I’ve been training for gun fights for over 30 years, yet I always learn something new when I watch you folks on Tactical Hyve. And, you are a very good communicator Miles.
For those of you who haven’t been shot at; you might want to find cover quickly. Like sprint fast! Especially, if the bad guy is already shooting at you.
A flop just drop doing that can help you if you don't have cover don't stop moving keep changing the sight picture of yourself so you don't remain a still target
Really like how simple you guys break things down and you guys teach everything in consideration for every experience level. Wish I could take a class one day!
I hear there is a class that is taught in Colorado and another in Wyoming I don't remember much about it but you might check it out and research it according to what you want to learn
It helps to sort of change how you are focusing on "everything" as well. By not intensely focusing on a single point (sights OR target) but instead allowing your brain to instead look more "generally" that extra peripheral vision will help you to walk more steadily and less bouncy. You only need to focus on the target "enough" to have situational awareness about the target. Think of it as seeing the "whole picture" instead of a dead focus on a single point. I've heard the same from many competition shooters as well. Doing that along with the more "sneaking up on someone, but quickly" style of movement will keep you much steadier. You'll also have better situational awareness. It's one of those things that's hard to understand, but once it "clicks" you just get it. You hit a lot of good points on this one dude. Bravo.
I “walk the box” every couple of months. Forward, moving left, then backwards (toe/heel), then moving right. Repeat going other direction. Note: many don’t endorse shooting moving backwards. Admittedly rare, I think it’s worth practicing. Another Note: If new to this, I would practice at great length DRY first & with a coach present.
Fallow your own personal situation don't worry about what other people think save yourself if you have a shot take advantage of it practice preparation is a great idea
Your instruction is spot-on. I recall several years ago when some of the big-name instructors noted that a lot of students wanted to learn all this fancy stuff when they still hadn’t mastered the fundamentals. Made sense, especially when they taught it was probably better to be able to move from one position to another fast, get still, then apply fundamentals behind cover and shoot. I worked for an LEA that taught shooting on the move, those same three techniques you addressed. This was before red dots or big orange iron sights. While not everyone was good at it, they were still exposed to, and periodically trained on it. I wasn’t aware of the figure 8 technique, but I will put it into my training regiment.
Young Man, I really enjoy & benefit from your skills-videos, your speaking is very accurate, clear & precise with powerful conveyance & easy to comprehend aswell because not too lengthy.....You are a great instructor ! Thanks fer sharing !
Another excellent presentation brother. God bless. This is the type of military/police training that I received many years ago and have taught to a number of civilians.
This is a counter intuitive to how I learned to walk, and run, using the balls of the feet as the natural shock absorber as a runner. I think I can mover more smoothly walking this way rather than on the heals of my feet. I'm not at the range, and I'm not an advanced shooter. Just making a comment on a video that I enjoyed. Thank you!
Tactical Hyve is my favorite Gun channel. Great topics always. I am always looking for practical, home defensive, good fundamentals/practices and adding to my educational gun knowledge and or training. Myles is also my favorite! I watch other channels occasionally for specific topics. It is rare however because I find most of them extremely boring, monotone, wordy but Myles is different. He talks to us like you would talk to a friend. Not a mentally challenged child. It is concise and easy to understand. If I am looking for knowledge or training this is where I come first! Thanks TH for all the work you put in. We appreciate your entire team for providing us this content!!!!!
Good tips , spent time as a waiter , carrying trays of food and drink you learn to anticipate your path and footsteps , just as to ski smoothly, look ahead 3 , 4 or 5 turns , smoothness of movement will become natural !
Great video! It might sound silly but when I was going through SWAT training, we used a water bottle and filled it half way and drew a line around the center. Hold the bottle as if youre presenting it and heel-to-toe without the water in the bottle moving below or above the line.
