Timestamps: 1:10 Tyler A - Is a 22LR conversion kit a good way to train with a full sized rifle? 2:04 Craig S - How "bad" are Vomz optics? 2:58 Andrew H - Would you rather have a 1911 or 1917 US revolver to defend yourself with? 3:28 KD Camp Bell (?) - Thanks for the content 3:41 Augustin D - Can there be gun legislation that makes both sides happy if logic is put to the task? 3:50 Matthew J - If you are going to be airdropped onto a desert island with nothing that you couldn't grab from your house within a ten minute notice, what would you be bringing? 4:37 RGB - Is field bullet casting and reloading of black powder cartridges a viable way to simplify resupply? 5:30 Tim K - Have you ever been to Custers Last Stand and would you ever do a deep dive into that battle? 6:27 Travis R - Mirrors Leg Rifle... Why? 7:30 G3 Jost - What is your favourite sandwich topping? 7:42 Where did you get your black full rimmed brim hat? 8:30 Garrett D - From a cowboy action shooting perspective, how do you feel about Marlen (?) being under Ruger ownership? Do you expect them to be competitive with other lever actions on the market such as Henry? 9:58 Timothy C - Why did the video of you shooting M855 and M855A1 against russian level 4 body armour plates become private and unviewable? 10:22 Gunner D - With your recent Fallout themed collaboration I have to ask: What faction of the fallout series would you align with or would you go at it alone? 11:28 Charles E - Whats your favourite way to enjoy eggs? 12:16 Owen S - When reading history, what are some common misconceptions that historians have about firearms that tend to bother you the most or stick out as the most prevalent? 14:21 Max J - What do you think prompted your interest in firearms as a force equalizer and as a defensive tool? 16:07 Vox - Outside of competition to do you see a practical use for a semiautomatic pistol caliber carbine that isn't already covered by an intermediate rifle caliber short rifle? PCC vs compact AR? 17:10 Hurk - Broadly speaking, who would enforce your proposed digital bill of rights and who would it be enforced upon? 20:15 Dandy Echo - How do you think firearms designs would have evolved if smokeless powder was never invented? 21:08 Bluejay - I just got a third generation glock 17 as my first handgun. The primary reason I picked it over other options is because of its after market support, customisability and modularity. Aside from an RDS any suggestions on upgrades? 22:39 Nyram - Thanks for all the great content. You often said that a modernized lever gun should have more going for it than just optics mounting and front end rails. Anything in particular you'd like to see? What would constitute a major upgrade for this kind of rifle? 23:54 Bear independent - Do you think we'll still have a constitutional representative republic by the end of the decade? 24:04 Daniel C - With 3D printers and print material getting cheaper have you had any interest in 3D printed firearms components? 24:46 Jared L - Do you think there would be a market for a reproduction M1 Garand in .223 that is also smaller in size, maybe same size as the .276 trials Garand? What would be a realistic MSRP? 25:59 John W - At 2gun ACM how do folks with 5.7 caliber pistols tend to do? 26:34 Maz - Do you find it difficult to keep all the knowledge needed for work, life etc in your head and if so how do you prioritize? 27:51 Edwin G - To become a true operator, should I combine tactical reloads with New York relaods, for example take 5 shots from my FN P90, throw that on the ground, then take out the next target with the SCAR17, throw that on the ground and then alternate using grenade launchers and throwing grenade launchers? 28:52 Jeremy the Headfox - In the past you've mentioned how the gun culture isn't exactly inclusive. What things would you change to make it a more welcoming space? 30:10 Alexander M - Now that you have possession of a Springfield Hellcat and the Shield MSRC for over a year and a half, what are your long term critiques of it and the red dot? 30:55 Brandon T - Ported barrels vs comped barrels on EDC guns? 31:49 Fatman Tactical - Do you go camping and if so would you do a video on it? 32:25 Norman H - I believe I've seen chest mounted pistol holsters banned at some events. Is this common and do you know why, I assume it's a safety issue? 33:55 Jimbo J - With reliable double action pepper boxes available in the 1830s, why did it take so long for reliable double action revolvers to become commercialy viable? 25:02 Jeff K - Is there a way to police the firearms training industry to prevent incompetent trainers? 36:15 Ryan - Being a native californian I've heard for years that the only reason the M14 is worse than the AR15 is due to the lack of support and development by the US military over the years. Do you think the deficiencies with the Mini are due to the lack of development or a simply subpar design? 