By far the coolest and most useful dry fire video 👍🏼👍🏼 thx for sharing a video„art“ like this. Would love to see some kind of rifle drills 😁 Greetings from austria.
Not trolling or being indignant. But your slide lock reload speed is definitely hindered by your desire to put that spent mag in your dump pouch. Its empty, its useless. I know it is a pain in the ass to go pick up that empty mag to continue the shooting drill but you are indirectly training a bad habit. There was an officer killed because he was used to dumping his spent revolver brass into a bucket to keep the range clean and have less mess at the end of the day. He ended up in a shoot out and there was CCTV footage of him hesitating because when he went to reload he was looking for the bucket to drop the brass in instead of just dumping them on the ground and was shot in that moment. This is just food for thought and want to add to the group. That being said, I believe the video you have created is one of the best dry fire videos I have seen to date.
Nice practice and mothodical build, but from a LE or Mil perspective it makes no sence to differ between slide lock and emergency reload - a slide lock should an will always be trained as an emergency reload in this context. If it makes sense for in another setting, go for it. Very good training routine!
@@humblenoob7631if you’re on a pistol (LE-primary/MIL-secondary) and you have slide-lock in the middle of a gun fight, who cares about maintaining the magazine. It’s survival. Break contact, seek cover, reassess.
Brilliant video for dry fire training....Today you will be on my TV and I will be training with my glock 19 as well! Well done @ChairmanCat
Mega thank you for this!
We can’t do much live fire like this in the UK
thanks for the video definitely one of the best I've seen for training
By far the coolest and most useful dry fire video 👍🏼👍🏼 thx for sharing a video„art“ like this.
Would love to see some kind of rifle drills 😁
Greetings from austria.
I like the emergency mag realod that's real life scenario.
Reloads tactically from slide lock*
Me: Sounds of confusion
APPRECIATE THIS🙏🏽 Also, love watching you train and mess around with your guns at GPS.
85寸的电视机 终于派的上用场了!
Is there a particular reason for doing your tac reload from the front mag pouch instead of the rear one
I mess with this hard
Sick
Good reps.
super cool training aid! i’ve added this to my saved videos for dry fire. definitely should come out to Alaska for some shooting content
shooting under aurora is my dream
W
Not trolling or being indignant. But your slide lock reload speed is definitely hindered by your desire to put that spent mag in your dump pouch. Its empty, its useless. I know it is a pain in the ass to go pick up that empty mag to continue the shooting drill but you are indirectly training a bad habit. There was an officer killed because he was used to dumping his spent revolver brass into a bucket to keep the range clean and have less mess at the end of the day. He ended up in a shoot out and there was CCTV footage of him hesitating because when he went to reload he was looking for the bucket to drop the brass in instead of just dumping them on the ground and was shot in that moment. This is just food for thought and want to add to the group. That being said, I believe the video you have created is one of the best dry fire videos I have seen to date.
LETS FUCKING GOOOOO
Nice practice and mothodical build, but from a LE or Mil perspective it makes no sence to differ between slide lock and emergency reload - a slide lock should an will always be trained as an emergency reload in this context. If it makes sense for in another setting, go for it. Very good training routine!
in a mil perspective, would it not be better to retain magazines? for LE, fine
@@humblenoob7631if you’re on a pistol (LE-primary/MIL-secondary) and you have slide-lock in the middle of a gun fight, who cares about maintaining the magazine. It’s survival. Break contact, seek cover, reassess.