Excellent material. One disclaimer: for red dot you should always focus on target. If you focus on red dot you could get it distorted. I have the astyghmathism and the holo teached me the focus. Excellent job for newbies including me:) Edit: tecahing neural paths is much more complicated, but your hypothesis shows your uderstanding within the challenge
This was such a detailed, but simplified video.. Perfect for one who is just starting out trying to better their shot. I will most definitely be using these drills and exercises to improve my aiming!! Thank you!!!
🔥 Myles is an absolute legend when it comes to teaching the art of moving and shooting laterally with both pistol and rifle! 🏃♂🔫 His charisma and teaching style make every session not just informative but also incredibly enjoyable. 🎓💯 Moving and shooting can be a game-changer in tactical situations, and Myles breaks it down with such clarity that even beginners feel confident practicing these skills. 👏 Massive thanks to Myles for being such a charismatic and comfortable teacher - learning has never been this fun and effective! 🙌 #MylesMasterclass #TacticalTraining
Thanks. Have done these drills in tactical classes many times. The stationary ‘figure 8’ drill has been tremendously helpful to me, especially given I’m limited the majority of the time to a stationary / square range. A great reminder for me to practice for the class coming in a little over a week.
Thank you for this great information and practice drills. I'm going to shoot my first Steel Challenge with my 9 mm RUGER PC chassis carbine and AEMS circle/dot sight this February. With its upgrades my carbine is a lot more ready than I am.
look at tournament paintball and look how they do it train it with airsoft then transfer skills to something with recoil. its more of a sweep keeping your upper body level there is a sweep motion that's faster moving than the heal toe.
im shooting in competition. any tips if i will shoot the paper board what sight should i use target focus or front sight focus? by the way im using iron sight. thanks in advance.
Hey Myles i see you're not using the suppressor height sights on your Glock .. Can you tell us the reason why? BTW i'm doing the same on my Glock,, just wanna hear from you the answer to this debate.. if backup suppressor sight is a must have or not .. thank you from italy
Nice....wonder when community will embrace searching structures/hallways w my Modified CAR position and firing from there in SWAT walk when threats present...or when breaking right...or when advancing diagonally to cover. And haters think Bagua and Systema aren't helpful...
Seems like speed shooting would help the moving and shooting because you need to be able to quickly break the shot when the wandering sights are on target. Some people say you should always want a surprise break on the trigger but isn’t that just because they don’t want you to be unsteady and time it when you aiming but not moving?
I would imagine a large portion of shooting on the move would involve finding your cadence. Rhythm of your footsteps and body movement lining up with your acceptable sight picture.
I was thinking, for beginners, maybe a good way to let them start practicing the stable walk is to tell them « imagine you want to walk the most quietly possible but fast, like if you want to scare someone by walking to their back without being heard » I think it forces us to absorb naturally our steps, instead to overthinking how to do the right walk… When we start learning we’re getting easily goofy cause we think too much instead of feeling what we have to do
6:35 Would the fox walk be useful in this situation? There is an African kid who just walks like that, which shocks me the most. He had to learn that for survival and just became a natural predator. ( 0:54 RUclips - Episode 173. AK-12. The new Kalashnikov )
Three suggestions for your very helpful tutorial. Less words, show video of the final drill upfront then teach it step by step, and add side to side and backwards movement.
There's something going on with your audio processing. Very sharp short "hissing" spikes which make listening on headphones very unpleasant, like someone is constantly making short "PSSST!" noises in my ear. Running an aggressive low-pass filter at 10kHz seems to mitigate it? Could be coming from some other processing like a compressor or EQ or noise gate or something. Would greatly appreciate if you looked into fixing this as it's quickly becoming the only thing I hear and makes it hard to concentrate on the content. __Extremely__ audible example at 0:31 when you drop the striker. End of the word "watch" at 0:44. Multiple examples in phrase at 1:00.
I’ve been training for gun fights for over 30 years, yet I always learn something new when I watch you folks on Tactical Hyve. And, you are a very good communicator Miles.