37:35 Daniel S - Any chance of a comparison of oddball calibers against standard calibers on the spinner? 38:02 James B - Do you ever feel like taking a day or weekend to disconnect from the world and do some luddite LARPing? 38:20 Michael - Do you have any interest or have you ever considered doing content related to bladed and melee weapons particularly in regards to their use and advantages and disadvantages compared to firearms for defensive use? 40:10 John K - It is 1945 and you have to pick a service handgun and the high power is sadly unavailable. Where do you go next? 40:54 Andrew - Does there exist an InRange video that you've shot and edited but never posted? 41:06 Duke von Meep II - Do you think the concept of an offensive handgun like the Mk23 could make a comeback given modern technology and optics? 41:42 Jessie James - As of yesterday if you've been vaxxed you no longer need to wear a mask outside nationwide. How are you going to enforce those rules at your matches without crossing a line on people rights to go unvaccinated if they so choose and not check in their papers to enforce the mask / no mask rule? 44:11 Les Winner (guy from Polaris logistics) - It's been mentioned several times that the AKM is the standard use for the rifle portion of a 2g ACM brutality match and 1911 for a pistol. What would you say is the minimum for a DMR? 45:15 Carl V - Karl, you and Ian did a review of the KelTec RDB and liked it at the time. Do you still think it's a good bullpup rifle or do you consider it [unintelligible] now? If so, what changed your mind? 45:59 Michael M - Wisconsin recently designated May 14th as Hmong Lao Veterans Day. [...] What advice do you have for someone trying to learn about the events that were intentionally hidden for decades? 48:42 Owen - Do you have any thoughts about the Zapistas? Would you consider doing a video on their war with Mexico? 49:34 Prolapse Cranium - If the US army adopted lever guns, could you see the WW1 US army using Winchester 1895s or something similar and would that outcome delay the development of the Garand? 50:12 Eddie - What is your opinion on AR style rifles in unusual calibers? Any practical use or just a "range toy"? 51:18 Dick Burglar - Any chance we'll get some 10mm action in the FK BRNO? 51:42 Robert E - If I prefer the manual of arms, ergonomics, style and practice of modern double action revolvers and lever action PCCs over semi-autos, does that justify using the former for self- or home-defense or should I get with the times and learn to love semi's like glocks and ARs? 53:25 Aaron H - Any thoughts on the colonial pipeline ransomware hack? 54:08 Stanislaw - In recent black powder content you cautioned against loading directly from a powder flask. During the time period in which these devices were in standard use, way your advice standard practice [...]? 55:00 Lillie - In my discussions with others regarding my desire to get medical training I've heard opinions on restricting bands being superior to a tourniquet. What are your thoughts on this sentiment? 56:26 Robin V - Have you ever used an optical sight that was so bad that you would have preferred to use v-notch iron sights? 56:46 Martin M - Scoped on lever actions. What do you think? 57:07 Colin H - Were there any sort of speedloaders or other devices to assist with reloading cartridge pistols in the old west? 58:16 Timo G - For everyday carry would you rather have a single action but double stacked pistol or double action but single stacked pistol? 58:32 Paul J - Have you ever walked out of a film, concert or exhibition and if so why? 59:02 Oscar - Do you plan to mudtest the SLT trigger and recluse (?) fire control group in comparison with a milspec fcg? 59:25 Nick H - Have you heard of the [unintelligible] ghost town rebuilding project? Seems like an interesting topic for the old west? 1:01:22 Ryan S - Winter/mud triggers or removable trigger guards. Do you have a preference and why so? 1:01:50 Rumblestrip - Given that 99% of the people 99% of the time who have an LPVO run it at either minimum or maximum magnification, wouldn't something like what ELCAN does make more sense? 1:03:00 William F - I notice some of your older content such as your review of your masterpiece arms empar (?) 556 isn't available anywhere. Is there a reason? 1:04:09 Amon B - If you were choosing a carry gun in 1860 would you go with a colt army, navy or pocket model or would you choose something else? 1:05:03 Bill B - I love the KNM arms M17S in 308, I'm wondering if and when you'll be doing a review? 1:05:32 Patrick H - Karl, what models of italian reproduction revolvers should a beginner to cowboy action shooting be looking for or considering?
