USAMU Basic Rifleman's Course Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • This video is about the Basic Rifleman's Course as conducted by the USAMU

Комментарии • 623

  • @ggor06
    @ggor06 Год назад +1940

    as a member of the taliban, i find this information very useful thank you

    • @sleekbear1589
      @sleekbear1589 Год назад +77

      seemingly a gestapo too?

    • @Joostmhw
      @Joostmhw Год назад +107

      Million dollars per soldier, gives out the info for free on YT

    • @tandavawalsh0777
      @tandavawalsh0777 Год назад

      @@Drewgystew lol 95% of people enjoying any US military content would sign up for the SS and sign their kids up for the fascist youth asap if and when the opportunity arises. Not one of ya have a speck of the integrity you all steal from previous generations and lie and hypocritically and dishonestly play at as an excuse to hold yourself up in your mind over people who just want to live without fighting and killing

    • @thepruh1151
      @thepruh1151 Год назад +30

      @@Drewgystew You'll find it more difficult to aim when your foresight is enveloped completely in someone's mouth.

    • @argotheslicer1654
      @argotheslicer1654 Год назад +5

      @@sleekbear1589 Taliban secret police obviously get with the times

  • @donlesley1873
    @donlesley1873 Год назад +74

    Congratulations you just received free military classroom instruction without having to sign up for 4 years

  • @louislazarus9253
    @louislazarus9253 4 года назад +248

    For some reason I miss my old military days. This instruction brings back some great memories. Glad I wore the uniform!!!

    • @Reticulosis
      @Reticulosis 4 года назад +21

      It brings me back to death by power point for a week, read by some SSG who barely graduated high school at a 5th grade reading level. First formation at 4am to draw weapons at 6; to wait for motor movement at 9; for the range to open at 10; rush through zero, and qual; just to hurry up and wait at staging point to get back to to post....

    • @mostrogolf22
      @mostrogolf22 4 года назад +5

      Ft Jackson 1982, when the Army was real, not this BS when these little Bitches get there feelings hurt and pull out a my pussys hurt card and the DI gets his career fucked! Pathetic!

    • @billcampbell9886
      @billcampbell9886 4 года назад +5

      @@mostrogolf22 Amen! ...Fort Sill 1982.

    • @bushmasterar-158
      @bushmasterar-158 4 года назад +4

      Thanks for ur service

    • @eatshit2863
      @eatshit2863 4 года назад +7

      This course took me from having never held a rifle to Air Force Marksmanship Medal in one hour of training. The M-16 is the finest weapon ever created.

  • @2wheeleddemon999
    @2wheeleddemon999 5 лет назад +157

    Cameraman is crushing on the instructor.

    • @banninglyth5172
      @banninglyth5172 4 года назад +6

      @levi blankenship doesn't have to be these days

  • @TheAppalachianYeti
    @TheAppalachianYeti Год назад +27

    Well, a good decade into civilian life, and here I am, literally choosing a military power point presentation.

    • @alexwalker2582
      @alexwalker2582 Год назад +3

      I've heard it said that you may leave the military, but the military will never leave you.

  • @Gottaculat
    @Gottaculat 5 лет назад +219

    OMG, THANK YOU!!!
    I recently built my first AR-15 in 5.56x45mm NATO, and it's also my first rifle ever owned. I've plinked with air rifles and .22LRs before, and fired a handful of rounds out of a .30-06 bolt action, but never a 5.56, and I was always using a scope.
    Thanks to these videos, I got my irons sighted in correctly in about 10 rounds (accidentally rotated the front post the wrong way at first). Once zeroed, I was consistently pinging the 12" steel gong at 200yds, the 18" gong at 300yds, and even maintaining about a 60% hit rate on the 18" gong at 450yds.
    I still have a lot of practice to do, as I've only put 190 rounds down range in 2 days. Focusing intently on the front sight post has even gotten rid of my blinking when firing, and it also got rid of my 6 o'clock flinch with my pistol. My pistol is an Astra A-100 in .40S&W, which is like a Sig P226, but all steel weighing in at 34oz when empty. I was having a terrible time hitting my targets past 7yds, but after applying the fundamentals outlined in this series, I now have 4" groups at 15yds, and I even managed to get within a foot of an 18" gong at 250yds! With a goddamn .40S&W out of a 3.5" barrel, lol! The super far shots were just for fun, and I continue to train at 7yds with my pistol.
    I may even take my AR-15 to the high power range which starts at 500yds, and ends at 1,000yds. Not sure how effective 5.56x45mm is at those distances, but I can't afford anything in the .30 caliber group at this time, so 5.56 will have to do.
    Thank you again!
    You guys helped me greatly, and my shooting thoroughly impressed the combat vets at the range! The other guys with ARs were using super expensive scopes and red dots, but weren't rocking the accuracy and rapid long range target acquisition I was with a $45 rear A3 carry handle sight and cheap-ola $7 A3 style front sight. I plan to get even better! I salute you, USAMU!