For those of you who haven’t been shot at; you might want to find cover quickly. Like sprint fast! Especially, if the bad guy is already shooting at you.
nah cardboard usually doesn't shoot back so I'm all good
A flop just drop doing that can help you if you don't have cover don't stop moving keep changing the sight picture of yourself so you don't remain a still target
@@danielvu5211 yep cans same thing with me lol
Really like how simple you guys break things down and you guys teach everything in consideration for every experience level. Wish I could take a class one day!
Like that avatar
I hear there is a class that is taught in Colorado and another in Wyoming I don't remember much about it but you might check it out and research it according to what you want to learn
It helps to sort of change how you are focusing on "everything" as well. By not intensely focusing on a single point (sights OR target) but instead allowing your brain to instead look more "generally" that extra peripheral vision will help you to walk more steadily and less bouncy. You only need to focus on the target "enough" to have situational awareness about the target. Think of it as seeing the "whole picture" instead of a dead focus on a single point. I've heard the same from many competition shooters as well. Doing that along with the more "sneaking up on someone, but quickly" style of movement will keep you much steadier. You'll also have better situational awareness. It's one of those things that's hard to understand, but once it "clicks" you just get it.
You hit a lot of good points on this one dude. Bravo.
Absolutely correct. That’s something we cover later based on skill level. It helps to focus in the beginning for beginners.
2:57 1. REMAIN TARGET FOCUSED (target focused)
3:40 2. FIND AN ACCEPTABLE SIGHT PICTURE (acceptable sight picture)
4:42 3. MINIMIZE MOVEMENT OF SIGHTS (proper movement)
Tactical hyve is my favorite channel for training videos. Very informative.
Feel like this information for free is just too good. Thanks so much as always.
I “walk the box” every couple of months. Forward, moving left, then backwards (toe/heel), then moving right. Repeat going other direction. Note: many don’t endorse shooting moving backwards. Admittedly rare, I think it’s worth practicing. Another Note: If new to this, I would practice at great length DRY first & with a coach present.
Fallow your own personal situation don't worry about what other people think save yourself if you have a shot take advantage of it practice preparation is a great idea
This channel is absolute gold!
believe me , priceless lesson...
Your instruction is spot-on. I recall several years ago when some of the big-name instructors noted that a lot of students wanted to learn all this fancy stuff when they still hadn’t mastered the fundamentals. Made sense, especially when they taught it was probably better to be able to move from one position to another fast, get still, then apply fundamentals behind cover and shoot. I worked for an LEA that taught shooting on the move, those same three techniques you addressed. This was before red dots or big orange iron sights. While not everyone was good at it, they were still exposed to, and periodically trained on it. I wasn’t aware of the figure 8 technique, but I will put it into my training regiment.
Young Man, I really enjoy & benefit from your skills-videos, your speaking is very accurate, clear & precise with powerful conveyance & easy to comprehend aswell because not too lengthy.....You are a great instructor ! Thanks fer sharing !
Another excellent presentation brother. God bless.
This is the type of military/police training that I received many years ago and have taught to a number of civilians.
Crystal clear explanations… easy to under language… great video like it a lot . Nice truck in the back too.
Practice, practice, practice. Target focus, amen. Good stuff miles..
This is a counter intuitive to how I learned to walk, and run, using the balls of the feet as the natural shock absorber as a runner. I think I can mover more smoothly walking this way rather than on the heals of my feet. I'm not at the range, and I'm not an advanced shooter. Just making a comment on a video that I enjoyed. Thank you!
Tactical Hyve is my favorite Gun channel. Great topics always. I am always looking for practical, home defensive, good fundamentals/practices and adding to my educational gun knowledge and or training. Myles is also my favorite! I watch other channels occasionally for specific topics. It is rare however because I find most of them extremely boring, monotone, wordy but Myles is different. He talks to us like you would talk to a friend. Not a mentally challenged child. It is concise and easy to understand. If I am looking for knowledge or training this is where I come first! Thanks TH for all the work you put in. We appreciate your entire team for providing us this content!!!!!