Thank you. Excellent job And now the corrections: 6:27 :Mare’s leg not mirrors 8:30 Marlin Wrong timestamp should be 35:02 not 25:02 59:25 Sierra Gordo 1:03:00 MPAR
Would just like to say that I like the series On Her Own. I think it’s important. The content is less polished and probably not as popular, but it’s worth putting out and should be supported.
Wholeheartedly agree! Polish can always come later, but it drives me crazy that a lot of "self defense" tips and advice out there, are completely unrealistic and unhelpful. While most of us subscribers have some interest in firearms/history/vignettes/tactics, women inherently are more vulnerable. As a guy in his mid-20s, it's disturbing how many horror stories my friends that are women have. As such having a series like "On Her Own" is something I feel much more comfortable sending to friends, than some former operator type going on and on about sheep dogs and rule of law. This community/hobby/field loves to use people as props and marketing tools, whether its minorities, military/LEO, women, etc. I feel hopeful that with your work/collaboration with "On Her Own" will inspire other content creators and new faces to talk more about personal security and self defense in a more civilian, applicable role!
I live on a Lakota reservation in South Dakota. I've held in my hands a lever action that was at Greasy Grass. No markings on it. I'm going to have to talk to my friend and get the details and some pictures. There is no love for Custer or the 7th Cavalry around here.
@@InrangeTv It will take me a bit of time but I've been planning on taking pictures and posting everything I can find out about it on your patreon. Stand by.
Why would there be? From all accounts, Yellowhair was a self-aggrandizing little equine cousin of a horse. And then there was the genocide being waged on the first peoples at the time..
Karl: haha, I will surprise everyone with an early morning upload. :-) Deviant: jokes on you, I'm in Eastern Europe so I've been awake for the entire day. :-)
@@DeviantOllam State Department? Everyone overseas thinks your CIA when you say your contracting for the State Department . Tell them you with the Department of Agriculture, nobody suspects those who contract with the cows and plows.
You should create a channel called "InRangeTV Archives." You post old videos there, taken down videos and other random crap. Horrible ideas like the trigger-activated light come to mind as archivable material. Think of it as a B roll channel. I also think you need a channel where you can shitpost professionally.
I've already suggested repeatedly to Karl that IRtv needs to be on Rumble as the only current option that stands a chance of breaking YTs monopoly. Put "acceptable" vids on YT with a pinned comment with the link to the full vid on Rumble. Guntubers will eventually all be banned from YT anyway, so start paving the way for the transition *now*...
@@Bruciando I think that's the wrong idea. YT is about sharing ideas and knowledge. It's frankly a nice platform to find content, but I hate the fact that they been trying to push firearms stuff out. Damn dude, I learned how to put together my first AR and FAL together from YT videos. We need to keep posting, educating and advocating, till they keep us, or throw us out.
I am not a chef, but I am a talented cook and the son of a chef... ...but for JUST a cold cut sandwich spread I like Miacle Whip. That said, I DO prefer mayo for most cooking applications.
About the camping question you got. Paul Harrel has seasonal specials on his channel where he basically just does camping and dutch oven cooking and they're some of my favorite videos from him.
As I'm sure you have seen already, Harrel just put out a 5 mistakes of wilderness survival video. Of course all 5 points are ego, and discipline related.
Karl, I think many of us would enjoy seeing your camping gear and techniques. Not wishing to interfere with your relaxation time, but I think it would be fun to get an informal glimpse of you kicking back in a different setting.
I'd be interested in a camping video if it was using historical old west gear. Maybe camp in a place where the pioneers spent a winter and show how they did it. Or gun focused in some way. Otherwise probably not for me.
Regarding the comment about how brandishing a gun can be a game changer: according to various studies, there are between 500,000 and 3 million defensive uses of a firearm in the US every year. It is safe to assume that, in self defense situations, a gun is brandished way more often than it is shot.
When people deride the effectiveness of a 22lr handgun, they're overlooking the uncountable times that just having *any* firearm dissuaded the nascent attacker...
