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View Full Version : What is the best practical military training you've had?



shooter31
09-09-2009, 03:33 PM
Lets get a couple of different services represented here.

What's the best types of shooting you've done in military and/or law enforcement training?

mdroz3
09-10-2009, 12:06 AM
does boot camp count???? not to much small arms fire on a submarine.

JustinN
09-15-2009, 08:22 PM
I always thought our best training in my police academy and continuing training hours came from sims round training on building searches or practical exercises. There is something to be said for having to use your weapon and use it accurately when someone is actually shooting back. Paper targets are very easy to shoot, even with tactical movements and all, but once that target starts moving and thinking it changes the ball game....

johnh
09-15-2009, 09:46 PM
I agree with that. The ball game is entirely different. Modern LEO and military training has made enormous strides in that over the last two decades. Many years ago when I had what little shooting training was required to be a reserve police officer, we spent so little time at the range shooting paper only that I think it may have confused many new shooters more than helped. Whatever you do when shooting targets, get lots of ammo and shoot, shoot, shoot the pistol you will carry. Spend time shooting in different ways, at different targets, under different conditions. I have not spent the time I would like shooting competitions, but USPSA and IDPA matches should not be underrated as useful experience for civilian shooters. You get to practice various important skills under stress, and also stress your gear assuming you shoot what you carry. The old adage that if something can go wrong, it will in a match is certainly true based on my limited experience.

:D

John

500KV
09-16-2009, 01:07 PM
I think the most practical thing I learned in the military was the fact that you can't drink enough 3 percent beer to get a buzz.

kpm9
09-27-2009, 07:58 AM
I think the most practical thing I learned in the military was the fact that you can't drink enough 3 percent beer to get a buzz.


I haven't heard that in a loooong time.
lol

.45mac.40
09-29-2009, 09:34 PM
:D
500KV 3.2 Beer ?? Yeah ... just alittle better than water ..!
The most practical thing I learned in the Military (( after I did it once )) was to NEVER VOLUNTEER !
The best/worse practical exercise I've ever had with the Military and/or shooting was back in 1966-1967

1 Bn (Airborne Inf.) 12th Cav. ( 1/12 Cav. )
1st Cav. Div. (An Khe)
RVN

I to this day, still like tha' M16s (AR15 - BLACK rifles) :D

Mac

Canine Dave
01-24-2021, 05:44 PM
1966 Lackland AFB. Qualifying with an M-16, needed 60 hits on a target as big as a barn door. My score was 63 (Kid next to me from New Jersey kept shooting my target).

AJBert
01-24-2021, 07:19 PM
The Navy taught marksmanship on both long and short arms. The Army wasn't concerned with marksmanship, just that you could hit the target. The Army was pretty good a teaching kicking down doors and taking out the bad guys, though.

BirdsThaWord
02-15-2021, 04:51 PM
In bootcamp we shot some sort of rifle, which I forget, and the training was brief. I severely doubt that anyone walked away with anything that would last or help. What I do remember, was how to turn a shirt, pair of dungarees, etc into a float if you find yourself having to tread water for long. I’ve shared that with multiple people over the years. I did do some trading with our Mardet guys when on the “Chucky V” (CVN-70) and got to shoot some floating barrels with a 50. Might not fit in the practical sense, but that was fun I will also always remember! : )

O'Dell
02-16-2021, 01:52 AM
Plebe year at the USNA. During the two month plebe summer before academic year started, we spent time at a Marine Corp range across the Severn River from the Academy proper. I had a chance to qualify both expert rifle and expert pistol with Marine instructors. We qualified with the M-1 and the Colt 1911. Plus we fired M-1 Carbines, 30 cal Browning MG's, BAR's, the new M15 rifle, which became the M-14. After plebe summer, I experienced the hardest nine months of my life. Hazing back then wasn't the cakewalk it is today. Every plebe didn't have his congressman on speed dial. Although physical hazing wasn't permitted [HA], I spent ten days at Bethesda with a head injury after one incident.