Good tips , spent time as a waiter , carrying trays of food and drink you learn to anticipate your path and footsteps , just as to ski smoothly, look ahead 3 , 4 or 5 turns , smoothness of movement will become natural !
Great video! It might sound silly but when I was going through SWAT training, we used a water bottle and filled it half way and drew a line around the center. Hold the bottle as if youre presenting it and heel-to-toe without the water in the bottle moving below or above the line.
Excellent material. One disclaimer: for red dot you should always focus on target. If you focus on red dot you could get it distorted. I have the astyghmathism and the holo teached me the focus.
Excellent job for newbies including me:)
Edit: tecahing neural paths is much more complicated, but your hypothesis shows your uderstanding within the challenge
love the visual! very insightful! 🐺🏴
Good info and I’ll use it in competition but that holster leg strap looks like a ball buster!
This was such a detailed, but simplified video.. Perfect for one who is just starting out trying to better their shot. I will most definitely be using these drills and exercises to improve my aiming!! Thank you!!!
ALWAYS GOOD CONTENT ON THIS CHANNEL! You guys are awesome, wish I lived closer to take classes
🔥 Myles is an absolute legend when it comes to teaching the art of moving and shooting laterally with both pistol and rifle! 🏃♂🔫 His charisma and teaching style make every session not just informative but also incredibly enjoyable. 🎓💯 Moving and shooting can be a game-changer in tactical situations, and Myles breaks it down with such clarity that even beginners feel confident practicing these skills. 👏 Massive thanks to Myles for being such a charismatic and comfortable teacher - learning has never been this fun and effective! 🙌 #MylesMasterclass #TacticalTraining
Excellent job breaking this down and explaining.
Thanks. Have done these drills in tactical classes many times. The stationary ‘figure 8’ drill has been tremendously helpful to me, especially given I’m limited the majority of the time to a stationary / square range. A great reminder for me to practice for the class coming in a little over a week.
Thank you for this great information and practice drills. I'm going to shoot my first Steel Challenge with my 9 mm RUGER PC chassis carbine and AEMS circle/dot sight this February. With its upgrades my carbine is a lot more ready than I am.
Thank you. Your instruction is much appreciated.
Love the figure-8 drill! Practicing that using a dry-fire training laser at home!
Useful information. Thank you.
Thanks a million for this tidbit I just did it for a bit , I get the point I like it and will add it into training. Thank ya Myles 👍.
Great advice, thanks from Canada
A big thank you from Hungary
Good content, good delivery. Glad I came back to your channel!
You make good sense.
Great Information. Thank you
This video just hit my doubts! Many thanks!
Hey Myles thanks for the video! Could you please tell me what rig you're wearing and the mag holders and holster. Thanks
look at tournament paintball and look how they do it train it with airsoft then transfer skills to something with recoil. its more of a sweep keeping your upper body level there is a sweep motion that's faster moving than the heal toe.
super!!!!!! thank you very much!!!
Man jusy what i needed thanks so much.good job.i will be back.
Spot on!!!
Great job, no need for background music, easy to follow. Off to 300k!
This has got to be the best firearms training in America.
Great information Thank you!!
This was a very good video and practical as well
What about moving objects?
Great information!!
I was told to walk like "Grocho Marx". Can you show us a video showing parts of one of your classes? Also, do you teach a class for SD CCW's?
im shooting in competition. any tips if i will shoot the paper board what sight should i use target focus or front sight focus? by the way im using iron sight. thanks in advance.
excellent video, thanks
Hey Myles i see you're not using the suppressor height sights on your Glock .. Can you tell us the reason why? BTW i'm doing the same on my Glock,, just wanna hear from you the answer to this debate.. if backup suppressor sight is a must have or not .. thank you from italy
Great instructions
Great, more work to do 😁 Thanks guys
Great video great training tips
Thanks
Nice....wonder when community will embrace searching structures/hallways w my Modified CAR position and firing from there in SWAT walk when threats present...or when breaking right...or when advancing diagonally to cover. And haters think Bagua and Systema aren't helpful...