    • @ignaciosx
      @ignaciosx 2 года назад +15

      nice.

    • @svenniacin6891
      @svenniacin6891 Год назад +15

      So you appear to have learned to be safe and accurate.

    • @blazeit505
      @blazeit505 Год назад +8

      I like to practice my pistol skills at 25 yards. I can constantly hit the bullseye or close to it. I think I could do trick shooting if I could afford the ammo

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Год назад +3

      In 60 years of shooting, I never used the trigger method shown here around the 13:00 mark.

    • @LoanwordEggcorn
      @LoanwordEggcorn Год назад +1

      @@savage22bolt32 How do you do it?

  • @aferdix
    @aferdix 3 года назад +1101

    *I live in Italy, so I can't keep and bear any kind of combat rifle, but I served for one year (once it was mandatory) in the Army, my weapon was a M-1 Garand inherited from the American after the second world war (they were a mere gift...), and everything in the aiming system was like shown in this video. I loved my rifle. I had excellent results, during our training, with my Garand. It was a heavy, rugged, very accurate and extremely powerful weapon. It was a 7.62 NATO Caliber, full metal jacket. We had just a few occasion of training with rifles and machine guns, but it was fine. It was liberating, for me. And I got real satisfaction in shooting with the magic Garand. This video brings me back to 1986, when I was in the Army. Sweet memories...*

    • @MattyB7
      @MattyB7 2 года назад +17

      Magic is sinful

    • @acwarner7911
      @acwarner7911 2 года назад

      @@MattyB7 "Put your sword away. Those who live by the sword, die by the sword." If you truly believe "magic" is sinful--as if the innocuous, colloquial "magic" referenced by the Italian gentleman above is the same as the occult magic you're likely referring too, which it's not--then you have no business having an internet in firearms or weapons training. Your saved playlists are sinful, jackass. Sell your guns. Put down your sword. Turn the other cheek. Be a pacifist like your savior asked you to be.

    • @lanceamadantebonife3987
      @lanceamadantebonife3987 2 года назад +60

      isnt the garand chambered for 30-06? (7.62x63)? you rechambered garands in 7.62x51 NATO?

    • @aferdix
      @aferdix 2 года назад +74

      @@lanceamadantebonife3987 I really don't know. I just remember the caliber, anyway it was NATO standard, they told at the time. We use to call those shots "7.62 NATO", but it must be told that italians are "approx".

    • @isiahhannon1740
      @isiahhannon1740 2 года назад +1

      ​@@aferdix

  • @samuelpope7798
    @samuelpope7798 4 года назад +169

    This series is excellent. The one basic that I might add would be to mention the effect lighting has on the very excellent post and aperture sights common to U.S. service rifles. Shooting on a bright and sunny day vs twilight or overcast. The effect glare can have on the front and rear sights, the importance of blackening the front post (a bic lighter works great) and shading the rear aperture. The ball cap worn by the soldier in the latter range portion of this series does an excellence job of that. and maybe mention the importance of glasses, especially if the shooter has an astigmatism or presbyopia and to avoid the use of bifocal lenses if possible. Use a good "distance" only pair. or a distance pair reduced by .25 - .5 diopter. I prefer clear glass as the photochromic ones will often darken under overcast and result in a dim sight picture.

  • @forestgnome55
    @forestgnome55 9 лет назад +204

    Focus the camera on the graphic not the guy!

  • @casams1992
    @casams1992 6 лет назад +87

    The instruction was excellent! But id like to see more of the slides.

  • @snipper1ie
    @snipper1ie Год назад +7

    In days of yore, in musketry, the soldier was taught to take 'a sight' on a target. He was also taught to take a 'fine sight'. An Irish soldier was once quizzed by his instructor as to what a 'fine sight' was. "Two dinners on the one plate", came the reply

  • @MexicoAdventurer
    @MexicoAdventurer Год назад +11

    Being former USAF Security Forces, this video takes me back to our weapons training days. I got Expert Marksman with the multiple weapons device, partly because I grew up on a farm and was already a Marksman before I left for the military. Partly because I had great instructors, one of whom is in his 80's now, and he was at our police reunion in 2019 before covid hit. Emotional reunion.
    I'm so glad you loaded this series of videos.

    • @andrewpoderis8548
      @andrewpoderis8548 Год назад +2

      Thank you for your service Sir

    • @MexicoAdventurer
      @MexicoAdventurer Год назад +3

      @@andrewpoderis8548 Thank you for saying that. 🙏

    • @j.robertsergertson4513
      @j.robertsergertson4513 Год назад

      OMG ,they issue rifles in the Air force .I guess Gunny isn't always right .

    • @MexicoAdventurer
      @MexicoAdventurer Год назад +1

      @@j.robertsergertson4513 Sounds like your gunny was a retard.