AJBert
02-17-2021, 12:37 AM
I got stationed at a SpecWar command as the Maintenance Officer for one of my three shore duty stations in Mississippi the was a training school for foreign militaries. One of the classes that were taught there firearms maintenance. Somehow the armory fell under me, still haven't figured that one out. Anyway, there was only one Gunner's Mate at the command who kept up the armory and taught the classes. Being as we only had foreign students we had to have the firearms that their militaries used. We also had to carry the ammo for these firearms as the students went out and shot after tearing the various firearms to ensure everything worked the way it was supposed to.

So, every time we got new firearms in the GM and myself took it upon ourselves to go to the range and "test fire" every one of them. The XO called me into his office one day and questioned why we felt we needed to do this. Being as I was an LDO (went from enlisted straight to officer without having to go through OCS) I carefully explained to him that I could not in good conscience allow a student to fire a weapon that had not been thoroughly tested by myself and the GM. He questioned that, and we went back and forth for about 15 minutes until he finally conceded.

Needless to say, we shot a LOT when there wasn't much going on. I can't fathom how many thousands of rounds we went through in my short time there (less than two years) but we sure had a lot of fun!

BirdsThaWord
02-17-2021, 07:26 AM
AJBert: What a great gig you had going! Part of me would think, “hey, that’s on the tax payers dollar”, but it is quite alright when you think of how much $ was just given to gender studies in Pakistan, or how much tax money has been given to the BLM and other “special” interest groups.

Bawanna
02-17-2021, 10:07 AM
Exactly, if you don't spend it, somebody else will. Sadly nobody treats tax payer money or company money like their own now days. I get kind of hot when a doctor or dentist (another of my greatest fears) get stalled when I ask how much something cost. Their response is usually you have insurance, you don't have to worry. Well that's exactly the reason insurance cost so much.

Canine Dave
02-17-2021, 01:45 PM
O.P. M. = Other peoples money.

HSparrow
12-20-2022, 11:43 AM
Expect the unexpected and when the suck happens deal with it.

kenemoore
12-20-2022, 09:16 PM
I was a Machinist Mate on Tin Cans, worked down in the Engine room, hotter than hell. The biggest thing I learned was ****. (Read the F**king Manual). I have had to figure out the solution to many problems in the real world where the manuals were my only asset.

BirdsThaWord
12-20-2022, 09:55 PM
I was a Machinist Mate on Tin Cans, worked down in the Engine room, hotter than hell. The biggest thing I learned was ****. (Read the F**king Manual). I have had to figure out the solution to many problems in the real world where the manuals were my only asset.
Me too! Got 130 degrees down in “the hole” in the Persian Gulf. Was also a fire fighting team leader at GQ. Had heat exhaustion fighting a small bilge fire due to the temps and gear I had on.
I don’t think I woulda ever been a hot rodder/drag racer and amatuer ‘smith were it not what I learned from being an MM.

dao
12-20-2022, 10:42 PM
And your affinity for polishing guns to a high degree of shine came from swabbing the deck? :D

BirdsThaWord
12-20-2022, 11:15 PM
And your affinity for polishing guns to a high degree of shine came from swabbing the deck? :D
You’re not wrong! When I was the Leading Petty Officer, we got many awards for having the brightest floors on inspections. I was on the Admiral’s “flagship”, so I learned how to strip & wax those floors like nobody’s business. They were always gleaming. Lol! Realistically though, my dad was a carpenter/handyman. I worked by his side many times. He took pride in his work. He said to me many times that, “your name is on this job”, and “if you are going to do it, do it right, or don’t do it at all”. Sadly, I think those concepts are a thing of the past. At least for the majority.

Bawanna
12-21-2022, 10:00 AM
Sadly, now days instead of doing it right, it's been replaced with good enough. There are still perfectionist out there but don't seem to be as many of them.

BirdsThaWord
12-21-2022, 10:08 AM
Agreed!