Very good stuff. Do you think Rob Leatham might make a guest appearance? Like to see how things gel together.
Very good
Seems like speed shooting would help the moving and shooting because you need to be able to quickly break the shot when the wandering sights are on target. Some people say you should always want a surprise break on the trigger but isn’t that just because they don’t want you to be unsteady and time it when you aiming but not moving?
I notice you use the horizontal figure 8 … would it be helpful to do the vertical figure 8 or any other direction. Thanks
Thanks!
Glad you liked it, and thanks for the donation! We really appreciate it.
Hi I have a ADE green dot. How do I zero the dot? This will be my first time using it.
Appreciate the video - what belt and holster is that ?
Well done
For iron's figure 8, do you focus on front sight still?
Great video! Would love to know what suppressor you have on your MDRX.
Nice!
good stuff
What holster arr u wearing? Extension?
Very informative! What ear protection are you using?
Very nice
I would imagine a large portion of shooting on the move would involve finding your cadence. Rhythm of your footsteps and body movement lining up with your acceptable sight picture.
Definitely a dry fire practice drill
I was thinking, for beginners, maybe a good way to let them start practicing the stable walk is to tell them
« imagine you want to walk the most quietly possible but fast, like if you want to scare someone by walking to their back without being heard »
I think it forces us to absorb naturally our steps, instead to overthinking how to do the right walk…
When we start learning we’re getting easily goofy cause we think too much instead of feeling what we have to do
Nice mdrx!
I've just realized I've never trained moving & shooting... Now I understand why trained-dudes walk rather uniquely while ADS.
Very good :)
On everything I love my first time shooting while running I hit every single shot 😂 it was like I was born to do it 😂
I take the shot all the time on the move
Not Myles taking me back to trig 112 freshman year uni
*can you teach us to hit while running, rushing like Usain bolt, can anyone achieve this?*
Hook up some merch my guy
6:35 Would the fox walk be useful in this situation? There is an African kid who just walks like that, which shocks me the most. He had to learn that for survival and just became a natural predator. ( 0:54 RUclips - Episode 173. AK-12. The new Kalashnikov )
anyone know what rifle he is using here?
Do you have a training school
what is the name of the rifle. is that a Tavor?
Did you figure it out? I'd like to know as well
@@SI96k lol nope. came back for a refresher bc i'm a shit shot. Didn't even realized I commented on this. But yeah, no luck. Great vid tho!
Jethro bodies can nock a knit off of a plate of grits at a hundred yards while at a dead run sounds kinda country fried 🤔
I feel like the focus should be .. How to move while aiming rather than how to aim while moving. Maybe its the same thing. Good stuff though, Thanks.
The infamous duck walk.
"slow is smooth , smooth is fast"
Could you possibly shitcan the "circle back" b.s..
Three suggestions for your very helpful tutorial. Less words, show video of the final drill upfront then teach it step by step, and add side to side and backwards movement.
csgo and valorant dont let you shoot while move
Public-safe practice method - shoot a walking video with your phone, with stabilization turned off :)
I get all my tactical instruction from Breaking Bad.
hi sir, i always watch your videos. can you send me you T-shirts 🙂. THanks
There's something going on with your audio processing. Very sharp short "hissing" spikes which make listening on headphones very unpleasant, like someone is constantly making short "PSSST!" noises in my ear. Running an aggressive low-pass filter at 10kHz seems to mitigate it? Could be coming from some other processing like a compressor or EQ or noise gate or something. Would greatly appreciate if you looked into fixing this as it's quickly becoming the only thing I hear and makes it hard to concentrate on the content.
__Extremely__ audible example at 0:31 when you drop the striker. End of the word "watch" at 0:44. Multiple examples in phrase at 1:00.
Thanks for letting us know. We’ll look into it.
You might be running.