00:00 Intro 01:30 Lynx Brutality 2024 06:45 PSR History 11:20 Building skills for Brutality matches 13:40 Improving shooting skills 14:50 Grip and anticipation 17:40 Slow is smooth 20:45 Ian's Favorite stage Lynx 2024 22:25 Shooter accountability 24:00 Ian's ultimate stupid 25:50 Tactical vs Competition 31:00 Train as you fight 35:15 Shooting pistol in competition vs real life 36:30 Force on force 40:00 Shooting positions 43:40 Military in competition and vice versa 44:30 Force on force p2 46:45 Negotiating a chair 48:00 Salty Liquorice 49:15 Subway Robot 52:35 Uvalde 55:40 Someone who is interested in LEO/MIL 1:01:30 Q/A PSR 1:07:00 Bullet energy 1:12:00 3D printing 1:23:20 Law's and fines 1:28:39 Q/A Ziga 1:31:40 Doing dumb stuff 1:33:40 Dogs and ATF 1:37:10 Training 1:49:20 MOA Challenge 1:58:40 Q/A Ian 2:06:40 Drug laws
Dryfire for the win. I’ve won competitive matches after only shooting .22 pistols for a year, (same as you, new children who don’t let me sleep). It was 3 gun and 2 of the three guns were borrowed, and the pistol hadn’t been shot in 4-5 years. (Dry fire almost every night for the week leading up, but again only pistol).
Ziga makes a very good point at 30:00 about how rifles/pistols are not the main weapon of the military. I spent 4 years overseas and never fired my weapon in anger. I sure used my radio though. Not to say that individual skill with small arms is not important for the military, but it is not the MOST important.
@@PolenarTactical I know that these days you can get radlers/shandies with something like 3.5% ABV, but having mainly grown up in the UK I still think of them as 0.5% ABV soft drinks that kids can buy, so the idea of somebody taking a long time to drink one because they aren't used to alcohol is quite funny to me.
nice to see the worlds axis powers sit down and talk it out, and in a elementary school library by the looks of those chairs. amazing times we live in.
@@jason200912 Canada, ''little town'o'bethlehem'' and Ukraine. i think Z brought his good luck gimp. and this aint twitter, no matter how hard you try and bait me id never say something stupid like north Korea or China, or the prime minister of Malasia , Malaisia or however its fkn spelled , idk too easy. so, ....im going with the dooshbags to the south, Canada so..... ''you go now'' yu-been here for-awah!!!!!
As a comp shooter of 10 yrs, i can tell you that training and gun discipline WILL help you in any situation, the stress of competition helps deal with staying cool under pressure, any kind of pressure. Dumping hundreds of rounds as opposed to IPSC or UDPA which allows for instant critique
I agree mostly, except not everyone reacts the same when it's real and someone might not ever go home. I was pretty confident too, highest scorer on yearly quals, trained hard and often, and still froze like a $2 popsicle for a second or two the first time I actually had a suspect at gunpoint. It's not run and gun John Wick when lives are at stake and bullets go both ways.
Any trigger time will make you more likely to prevail in a real world defensive encounter, but IDPA is designed specifically to mimic defensive encounters while remaining *accessible* to the general shooting public.
@@edm240b9 same here. I'm from the midwest and my wife's from the North Shore. She didn't want to move back to MA, thankfully, so we're up in the live free or die state, within a short drive to her fam. Just don't Mass it up while you're here!
This was a good talk guys, cheers 🍻 Some points of pros/ cons (or benefits/ downfalls) to competition shooting as applied to the exigent or defensive situation and conflict/ combat world-- Pros/ Benefits: - Escalating fundamental skills and accuracy emphasis - Variable situation dynamics application (if the events are good) - Hard-testing of your arms and equipment - General factor that is is training, just a different way/ means, and good exercise with some stress application Cons/ Downfalls: - A battlefield or defensive situation is a 360 degree spectrum, competition is much more limited - Timed events are the opposite of combat (save for very specific tier-1 operations as the exception) or a defensive situation, you have the rest of your life to figure things out-- and to quote a wise man who served in Somalia, "nothing ever takes 5 minutes" - Courses of fire on the flipside are too predictable compared to combat or defensive situations, besides the assistance of ISR and GEOSINT, the battlespace is largely unknown and the threat/ enemy has a say in the nature of the fight - There is very little to no application of physical defensive tactics (such as combatives) for everyday defensive situation training or nuanced crossover
At 45:00 Ian is right. Unless you're training daily with the guys you're kicking the door down with, you're gonna get shot. You're definitely not doing it alone either.