  • @blazeit505
    @blazeit505 Год назад +95

    I learned all of this by the time I was 12 years old. I started even younger. I grew up in a time and place where I could carry and shoot my rifle pretty much anytime I wanted. It was a ruger 10-22 and I never cleaned it until I forgot it on my grandparents patio over night and it was covered in rust and I freaked out and my uncle showed me how to oil and clean a firearm. Looking back that riffle was unstoppable. I don't remember it jamming up or having any issues. I might go buy another one

    • @frankfrankly1366
      @frankfrankly1366 Год назад +11

      "Grew up in a time and place" ,,,,,, its getting harder and harder to fund those places unless your really really rich.

    • @LoanwordEggcorn
      @LoanwordEggcorn Год назад +4

      Boycott Ruger. Buy a clone, most of which are superior.
      Bill Ruger personally walked the halls of Congress promoting magazine size limits and that's a significant part of why millions of Americans now have magazine bans.

    • @charlesmiller7848
      @charlesmiller7848 Год назад +1

      Why exactly would one need to be so rich to operate a firearm?
      I'm fairly poor but carry and use a rifle multiple times a week.
      Protection of livestock and a need to eat meat are the reasons.

    • @frankfrankly1366
      @frankfrankly1366 Год назад +1

      @@charlesmiller7848 all the land I used to have access to is now leased to out of state deer, duck and turkey hunters.
      When I was a kid we had no deer or turkey and you could hunt miles of private property. Rabbits, squirrel, quail, trapping and running coon dogs. No more of that, LEASED NO TRESPASSING.
      Property Under Video Surveillance.

    • @danielhandika8767
      @danielhandika8767 Год назад +2

      Man, some people freak out when a kid handle a knife yet my guy over here carrying a gun

  • @JG54206
    @JG54206 Год назад +7

    It’s awesome of them to post this video for general consumption. I’m excited to watch.

    • @InappropriateShorts
      @InappropriateShorts Год назад

      No it’s not wtf 😬 this is why their dumbazz can’t keep literal war secrets off of discord. They’re marketing to trans people & putting military training on RUclips. USA is fallen & we can blame no one but ourselves

  • @ReelGuyTv
    @ReelGuyTv 4 года назад +62

    Whoever shot this video: YOU'RE FIRED!!!

    • @stevemoore6245
      @stevemoore6245 4 года назад +3

      mil spec

    • @billcampbell9886
      @billcampbell9886 4 года назад +3

      LMAO ... The video is very raw; I don't think it was made in Hollywood, but all the pertinent information appears to be included.

    • @tankgirlsc
      @tankgirlsc 3 года назад

      The Army isn’t Hollywood. It’s not supposed to look pretty, it’s about the information.

    • @brettblack7049
      @brettblack7049 2 года назад +1

      @@tankgirlsc then they should have focused on the information, not the instructor.

  • @bristolfashion4421
    @bristolfashion4421 Год назад +6

    Unusually for a Brit, I was brought up around guns from an early age - by the time I was in my late teens, I had shot dozen of air guns, 22's, Lee Enfields, Bren guns, smg's, 12 & four ten gauge shotguns etc etc etc. However I have never killed anyone to my certain knowledge !!

  • @Mike-ui7ls
    @Mike-ui7ls Год назад +9

    Death by power point. Def one thing I don’t miss from the military 😅

    • @desertlightning4200
      @desertlightning4200 Год назад

      I would’ve been snoring as soon as they turned on the projector

  • @piotrstodolski6976
    @piotrstodolski6976 Год назад +3

    I love that he started with "what is shooting?"

  • @godsmacked1000
    @godsmacked1000 Год назад +3

    They need to bring back the black and white videos with the stern sounding narrator from the 40’s and cheesy actors. Those were cool!! 😂

  • @Brian-qg9bm
    @Brian-qg9bm 7 месяцев назад +1

    I really appreciate this video.
    As a former Marine, sometimes I forget the army actually trains for this stuff. :-P

  • @wolfeloma
    @wolfeloma Год назад +2

    This video reminds me of call of duty where Captain Foley would make a brief plan on missions. The nostalgia.

  • @matt-ts8cx
    @matt-ts8cx Год назад +3

    Great instructional video for anyone new to shooting.

  • @charlesh1735
    @charlesh1735 5 месяцев назад

    I will use this educational resource when out at the range to improve my marksmanship with my AR-15 rifle. Thank you SSG Green!

  • @lordofentropy
    @lordofentropy 2 года назад +3

    Really this video about what 90% of US Military life is, Power Point.

  • @wallclock4648
    @wallclock4648 9 месяцев назад +3

    شكرا لك، لقد ساعدني هذا أنا وجنودي كثيرا❤🇮🇶

  • @shanemiles5659
    @shanemiles5659 Год назад

    glad to see this being recomended to everyone 9 years later

  • @lovethataxz3635
    @lovethataxz3635 Год назад +6

    Boy am I glad I was taught young. Thank dad! 😎🙏🏻

  • @DanielADickey
    @DanielADickey 10 лет назад +86

    Good training, too bad it was edited by an 11B :(

    • @509Gman
      @509Gman 8 лет назад +8

      No, he's right. These army training videos need to stop trying to win an AAM for editing. The information is central. These slick tricks distract from it.