@@Bruciando That is true, but if you have the option to carry something more potent than said .22 LR handgun, why would you opt for the .22? The way I see it is, if the .22 is all you have, it's better than nothing... usually. I add the "usually" because if that .22LR handgun leads you to feel be overly confident and to not avoid or deescalate potentially violent encounters, then it is worse than not carrying any firearm at all. To be fair, though, my point could be said of just about any firearm up to a .50 AE Desert Eagle, and it has far more to do with the psychology of the person than the firearm itself. To sum up, if a .22 LR handgun is all you can have, train with it to become very proficient and confident with your ability to place accurate shots even under stress. But if you can get something better, don't settle for a .22 LR handgun.
Wanted to comment on the 25:00 "incompetent trainer on the clock thing: In many sports the most capable athletes aren't always the best instructors or trainers themselves. And vice versa. The best instructors and trainers sometimes were "middle class" at best in their own active competing time as athletes. (Some are good at both, but they in my opinion aren't the majority.)
That's why a QB coach or Goalie coach is the successful guy, despite all of the shortcomings. Give me a goalie coach who's 5'6" and busted their butt to make it as far as they did... vs some 6'7" guy who was a seated wall 95% of the time.
Reminds me of the "Magic Johnson Effect" as Scott of Modern Samurai Project describes it. When Magic Johnson turned from player to coach, he was horrible. He came from a level of performance where he couldn't understand why everyone couldn't do a no look behind the back pass to someone else. Coming from a place of deficency does help trainers understand their student's issues and correct them more appropriately.
Per the Hmong/lao veteran question: Learning about MACV SOG will get you very far with regards to that history. MACV SOG was comprised of 70-80% indigenous personnel. They were Vietnamese, Hmong (commonly called "nungs"), or Montagnard tribesmen. ALERT, SHAMELESS PLUG INCOMING: I am doing lots of work with MACV SOG veterans who ran recon missions and grew incredibly close with their indigenous men. They tell stories about how the indigenous pilots and team members saved their lives over, and over again. Its a great way to access their history despite a significant language barrier. Thanks
If you’re not already in touch with them, look into the Vietnam Center at Texas Tech. They’ve been doing as much preservation of primary source interviews as they can manage for some time now, really interesting resource.
My thought on a possible solution for American companies moving over seas to avoid American rights. if over half of a company's assets, money, or infrastructure of the business is out side the U.S. and it's territories, that company is treated like a foreign entity.
Additional information regarding to the question at 45:59. I am Hmong American. I, too, am learning further in my family's immigration history. The largest population of Hmong Americans will be in Fresno, CA and the Twin Cities, MN. Particularly in MN, there are museums dedicated to Hmong history and culture pre, during, and post Secret War (Laotian region of the Vietnam War). Not to bash Karl's answer, as the Khmer Rouge was a real historical event. But I'd want to clarify a little more. As far as I know, no Hmong were involved the Khmer Rouge or located in Cambodia during that time. As I was told that most of my family and other Hmong fled from Laos to Thailand. We crossed the Mekong River to Thailand for safety, as that is the story that is generally told in newer generations of Hmong Americans. Perhaps Hmong settled in Cambodia after fleeing Laos but that would be more of post-Secret War era.
With regard to the Hmong question: there is a history of the Vietnam War from the Vietnamese perspective called “Fire in the Lake”, which may be of help. I read it years ago and can’t recall if it addressed the Hmong role with the American and ARVN armies. However, it is a quasi-scholarly work and may have a good bibliography. Also, declassified records of units can be a(n) (un)reliable source.
I can't decide if I like the Q&As or the Old West videos best. Very different but both are very engaging and thought provoking, a very dangerous thing.
Somehow I knew his answer before he gave it... that may very well be my favorite game, though I feel like Honest Hearts deserved to be more than just a DLC
@@jkf9765 Honest Hearts deserved to be much larger, but, same can be said of the other DLC :) Dead Money is IMHO, the best DLC/add on for any game *ever* and New Vegas is in top 5 games of all time (hard to chose between 'em, lol) oh to have the gameplay/graphics of Fallout 4 in New Vegas...and all the missing content restored etc....mmm!
And there's only one company making a mini M14 ish thing vs how many making ar15's and every other flavor of semi auto 5.56/.223.... And the mini has design flaws I'm not fond of despite 1 or 2 advantages over the AR. Tradeoffs.