I mean, I guarantee you Ian has SOME politics, but yeah him not letting it color his videos to the best of his ability is quite a strength. There is a time and place for that stuff, but with the focus his channel takes I think it's okay to leave it by the door, so to speak.
Thanks for taking the time to do this. Quite enjoy seeing you doing your normal videos but also just hangin with the bros in a more relaxed environment. No one cared who I was till I put on the mask. -PSR
Regarding the title of the video, i would say competition shooting makes u much more capable in a self defense situation in the streets, even more than it would in in a warzone. In a war its more about who's ready first rather than fastest, but in the streets u can't just draw your firearm every single time you get suspicious of someone, so speed matters more.
I started shooting doing more tactical oriented shooting, this was my base level starting from no experience. Because i liked the shooting and moving aspect, i started to do IPSC so i could keep practicing that aspect. Now still doing IPSC and liking it more and more, i also still do tactical courses. And i definitly see a benefit of doing both, coming from tactical shooting and already used to shooting while moving a bit. It helped a lot doing my first competitions when seeing new competition shooters who are not used to that. Doing competitions more, it also helps with tactical shooting in looking where you are going, keeping an eye on the target, getting in position to have a solid base to shoot. like Ian said also, just being comfortable moving around in different positions with a pistol or gun, while running and or reloading is something from competition that transfer very well to tactical. Tactical moving is most of the time even way easier because you only have to go temple index instead of keeping the 180 in mind. There are a lot of details that transfer over back and forth and can compliment each other. The biggest detail that is different in IPSC that doesnt really transfer over, is playing the game more to get a good score. Its not all about just shooting A zone. Which is something i have to keep in mind because when i started i was being "to accurate" , which gives you a lot of A's but a less overall score. 😅
Same here, i was 8th overall in the match but won the "most accurate" award :D IPSC is awesome because it has (in my opinion) one of the best scoring systems around - you have to hit the target but also be super fast. It just pushes you to improve on your skills
I like competition shooting and it is certainly a beneficial form of training, but IMO tactical training (with your edc/duty pistol) is more beneficial. How many people EDC a competition pistol here in the U.S.? I would bet not many do.
It's sorta funny when Ian speaks with people here, he looks at the camera, like he does with his videos. Ofc not constantly but he looks at the camera way more than the other people. edit: this be not a bad thing to do.
The ATF and dogs meme comes from Ruby Ridge and Waco. Th Ruby Ridge standoff started when the US Marshall's shot Randy Weaver's dog without identifying themselves and Randy's son Sammy shot back at them. They were staking out Randy Weaver because he didn't show up in court after an ATF informant entrapped him into selling sawed off shotguns. At the beginning of the Waco raid The ATF shot the Branch Davidians' dogs that were in a fenced in pen they had a team that was specifically assigned to do that.
Electrical Discharge Machining uses sparks, Electro-Chemical Machining uses electrolysis. Both amazing processes, but the one being discussed here is ECM.
One correction for Ian, regardless of lying on a background check, possession of firearms is prohibited by illegal users of controlled substances. They're in the same class as felons.
Shoutouts to @gunrobot for making PractisimVR, the VR training tool they're talking about. Dude's a GM open shooter in the pacific northwest and a very talented competitor.
Do you know him? Tell him that we love the game but would be very happy if he could make a couple of upgrades to the graphics and update some stuff. We would even be prepared to pay for the patch/upgrade
Felons can vote depending on local laws in each state! In some states they can vote while incarcerated. In other states only after they serve their time. With many variations of the theme in between.