  • @D2v0n
    @D2v0n 3 года назад +13

    Thank you, from a VR player.

    • @rii7550
      @rii7550 3 года назад +1

      😂😂😂

  • @dainewatson1
    @dainewatson1 Год назад +10

    Go army !!! Thank you all for your sacrifices and service. America and the world would not be the same without American arm forces. Love yll

  • @dylanking9646
    @dylanking9646 Год назад

    now i can use this knowledge to be better at video games, thank you U.S. Army

  • @1111Tactical
    @1111Tactical Год назад +6

    With red dots on any gun and pistol iron sights (any irons further from my face like AK sights), I do WAY better focusing on the target instead of the sights.
    I got a perfect pistol score in 2 federal academies so I am no world champion but I'm doing something right.
    I only focus on sights with AR style irons or magnified scopes.

    • @mingus445_gaming
      @mingus445_gaming Год назад +4

      i think that's usually the case for sub-100 meter engagements and cqb. For longer ranges i think focusing on the reticle is better. Rah.

  • @ramirosabatini
    @ramirosabatini Год назад +1

    This made me fall asleep.
    Thanks!

  • @angry_zergling
    @angry_zergling 3 года назад +41

    I had been taught and always heard that with optics focus should be on the target. This instructs focus on the reticle. Does this apply to non-magnified optics like red dots and holos too? Looking 'past' the reticle with focus on the target feels so much better - much more natural and less hectic especially when transitioning between targets at different distances.

    • @therandomwizard188
      @therandomwizard188 3 года назад +1

      I agree

    • @LordPerique
      @LordPerique Год назад +31

      The army way is not always the best way.

    • @willminer7427
      @willminer7427 Год назад +10

      If you focus on the target, sights drift and you miss.

    • @AV-nl9gc
      @AV-nl9gc Год назад +27

      This should not apply period. If you have a good scope it should be adjusted via the diopter to have both the reticle and target in focus. With a red dot the whole point of the bright red dot is so you can target focus with the dot being layered into your vision per se.
      I saw the thumbnail of the video and immediately called bs. That being said if you have irons you are relegated to this technique because lining up irons on a target farther than 50 yards is actually necessary.

    • @charlesludwig9173
      @charlesludwig9173 Год назад +7

      @@AV-nl9gc. There’s not even a hint of bs here. It’s an outstanding presentation of the principles of marksmanship as applied to the M16A4 and M4. The session here is a portion of instruction given to students attending SDM, TTT, and SAFS Training Events which are delivered by the Army Marksmanship Unit. The instruction produces results.

  • @travis8229
    @travis8229 Год назад

    Key to success: controlled breathing, steady aim. I got right below sniper qualification by doing this.

  • @hikarihitomi7706
    @hikarihitomi7706 Год назад +24

    Tip 1: Do not zero your rifle with the front sight post centered on target. Use the corner of your front sight post as the aim point. Naturally you need to zero the rifle accordingly to the corner you choose. Still need your sight picture to be aligned properly.
    This will give you a tighter shot group as well as allowing you to see more of the target you are aiming at.
    In basic, I took 11 fellow soldiers who just couldn't qualify, taught them this one thing and every single one doubled their hit rate or better, 3 even scored the highest rating with 37, 38, and 38 out of 40, just from this one change alone.
    Tip 2: alignment of your sight picture doesn't need to be centered, it just needs to always be the same as what you zeroed with. Centering often requires estimating the center which is inaccurate, especially when your adrenaline is going. Instead, look at the front sight post with side fringes, and line up your rear sight hole to fit the front sight at key points that are easy to reproduce. For example, I would make the circle of the rear sight sit level on the bottom of the front sight and with the tips of the front sight fringes just touching the circle. This made it easy to have the same sight pictures every time. As long as your sight picture is always the same as it was when you zeroed, it'll work.

    • @NOT-FINANCIAL-ADVICE.
      @NOT-FINANCIAL-ADVICE. Год назад +7

      No

    • @charlesludwig9173
      @charlesludwig9173 Год назад +1

      First, sight alignment must be consistent, centering the tip of the front sight post in the rear sight aperture. This is important since Inconsistency creates angular error which increases with distance. Next, focusing on front sight, the shooter adjusts natural point of aim to place the tip of front sight to center mass of target while maintaining sight alignment. The center mass hold must be selected over other holds for bullet strikes to hit various size and shape targets at distances served by the battle sight zero and bullet drop compensation functions. Of course a sight picture or hold can be off set to account for wind or distance.