My recollection of the origin of the mare’s leg’s popularity: Actor Steve McQueen (1930 - 1980) was known as “The King of Cool”. His character, Josh Randall, carried a mare’s leg as his sidearm in the popular (1958-1961) TV series “Wanted Dead or Alive.” After that show came out, all my buddies and I wanted one and at least one company (Mattel?) made a toy mare’s leg.
@@frankfisher99 Mare’s leg, in my adult opinion, was strictly a Hollywood gimmick. With so many TV westerns in the 50s, show creators needed ways to set their offerings apart from the herd.
Huh fascinating! As a younger guy in his mid-20s, I first saw the Mare's Leg in Zombieland (2009), comedy zombie movie, as Woody Harrelson's gun. I think we all know that anything "sawed off" is next to useless but Hollywood has a way of making us want impractical things haha! But your comment reminds me of why I think its stupid when certain gun folk scoff at video games or movies when it comes to firearms. Video games especially are how the younger generation learn about and access firearms. In my age bracket, I can guarantee that games like Call of Duty and Battlefield and shows and movies like Band of Brothers and Black Hawk Down, played a huge role in the interest of certain firearms. Sure Hollywood and media gets more things wrong about guns than they do right, but I think its important we address these gateways so we can steer younger folk in the right direction.
@@frankfisher99 I just like that they have super short barrels from the factory so you can put a full stock on it and make a very short carbine. Way easier than cutting a full-size lever gun down.
@@CHPMP5 I don't know what you're suggesting people do. Yes, a lot of us do scoff at the use of guns in creative media, because media will always choose excitement over accuracy. Filmmakers are always more interested in plot and visual appeal, and game designers are more interested in balance and game mechanics (video games have generally come a lot further than filmmakers, though). They never seem interested in how physically difficult it is to carry 500 rounds of rifle ammo, or how many seconds of full auto fire you can get from a 30-round M4 mag.
@@zacharyrollick6169 I wouldn't hold my breath on the caliber. However, that'd at least be nicer on account of the magazine being internal and Mosin-Nagant stripper clips being much less expensive than BLR magazines. At that point, why not go for a reproduction in the likes of .30-06? I'd think the caliber (and perhaps the stripper clips, too) would at least be a bit easier to come by (at least in the U.S.). Certainly easier to reload for, if you do that. And you could tone down the 30-06 to the somewhat lower pressures of 7.62x54mmR if you wanted a similar experience in regard to recoil.
I thought of that too. Plus, there may actually be a market for such a rifle, as it would be legal (at least for a while) in those states that have magazine limits.
For camping content, I'd be interested in the parts unique to Arizona. I live in a much less "extreme" environment, so I would be curious to see what's needed to be safe and comfortable in the heat and dust and such.
Fascinating as always - I do enjoy hearing your thoughts about such a huge variety of topics and would like to thank you for your content which I always enjoy. P.S. Was I the only one wondering if Karl was going to burst into flames if/when the sun reached him?? ;-)
Per the camping video, I personally would like it purely for my inability to travel and see places. So seeing places where you, Karl, are able to go camping - footage of the area, maybe some small-town trivia of a particular campsite, local wildlife - would be really neat imo. I realize how difficult capturing footage while driving is, practically speaking, but maybe footage of the open space that you can drive through? The idea makes me think back to one of your older Q&As with Ian, on your way back from Hard As Hell 2017. I remember absolutely _loving_ the scenery behind you both on the bridge, and while I acknowledge that a camera doesn't quite do it justice vs seeing it in person, it's still a video I personally would enjoy.
Ex Army Medic here. 100 percent correct. Sof-t or CAT preferred, avoid bands. Place 2 inches from the wound or joint, and if necessary on a large area, like a thigh, apply a 2nd tourniquet. Bands are for blood draws and ivs at best.
On speed loading, considering many people were still using cap and ball percussion revolvers in the Old West, a break top cartridge revolver must have seemed super fast.
Republish. Low quality is way better than no quality. People will complain, who cares. Sharing the info is more important than ensuring that everyone is happy with the video quality.
