JWR & HJL,
Below is my review of the MVT Combat Rifle Skills that was held at MVT Romney. As with the Defensive Concealed Handgun class that I attended in early 2017, I was greatly encouraged and motivated by the class. Again, thank you both for what you do!
Past Experience
I attended the Defensive Concealed Handgun class at MVT Romney in 2017. I greatly benefited from the well thought-out, deliberate, and detailed training I received at that class. One of the attendees of that class had attended the Combat Rifle Skills that had been held earlier in 2017. He was quite enthusiastic in his evaluation of the training he received. I determined then and there to figure out a way to take the Combat Rifle Skills class in 2017. I was encouraged as it was taught by the same instructor (Scott David) who taught the Defensive Concealed Handgun class. The training I received there was exceptional.
The Course
I had little experience with a battle rifle, other than occasional trips to the range to punch holes in paper targets. I appreciated the “layered” instructional approach. They. begin with the fundamentals, subsequent skills are built upon those previously covered and practiced. Scott started Day One with a thorough safety brief. He then gave us a detailed lecture of how the AR platform functions. This included a history of the weapon and a complete field disassembly and reassembly of his AR-15. He clearly explained how the AR functions, how each part works, how to clean it, and how to reassemble it.
I brought an AK-47 to class. He field stripped it as well and gave us the same clear explanation of function, cleaning, and reassembly. He also provided invaluable information on what to look for when obtaining a battle rifle. After a further safety brief, we moved to the range. There Scott taught us how to zero our rifles and spent the time necessary to confirm zero on everybody’s rifle. He then introduced us to shooting positions (standing, kneeling, prone). Also how/when to go to those positions. He also covered combat reloads, tactical reloads, what malfunctions we were likely to face and how to clear them. This instruction was reinforced by numerous drills that had all of us correctly learning the tactile skills needed to perform these actions.
Day Two
Day Two started with a brief review of Day One and a reminder that we were now responsible for keeping our rifle fed and running. Scott then taught us the basics of combat shooting and reacting to contact. We learned and practiced how to react to contact when facing left, right, and rear, using controlled pairs and hammer pairs. Movement toward the target was introduced and well as drills simulating the use of cover and concealment. The use of cover and concealment, as well as the difference between the two, was discussed at length, and we finished up Day Two with drills in stream fire, “buddy pair” fire, and movement skills. These final drills drove home the absolute necessity for clear and effective communication under stress, paying attention to everything that is going on around you, and the need to practice your weapons manipulation skills so they become instinctive.
Recomendation
Just as the first class I took at MVT was excellent, so was this one. You would do well to study the MVT Forum before you purchase your gear for this class. The information provided there will certainly help to set you up for success. Max has also written several articles available on SurvivalBlog.com that provide the information you need to know to select the proper gear.
I have been shooting in some sort of competition of one sort or another since 1980. I have never taken a class like this but it seems it would be a very educational and valuable experience even though I already have a lot of firearms experience. I’ll have to keep my ear to the ground and see if anything like this is going on locally.
Haven’t been to MVT site, but from what I know already from my own training, and what he does from checking his site, you’d be much better off going to his training than not. Especially if you are not prior service, combat arms. It won’t turn you into super-soldier, but it will give you a decent frame of reference to work from. Get trained. The tests in the Coming Excitement will be final, with no re-testing.
I’ve done almost all of Max’s classes, most 2 or 3 times. Actually just got back from one this weekend as well. The classes are extremely valuable. I already had well over 100 (no BS)classes and 30 years of firearms training under my belt before attending the first class with Max. So don’t delude yourself that because you took your state’s required 4 hour “ccw permit” course or a 1 day “in and out” marksmanship class that you are ready for violence. Serious survivors are students of violence and train regularly.
You won’t find many instructors that teach real world stuff like this. Highly recommended.