    • @hikarihitomi7706
      @hikarihitomi7706 Год назад +1

      @@charlesludwig9173 Absolutely correct. I'm not countering that at all. What I'm talking about is what part of the front sight post you are seeing as the point where the bullet is going to land. Instead of centering the front sight post with the idea that the bullet should land where the middle of the top of the sight post is your bullet aiming point, instead zero the rifle with the corner of the front sight post as the point where you want the bullet to land. Then, when you do as you just mentioned and have a consistent sight picture and aiming to land a bullet at the center of the target, the sight post will block vision of only 1/4 of the target instead of half, thus maintaining better awareness of the target and with the corner being a lot easier to aim than estimating the center of the sight post your shots will be more accurate towards your intended aim point.

    • @TribeWars1
      @TribeWars1 Год назад +1

      Good tip, I'm going to try this

    • @hikarihitomi7706
      @hikarihitomi7706 Год назад

      @@TribeWars1 Let us know how you like it.

  • @whomagoose6897
    @whomagoose6897 7 лет назад +16

    To each his own on placement of the trigger finger. I call his method "Choking the Trigger" when using the finger section next to the palm. I mark each of the joint sections on your finger from the tip as 1st pad, middle section as 2nd pad, the section next to your palm 3rd pad. I take an ink pen and make three equidistant lines on the 1st pad. Dividing the 1st pad into 1/4ths. So the tip of the finger is zero, next is 25%, then 50%, 75% the crease between the first and second section is 100%. I then place the 25% line on the Apex of the trigger. May have to move your finger slightly right or left to pull the trigger straight back. You know how much during dry fire practice. Everybody is different so you will have to work it out yourself. Insure there is no side pressure. Just straight back. The only part of the finger that touches any part of the gun is that 25% mark and where the palm/finger joint is located. You should see daylight elsewhere on the finger. Does this technique work for me? I shoot sub-MOA with my rifle. Used both single stage and two stage triggers. The single stage trigger has a spongy feel when "choking the trigger." Two stage triggers are not as bad. Always have low left impact hits when choking triggers. Never on first pad.

    • @Gottaculat
      @Gottaculat 5 лет назад +4

      I run an ALG QMS trigger group in my AR-15. Nothing fancy, just a smoother milspec. About a 5.5lb pull. I took the advice of a combat vet who now teaches long range shooting near me, and that advice is to pull the trigger in a relaxed, natural grip. Since people's fingers aren't identical, he said the important part is that you don't clench up your grip, and to pull, NOT squeeze the trigger. He said telling people to "squeeze" often leads to clenching or "choking" the trigger and grip.
      The advice is pretty sound, as I don't even think about the trigger when shooting. I just point at my target, and smoothly pull my finger back. Doesn't matter where the trigger is on my finger, though for me, I think the natural contact point is between the second and third knuckle, the base of the finger being the first knuckle. I'm consistently hitting an 18" steel gong at 300yds with standard A3 irons, and regularly hitting an 18" steel gong at 450yds, despite being a relatively new shooter.
      Probably best not to think about the trigger, as long as you are consistent in your shots. I did have a flinch and blinking at first, but that went away after about 100 rounds, as I got used to the noise and recoil.
      I should also note that I shoot for combat accuracy, not competition accuracy. My eyes can't even see sub-1 MOA with irons (especially since I'm focusing intently on the front post anyway, causing the target to blur). I shoot well enough to hit an enemy at 450yds with my irons, so sub-1 MOA isn't really important until shooting at very long range, or competitively. I'd rather get positive hits with rapid target acquisition than taking forever to get perfect shots on a single target when there are many targets. The range I shoot on has steel gongs at 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, and 450 yards, and I love having someone randomly call out which of the 6 targets to shoot next, and see how quickly I can get a positive hit. I'm a bit slow at the moment at about 3-4 seconds per target, but I'm a new shooter, and will get faster with practice. 🤠

    • @KH-rt3ef
      @KH-rt3ef Год назад +3

      Pulling the trigger with the tip of the finger is appropriate for classic style stocks like that on the 1903 Springfield. Most, when holding an M16 or M4, will find their finger pulling the trigger with the middle pad, as the weapon is gripped differently. Long range shooting is partially about trigger pull; consistency, stability and body positioning is more important than gripping a rifle unnaturally in order to adhere to a standard on a different platform, ie: pulling an M4 trigger with the finger tip because that is how the 1903 Springfield is held. Holding the trigger to the rear and feeling the reset improves accuracy and indicates malfunctions as well.

    • @charlesludwig9173
      @charlesludwig9173 Год назад +2

      The guy demonstrating is #1 United States Army Marksmanship Unit Service Rifle Competitor. He knows all about how to achieve SMOOTH Trigger Control.

  • @roguedoge2479
    @roguedoge2479 Год назад +4

    Man, this is awesome

  • @AWESOMO5
    @AWESOMO5 Год назад

    Thanks i will show this to my friend who has very strong opinions about certain politician

  • @ruinjohn10
    @ruinjohn10 Год назад +3

    Wtf i got this on my recomended i have used this profile pic for 10 years😅

  • @klimovichrusland
    @klimovichrusland Год назад

    Thank you for the video from Canada. Vancouver , BC.