A monthly or quarterly Kamping with Karl sounds pretty fun, not gonna lie 😂 Though I can understand the purpose of camping is relaxing so nobody here could blame you if you didn’t feel like bothering with it 🤷♂️
About camping videos, I think generally seeing how different people approach seperate aspects of camping (food, warmth, safety, etc.) is very interesting, and also getting to experience camping/outdoors through someone else, in areas we can't get to, is always going to be at least somewhat interesting.
Regarding the first year of InRange content, I'd say upload them to the channel as private videos accessible via public playlist. Couple with a short public vid to say "hey, this is here now"
Back twenty years ago when I was an EMT common practice for a tourniquet was to make what is today considered a constricting band or improvised tourniquet, and only to use them as an extreme last resort measure because of the risk of permanent damage or death (from sepsis) they could cause. With modern tourniquets even including the SWAT-T this is much less likely and has made them more effective and often used.
I think it would be interesting seeing you take on camping in the style of a Rancher/settler of the 1850s-1880s. In looking at the equipment and tools they had and how you think they fair against more modern equipment and approaches to camping
As far as the camping goes I think it would be interesting seeing where you suggest going, what you carry(gear, favorite foods,etc) and maybe what you enjoy most about canping
Yeah! Been yrs since I did any camping, but, occasionally, like to see vids on how some would pitch camp. Some who spend hours building forts are unrealistic, to me. How one selects a site or makes best of less than optimal loci. What is your minimalist carry? As a backpacker or packanimal or ATV, maybe?
I'd adore some "Kampfire with Karl" videos where we're told scary stories about the areas you're camping in. Videos don't necessarily have to be about firearms, you're just interesting to listen to in general, particularly about topics you're passionate about. Also I think I remember you talking about cryptids in the tacticool girlfriend interview and that'd be cool to hear about, particularly lesser known local legend ones.
@InRangeTV Definitely make some wilderness survival/camping videos. Maybe show us your daypack/kit (i.e. bare essentials), how to pack minimally for a 3-5 day camping trip, how to improvise shelter, alternative ways to start fires, etc. I'm going to study abroad in Scotland in the Fall with some friends and we will be camping very frequently in Northern Scotland far away from wifi, electricity, and human interaction. For those reasons, info like this is extremely crucial. I'd rather get advice from you than sellout channels that advertise gimmecky products.
I can not recommend visiting the Little Bighorn battle ground enough! The fact that the headstones are where the bodies were found and the archeology around them is amazing. I do advise going in the summer and in the Covid era I don’t know how the story telling will be but having the rangers and natives tell the story while you are overlooking the site on a warm day is an experience!!!
Catching up after a rough couple of weeks. Per Vox's question on 'What use is a PCC compared to a short intermediate rifle?' I see a LOT of people ask Karl this question or some variation on it. Always seeming to be somewhat leading, with the goal of "please proclaim this thing I don't like as useless so I can feel vindicated". I would posit, instead, that for an average home defense/civil defense user, a PCC is no worse than an SBR and comes with a number of upshots. 9mm is (usually...) easier to obtain and practice with than rifle calibers, and as Karl noted a well-designed PCC is quieter and has less recoil than an equivalent 5.56 SBR. PCCs are also less restricted legally, for states where that matters, and some of them have beneficial design elements you can't really do with a rifle. My Beretta CX4 Storm, for example, has the magazines load through the pistol grip, like a pistol, allowing Beretta to shorten the overall gun without sacrificing barrel length or getting into SBR territory - and thus also mandating an expensive, rights-infringing tax stamp that grants the government permission to monitor you against your will. The advantages of a short intermediate rifle are - theoretically - better range and better ballistics at range. If neither of those edges are considered crucial, such as the case for a short-range defensive carbine intended for use against unarmored targets? Why dismiss the PCC out of hand when it can fulfill the task perfectly adequately?
On the older vids, maybe start a second channel, call it something like "Inrange TV: Archives" and just use it to drop all the old stuff from the archives.