Yes The whole livestream can now be exclusively seen on Weaponsandwar.tv, a streaming service that Ian created. One way to watch it is if you are a subscriber there but it's also available for separate purchase for $0.99 www.weaponsandwar.tv/checkout/lynx-brutality-2024/purchase You are probably the first one to get the link as Ian hasn't announce this publicly yet 😅
Enjoying the video! Suggestion; maybe History of Weapons can do a grand collaboration with Pepperbox TV to make a Texas Brutality at the new range at Demo Ranch so the Nine Hole Review guys could camp out with their families and finally attend a brutality?
I work at a research facility where the army tests out new manufacturing technology. If you have about $600,000 you could buy a Phillips hybrid. It prints metal shapes out of welding wire and 5 axes mills them into finished parts all in one machine. It could absolutely manufacture a edc firearm. ive been dying to make a custom slide for my 1911 but my boss wont let me.
On the subject of dogs and the ATF, it doesn't help that in Ruby Ridge and Waco the first shots fired seemed to be to kill the dogs. Even if somebody doesn't like dogs, police entering a situation and shooting is an immediate escalation that it's very hard to de-escalate from
As a bullet caster the 8.6 is cool but I’m not sure if a 1/3 would work with a coated cast bullets would likley spin them apart I know with 6,5 Swede that’s a 1/8 the concenous of 1500/1600 fps being the rpm limit. For me I like to save the money on boolets.
Psr .. Keep the mask on. I think it's cool. Its the only reason i clicked on this video. Bc i recognized you from the thumbnail. Also that was an interesting conversation to listen to.
You are correct combat will not necessarily make one a great competition shooter but combat will make one better at combat. So do I want to go into combat with the best competition shooter or a sof guy who had 3 deployments in the gwot? I will take the sof guy.
Goes without saying mate, but would you rather (if u had to) go into a gun fight with somebody who does a bit of plinking in his backyard, or somebody who shoots 10,000 rounds a year in training and matches, what would be your choice then
RE: 2:05:15 Felon right to vote & bear arms it is my understanding that they will return your right to vote after a set time(after finishing probation?), but you never get your 'right to bear arms' returned (not without a full Pardon that wipes the felony out of existance completely, and has to come from a signed doc by the State Gov or Fed President)... even for the "Lowest category" of felony (which would be something like being convicted of "possession of ... whatever"). Shows you how much voting actually means there, eh?
"I didnt make the the barrel I didn't heat treat the bolt" neither do most peope who 3d print. It's pretty much buy parts and print the reciever and maybe some other small parts.
2:01:48 In the UK, any air rifle with a muzzle energy of more than 12 ft.lbf (6 ft.lbf for pistols) is regulated as a firearm, so there's zero advantage in terms of 'getting around the law'. And if you're unfortunate enough to live in Scotland, even that sub-12 ft.lbf air rifle requires a licence that is more-or-less the same as the one needed for a shotgun in terms of application process and restrictions.
Ugh, I'm going to sound like a fud but here goes. The problem with subsonics like the 8.6 at 300 - 400 yards isn't lethality. It's trajectory and time to target. yes you can have your range finder and kestral and all that but in the real world, animals move and winds gust. I think Mark from markandsameafterwork said it best. 1/2 second time of flight is as far as you should ever shoot an unwounded animal. ps I hunt with a .58 1863 repro during muzzleloader season so I like subsonic and it works, but I keep my shots to ~80 yards.
As a guntuber, and a printer at that, it's best to limit exposure. Maybe eventually?? But honestly Admin copped out (heh). It's megabased to stay anonymous as you can on the Internet, and his personality and content speaks all for itself. You reckon he'd be your raifu-waifu femboy or something? Haha Love PSR he's coming up near the top for me as of late, especially without mega cringe "dad humor" that's just Theocratic Conservatism values posed as jokes.
The best training i have done was basically a physically draining course that removed my fine motor stills due to fatigue. It was not fun. It sucked. And it was good training.
And what? Ukraine suddenly will have a president that takes his job very seriously, knows how to set up small arms production and has no friends among oligarchs, whom he'd protect? Oh no, _what a horror..._