  • @Airsoftotaku
    @Airsoftotaku 6 лет назад +33

    Hello, may I have your permission to reupload your videos with Chinese subtitle, so I can share them with my friends on some Taiwanese forums, FB clubs, and BBS sites. We people in Taiwan now are trained for only 4 months, so most of us don't even know how to be good shooters, even if we did go through the whole training.

  • @kingfish4575
    @kingfish4575 Год назад

    Got to love and standard issue Power Point presentation...

  • @madcapmagician6018
    @madcapmagician6018 Год назад

    Wow just having watched this I learned that I have been doing sight alignment sloppily 😮 thanx for the info will be subing and watching more 😊

  • @Erxhyj
    @Erxhyj 4 года назад +4

    Great great video, thank so much you from italian ar15 owner

  • @benlltt
    @benlltt Год назад

    “Once you remove all the differences between the different types of shooting all shooting is the same” can’t argue with that logic

  • @eatshit2863
    @eatshit2863 4 года назад +5

    This course took me from having never held a rifle to Air Force Marksmanship Medal in one hour of training. The M-16 is the finest weapon ever created.

    • @Tryharder69420
      @Tryharder69420 4 года назад

      Reee m4 is better

    • @porpoision
      @porpoision 2 года назад +3

      @@Tryharder69420 Lighter and more compact, sure. Better? Not really. The M16 has a longer sight radius, better gas system, and less felt recoil (granted 5.56 is already light recoiling). In my opinion, unless you’re frequently transitioning in and out of a vehicle, or clearing rooms, the M16 is a superior rifle. If your job is guard duty, or some other role that doesn’t involve door-to-door urban fighting, I think you’d be better off with an M16 if you can handle the slight weight increase.

    • @HatsuneM1ku01
      @HatsuneM1ku01 Год назад +1

      @@porpoision don’t forget your going from 3000 fps in the m4 14 inch barrel vs 3300 fps in the m16 20 inch barrel as well which make a big difference in the m193 round fragmenting and different wound type as the higher speed of the m16 creates a different more deadly type of wound paired with the m193 fragmenting on impact. The m4 fragment range is 100 yards vs 200 yards fragmentation distance on the m16 20 inch barrel. Higher speed from m193 from a 20 inch barrel also has a better chance of piercing level 3+ plates as well over the m4. Other than cqb/cqc tge m16 is in fact superior

    • @KH-rt3ef
      @KH-rt3ef Год назад

      @Jake Zommick should we tell them about optics, or just let them be right?

    • @sweatyapplesauce
      @sweatyapplesauce Год назад

      ​@@porpoision the gas systems are the same. Just different lengths

  • @zombiekinggamer
    @zombiekinggamer Год назад

    I learnt all of this 10 years ago when i played fps game for first time

  • @chrisholifield8571
    @chrisholifield8571 Год назад +1

    If your reticle and your target are not in the same focus, your scope is adjusted incorrectly

  • @Bolek063
    @Bolek063 Год назад

    Oh I had this lesson in school and we learned how to take apart AK-100 and hot to put it together and firing position

  • @badgumby9544
    @badgumby9544 Год назад

    The biggest thing I had to deal with in these classroom presentations. Was trying to stay awake.

  • @notmenotme614
    @notmenotme614 Год назад +1

    What hasn’t been mentioned is keeping the rifle perfectly still between shots to maintain a tight grouping.
    The problem I have is the rifle barrel will drift or wave around. Especially unsupported standing

    • @baimeistudent
      @baimeistudent Год назад +1

      It's not a problem but the nature of firearms. Different weapons recoil differently. Consistent shot placement comes from consistent training with your particular weapon. You will become more accurate as your skill increases from experience. The weapon is just a machine doing the same thing repeatedly.

  • @ryanwood6754
    @ryanwood6754 Год назад +3

    This may seem stupid to some especially those in the US who can legally own guns. But I am 25 from the UK and this was very informative since I have an active interest in the subject matter (and military coming from a family who has served) and I use this for both VR and Airsoft. Worked perfectly for me and added to the experience especially in VR where I have moving targets unlike airsoft where I am just shooting cans etc.
    something I need to ask though and maybe I missed it. How do you focus your eyes quick and align the iron sights mid fight? Its a tricky thing for me because when I lower my pistol for example then raise it to my eye to aim, it takes me a while to align and focus the sights as its kind of blurry. But issue is in a game example the enemy has already shot me once or twice by the time I can do it. So what advice would anyone give for quickly raising a weapon up and focusing and aligning sights fast?

    • @christcarscountry6870
      @christcarscountry6870 Год назад

      The simple answer is it will take time.
      The same reason somebody has to learn to swing nunchucks very slowly so as not to hit themselves, and over the course of countless hours over months and years, can simply pick up a pair and move them so fast you'd think they'd be black and blue by the time they're done.
      Put simply, the more you do it the slow way that gets you shot a bunch, ensuring that you bring them up accurately, eventually, the quicker you'll be able to do it accurately. Focus on accuracy, and speed will follow. Patience with definitely help. Good luck, partner.