Hi Karl, NYC Paramedic here, I suspect the author was confused about the advocation of constricting bands for snake bites or starting IVs. In terms of bleeding control and especially for massive extremity hemorrhage in which case tourniquet is indicated a constricting band is most definitely NOT a good idea and is most likely to INCREASE blood loss. When we apply a Venous Constricting Band (often wrongly called an "IV tourniquet" we are allowing arteries to continue to pump blood further along the limb while restricting the venous flow back to the heart, this causes veins to distend and become easier to see/feel and obtain access in. Although the main concern in extremity hemorrhage is arterial bleeding there is collateral circulation from other intact arteries that can be lost through disrupted veins and that loss will be increased. Much like we say that an improperly tightened tourniquet is worse than doing nothing so is a constricting band. Some items used as constricting bands might be able to be fashioned into a tourniquet but a purpose built tourniquet is preferred. For wounds a tourniquet isn't required for direct pressure and pressure dressings remain the standard of care. HTH! Keep up the great work!
18:13, some very true words spoken, in fact I think Karl would have made a great role as the " Architect " in the Matrix film. Please carry on the excellent work Karl. All the very best from Eryri, North Wales. Iechyd Da.
Speaking of " Mare's Legs ", I always thought it was hilarious to see Steve Mcqueen with a Mare's Leg strapped to his side and in the bullet loops on his pistol belt he was carrying 45/70 rounds, haha. If that Mare's Leg was chambered in 45/70 it could probably only load two rounds. The gun he carried was actually chambered in 44/40 I believe and the tubular magazine held five rounds.
Regarding the Muong people, many of the Muong refugees that were resettled in the United States was done by the Special Forces Association. The SFA has a lot of information about the experiences of the Muong (and Lao) during the Vietnam War.
That story of your opinion on guns is something I relate to: In 2015, I was robbed at gun point at a store by some gangster with a tec-9. The whole time afterward, my parents (mom specifically) complained that the guns themselves should be banned. I went the other direction. Got my first hand gun late 2020 because circumstances were such that I couldn't purchase it earlier. That said, I've never been happier with my choice. It's reassuring
Good as always. I just want to mention that I think too many people downplay the simple act of showing a firearm to deter a would be criminal. My brother had a guy follow him across an empty parking lot. After my brother warning him twice, he drew his .357 from his belt and the guy turned around and walked away.
I would love to see more lever-action shotguns. I can shoot a pump gun just fine, but a lever gun (like my Rossi Model 92) is just more intuitive for me.
In Australia there pretty popular because pumps are cat c, much harder to get There's a few modern brands Adler being a big one, they have both detachable and tube mags
Until Karl gets there, there is a very informative walking tour where is a guy walks around and explains all the little skirmishes where all the bodies were found what was going on where and there's a nice lead up to it as well as a whole series of videos. I really wish I could remember the guy's name but if you search for it you should find it I'd still be interested to see Karl's take on it but that should get you by
Studying a quite history-related discipline at university, the most irritating thing to me is how little credit “non-gun historians” give to the transition from black powder to smokeless powder and its impact on wars. It’s like the main reason why 19th century tactics were obsolete in ww1...
"Go it alone" trope in post-apocalypse game tropes completely ignores 1 physiological fact: our eyes cannot watch our backs and have difficulty, in some, seeing too far to sides.
Here's my important time stamps 0:00 - Starts 1:08:21 - End There you go. This took me a long time! Thank you so much people who put in the effort to timestamp these things, you're doing god's work (obviously not focused on any religion here, so please do not be offended. You're badass).
Karl, you and C&Rsenal are the only gun people I still support on Patreon. I've never submitted a question for your Q&A but I would love to see you do a camping video. As for "Why?" please watch a Steve Wallis video. We can learn from your thoughtfulness at experience. Thank you again for what you do.
My $0.02 about loading/not loading directly from the powder flask: people nowadays tend to have much higher safety standards than they did centuries ago. It's worth considering that a lot of things that people were ok with (e.g. lead paint in children's toys, playing American football in just leather helmets, driving automobiles without seatbelts) are rightfully considered woefully unsafe and even unacceptable nowadays. It's also worth considering that life expectancy in developed countries tends to also be much higher than it was back in those days. That said, I do believe there are times when loading directly from the flask could be the safer option, and it indeed was back in the day... but that was on the battlefield, when the risk of a stray spark igniting the powder flask in your hand would have been somewhat outweighed by the risks of getting shot, bayoneted, slashed, or trampled if you couldn't reload your weapon rapidly enough to get off the next shot before the unfriendly fellow wearing the wrong colours did something unpleasant to you. It's kind of like how even in the modern military, certain things that may be considered unsafe or undesirable on the training ground are somewhat acceptable on the battlefield. Of course, you probably (and hopefully) won't be relying on a muzzle-loader nowadays in a gunfight, so it can pay to take the bit of extra time and inconvenience to be safe, I feel.