    • @bigloud7067
      @bigloud7067 Год назад

      you should practice dry fire sight alignment with your pistol

    • @j.robertsergertson4513
      @j.robertsergertson4513 Год назад

      Practice, practice, practice ,try getting a contrasting colored front sight post ,

  • @therealdohos2607
    @therealdohos2607 Год назад +1

    the cameraman has a crush on the guy. when hes pointing to the board the camera stays on the guy and not show whats pointed

  • @user-zr6pl6nb6z
    @user-zr6pl6nb6z Год назад

    Great presentation, SSGT Green.

  • @danielescobar7618
    @danielescobar7618 Год назад

    Starting omega 7 up again since im seeing a lot of che guevara shirts out in the public again.. thanks for the vid.

  • @Christiansmoviesnow
    @Christiansmoviesnow Год назад +1

    Who else watch this to improve their FPS skills?

  • @sarge9
    @sarge9 Год назад

    This will help me play Call of Duty better. Thanks!

  • @AM-vc4tt
    @AM-vc4tt Год назад

    Weapons, fire superiority, and tech dont win wars. You've got to have a brave heart. Which the Americans lacked in their fight against the Afghans.

  • @kellybrian6495
    @kellybrian6495 Год назад +1

    I’ve been shooting since I was 7. Funny how things I take as common sense or natural, has to be explained to others.

  • @gmarlett84
    @gmarlett84 Год назад

    Glad this is public so our future enemies can use it against us…

  • @LargeBlueCircle
    @LargeBlueCircle Год назад

    Golly I probably should have watched this 2500 rounds ago. Good thing im still a begginer!

  • @paulhunt4690
    @paulhunt4690 Год назад

    My dad taught me to make a figure 8 and shoot when you cross. Also shoot on the exhale. Squeeze the trigger.

  • @mertz7305
    @mertz7305 Год назад +1

    @13:54 They call him Legion for there are many in him.

  • @بهلولمولىالسجين
    @بهلولمولىالسجين 3 года назад +3

    The presence of the Arabic translation increases subscribers

  • @Afftamatt
    @Afftamatt Год назад

    This is gold. Thanks!

  • @johnnytower6169
    @johnnytower6169 4 месяца назад

    I dunno if anyone will see this but assuming you have a weapon where you can’t get a proper cheek weld due to the way the optics are mounted (it’s done in a way to preserve the original condition of a historical piece and the stock can’t be modified either) is there a technique for achieving consistent eye position?
    I’ve just mentally developed a position on a different part of my jaw but watching this it makes me feel it’s not an ideal technique

  • @TimHall66McManu
    @TimHall66McManu 2 года назад +1

    Where was this video 25 years ago.

  • @juantovar4861
    @juantovar4861 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the video.

  • @Roundswithnocontext
    @Roundswithnocontext Год назад

    What I do when shooting is focus on the target rather than the crosshair and move the crosshair to the point of focus(this is for unsupported) reduces fatigue and is rather accurate

    • @Dan-yk6sy
      @Dan-yk6sy Год назад

      Total amature, but same, it just worked better for me. Especially for skeet.

    • @no.7893
      @no.7893 7 месяцев назад

      @@Dan-yk6sy In skeet shooting it seems pretty common to train to focus on the target, so much so that the first time I went clay shooting the gun that I was given had the front bead sawn off of it, the instructor said a lot of beginners miss all their shots because they focus on the sight too much.

  • @Szconsultingservice
    @Szconsultingservice Год назад

    >be army
    >oh good, RUclips, disruptive technology
    >still PowerPoints to death

  • @oloruntobaoluwadarewasiu8045
    @oloruntobaoluwadarewasiu8045 10 месяцев назад

    Long life and prosperity

  • @3IN1SDG
    @3IN1SDG 3 года назад +1

    Who recorded this? Focus on the diagram not the person talking. We don't need to see him to hear him, but we do need to see the diagram!

  • @iamprocrastination.9415
    @iamprocrastination.9415 Год назад

    thanks, as a soon to be terrorist this will really help me deal with those pesky oil corporations!

  • @nekomata_aero
    @nekomata_aero Год назад

    thanks this will come in handy soon

  • @kross777rlsh9
    @kross777rlsh9 6 лет назад +1

    Awesome stuff

  • @ArtekGeneral
    @ArtekGeneral Год назад +1

    I'm suddenly starting to realise why my video game aim is so crap... I always focus on the target. Dammit.

  • @portee9113
    @portee9113 5 лет назад +16

    I will NOT willingly subjugate myself to an army powerpoint slideshow being myself a free civilian.

  • @davidkelly5899
    @davidkelly5899 Год назад

    If all else fails, just watch where your first round impacts. Then adjust.

  • @CookedAF2
    @CookedAF2 Год назад

    Nice

  • @syahran1518
    @syahran1518 Год назад +1

    is this applicable in the funfair target shooting?

  • @thiemtranthi7760
    @thiemtranthi7760 Год назад

    Roi xong duong ai nguoi do di la loi thoat tot nhat giai phong cho su co loveyou covi19 38c my vn

  • @danlewis2449
    @danlewis2449 3 года назад +1

    President's Hundred tab = severely legit

  • @lt6077
    @lt6077 Год назад +2

    I’m all for going knuckles deep but Idk about that trigger placement. Unless you have a strength problem you might as well do it right and pull straight back. I’m sure a slight pull to the right isn’t a huge deal but it can’t be considered ideal.

    • @aaron6268
      @aaron6268 Год назад

      I think it's to compensate for the round ejecting its casing.

  • @MangoAurum
    @MangoAurum Год назад

    Yes Google I am interested in this, do with that as you will

  • @papyshak
    @papyshak Год назад

    How should I aim if I am right handed af but me doninant eye is left?

  • @Staerkebombe
    @Staerkebombe 7 месяцев назад

    *hey, do you have last prayers recitations, if you hit an ied in Baghdad?* :D

  • @Screamblade_
    @Screamblade_ Год назад +1

    Recommended this 2023? I am questioning why.... a lot. haha

  • @jacobiwolf77
    @jacobiwolf77 Год назад

    Though I wish the camera man was better at shooting, but excellent pointers are to be had from this video

  • @memo1975
    @memo1975 8 месяцев назад

    Peep sights don't make sense. How do you know when the front sight is in the "center" of the rear sight without any reference lines!?

    • @charlesludwig9173
      @charlesludwig9173 Месяц назад +1

      Consistent sight alignment is easy because it works on the shooter’s natural ability to balance and center things. Thousands of US Distinguished Riflemen have proven this fact, scoring as high with irons as they will with an optic. Just move eye to where the tip of the front sight appears to be centered in rear aperture.

    • @memo1975
      @memo1975 Месяц назад

      @@charlesludwig9173 cool, ty!

  • @jctedsap
    @jctedsap 2 года назад

    Great video but fire the videographer. On my iPhone I can hardly see the numbers of the targets. I would love to see a longer more detailed version of sight alignment. I’ve been shooting about 50 years and never seen this good of instruction.

  • @worddunlap
    @worddunlap Год назад

    The USMC has some of the best basic rifle training in the US Armed Services,.

  • @davidmagen5024
    @davidmagen5024 3 года назад

    excellent presentation

  • @fierypengu7439
    @fierypengu7439 Год назад

    All cars are the same as long as you remove the make, model, and place you drive it.

  • @news05kid
    @news05kid Год назад

    thanks for the Leason Ssgt Green

  • @Waltham1892
    @Waltham1892 Год назад

    I remember BRM being "YOU FAIL TO QUALIFY AND YOU WILL DIE IN THE FRONT LEANING REST."

  • @twich155
    @twich155 Год назад

    Why aren't there cross hairs on the rear sight aperture?

    • @dudeistpriest787
      @dudeistpriest787 Год назад

      Rear sight sits too close to the eye to be able to focus on a crosshair properly, kind of like putting your eye right up to a mesh screen and trying to use the crossing sections of mesh to aim. I know this because when I was in my early twenties I thought I was smarter than everyone else - like most people in their teens and twenties do - and I modified a rear sight ring to have a wire crosshair. I spent a long time with some jeweler's tools wrapping that wire around the sight ring, making sure it was even and centered, only to find out it did fuck-all.

  • @Felinal_19
    @Felinal_19 Год назад +1

    Interesting how that image of the sniper zeroed in on an insurgent is actually used as an example in this course

    • @xxxod
      @xxxod Год назад +1

      its propaganda

    • @UpVade
      @UpVade Год назад

      @@xxxod Bro what

    • @bummer7736
      @bummer7736 Год назад

      @@UpVade It is propaganda though. Just a really subtle one.

    • @puma2334
      @puma2334 Год назад

      @@bummer7736it’s to simulate what the soldier could be expecting as his opfor

  • @SeanTownsendStormrider
    @SeanTownsendStormrider 4 года назад +1

    It's been proven that the small aperture eliminates parallax, so the instruction that the front sight post has to be centered vertically and horizontally is incorrect. The large ghost ring aperture is not as effective in controlling parallax, so in that case it does need to be centered.

    • @keyboardcommando5146
      @keyboardcommando5146 4 года назад +9

      The smaller aperture is more precise, and slow as constipated shit, that’s why it’s for long range.

    • @willminer7427
      @willminer7427 Год назад

      Could you elaborate more on parallax in your own words sir.
      And also shouldn’t we align the rear sight and front sight vertically and horizontally or in other words make sure that they are perfectly aligned and centered, so that the barrel is straight and consistent, with the point of aim and point of impact meet. Any help would be great thanks

  • @saltysquatch1510
    @saltysquatch1510 Год назад

    So what kind of damage are we talking here? How many ships did he sink?