I'd love to see a Karl goes camping video. I think the details of equipment and planning that goes into desert excisions would be interesting and offer a totally different experience than my personal experience out in the temperate woods. Also, please upload those older videos at 480! Inrange came out of the gate with a ton of fantastic content that I'd love to revisit. There's good information and entertainment to be had there, and I think the inrange community is intelligent enough to understand that those are essentially reuploads from the good old days! Now, excuse me while I try to find a SA revolver to carry... that ruger in the thumbnail and on the right side of the table was tempting me throughout the entire video.
I didn't see that it was an hour long video, so. Smashed the Pause button, fixed some bacon and eggs and then came back and smashed that Play button. Morning well spent!!!
I did my own WWSD build, I have a Ciener conversation kit that is 25+ yrs old. I put a 14.5 Ballistic Advantage 223wyld on it. Ran 500 rounds no problem.getting ready for Apple seed.
Have to interject about the half-way mark: yes, camping video would be awesome. You have a natural way of presenting yourself, you are very I suppose 'conversational' in your tone. Rather blog-worthy honestly. So to combine that demeanor and apparent drive to explain things, perspective, etc. with camping and some/all the skills and gear around it, would be awesome...nearly ASMR worthy IMO
As far as the 21:50 mark about the glock triggers: this obviously isn’t the experience for ever trigger but you do have to be careful. I had what will be an unnamed trigger that is supposed to take up the break on the trigger and all that happened was it would make 2-3 shots rapid fire randomly no matter how much control you had over things. I put the bar in and went to the range and had to RO come out and get angry for burst firing. I explained what I changed and they took a few shots with the same result. Told me it wasn’t allowed and warned me against aftermarket parts. I’ve been a lot more careful since.
On the subject of you camping, I believe that would be interesting as well. Perhaps an "old west" historically accurate camping trip would be more in line with the other topics on this channel, but that's just my opinion. Awesome vid, thanks for the content.
i'd find that neat. There's a number of things he could do with a camping vid, I feel. I'm personally just interested in the scenery and maybe the kit he has, but ultimately whatever comes out of it is something I'll watch and enjoy to at least some degree.
Carl, the camping content we are looking for is from the perspective of a medium experience outdoorsman running into an experienced outdoorsman. We are capable on our own, but still willing to learn from people that have been there and done that... If you will.
@@Deterrent-xz5zz Taylor's and Co. Sells both BP an conversion cylinders for the major brands like pietta and uberti, I have a 45lc cylinder for my Rodgers and Spencer made by euro arms, picked it up last year.
For the old Full30 content, I think a good way to upload it would be to have the videos unlisted, but in a playlist with a single new video or even just a community post to direct people to it.
Great content - mahalo. One note; when you referred to your take on a digital Bill of Rights you mentioned ISP's moving out of "CONUS" to avoid any U.S. said Bill of rights. The two other non-CONUS States as well as the 5 U.S. Territories would also be covered by any U.S. jurisdiction. Aloha
Just gonna say, I believe a Mares leg has a benefit that most rifle-to-pistol things do *in the US*. And that is, it's usually easier to add a stock than to properly cut a barrel, if one wishes to SBR their contraption.
Some fun questions this time! Love the pepper box video, would love to see some content focusing on historical shooting TACTICS. How was cover/concealment, movement, positioning, and overall deployment of force different in the age of pre auto loading firearms?
A video on camping would be great. You should do a parody of YT bushcraft videos haha But in all seriousness everyone has different camping traditions, ideas, and tricks. It’s always cool to see different peoples style. I’m all about the old canvas gear and Kapok/wool Bags, for car camping at least.
Karl, here are my thoughts regarding possible camping videos. We could see what gear you use when camping, enjoy the scenery that you’re seeing, and pick up insights from your experiences. However, this would certainly add to your gear loadout when camping and make the trip a work and play event instead of being an enjoyable luddite opportunity to get away from it all. While it would be cool to “Go camping with Karl.” I totally would totally understand if you didn’t add this to your list of greatly entertaining and informative projects for this channel.