Note from JWR:

Today we present two entries for Round 31 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, B.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and C.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

Round 31 ends on November 30th, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



Survival and “The Right Stuff” Thoughts on Guns and Medicine, by Matthew R.

Survivalism in our age represents a gamut of knowledge in diverse subject areas. Expertise in a specific subject area can be a rare and valuable find. But anyone who claims to be a “general expert” is an oxymoron at best.

I have been serving in the Army Reserve and National Guard as a medic for seven years now; and I am an OIF veteran. That makes me an expert in a very limited area of combat medicine. It also makes me generally knowledgeable in areas of basic soldiering.

Based on these experiences, I believe I knowledge and skills that could prove useful to the prepper reading this blog. But take what I have to say with a grain of salt. With the good also comes the bad.

Debate in the survival literature regarding which weapon would best serve a survivor in a TEOTWAWKI situation is wide ranging and often conflicting. Personally, I have experience with weapons ranging from the .22 LR to the .308. And I know some of the readers are familiar with everything between the .17 HMR to the 50 BMG. While no one will ever agree regarding which one of the rounds falling in this range “best,” I think the most experienced shooters of us can agree that each caliber with its corresponding platform has its respective virtues. At the end of the day, it’s not about who has the “best” gun; it’s about who has the right gun to do the job at hand.

This is where situational awareness becomes particularly relevant. A prepper living in the city has different needs and requirements in a weapon than a prepper living in the suburbs, or a prepper in a rural area for that matter. Different blogs and literature are devoted to each of these areas and the reader would be advised to consult with the relevant resource.

One common denominator is the old combat axiom: “the first to die on the battlefield is your plan.” We may live in the cities, but we should be prepared to have to fight our way to the suburbs, into rural areas, and so on. Similarly, we may have a stronghold in the densest of wilderness yet find it necessary to fight our way back into a populated center. In the final analysis, what we want is a weapon system that is adaptive not only to the situation immediately at hand but also for the situation that we cannot anticipate.

This is why it is important to choose a weapon system involving more than one weapon. Historically, this means carrying both a long gun and a short gun. In the Old West, this meant a carbine/revolver combination. The contemporary military variation of this concept is the M4 carbine and M9 pistol. A shotgun can also supplement the short or long-gun role, depending on the prepper’s particular needs and abilities. Regardless of which weapon you choose for each role, this is the basic dual weapon concept.

When choosing which weapons to carry, the prepper must take into consideration two paradoxical factors affecting the choice of weapons: ensuring redundancy and maximizing range of use. By redundancy, I mean that if one weapon fails or is inaccessible, the other weapon will be able to supplement that weapon and fall into that role. An example of this scenario is the classic cowboy .45 Colt dual weapon configuration, lever action carbine and single action revolver. If my camp gets overrun with brown bears and I reach for my carbine and it jams, I can reach for my revolver and likely be able to stop the bear with that weapon. Additionally, I only need to carry one caliber of ammunition, making my total carrying load much lighter. A .22 LR carbine/pistol combination is probably one of the best examples of using the same caliber for both weapons in order to maximize combat load while minimizing weight in the dual weapon configuration. Obvious from these examples are the limitations of orienting your dual carry weapon system towards complete redundancy. In both cases of the .45 Colt and .22 LR dual weapon system, it is obvious that these calibers are inherently limited in their potential uses. The .45 Colt is essentially a pistol round, with very limited terminal ballistics. While it would be an excellent choice at short range, an individual preparing for the unexpected will probably anticipate the need for longer shots. I want to note, however, that for some individuals, the terminal ballistics of .45 Colt is within their maximum expected shooting range and, therefore an excellent choice for a dual carry system. A look at the 22 LR dual carry system yields similar observations. For some individuals, particularly inexperienced shooters and children, the .22 LR could deliver the optimum performance for what the shooter at short distances would expect to shoot. In such a case, the .22 LR would make an excellent choice as a dual carry system.

More experienced/skilled shooters may want to expand the field of uses for their dual carry systems. This usually means choosing a long and short gun of different calibers, with different purposes. The side effect of this is having to carry more than one caliber at a time. The corollary benefit is that in an environment of scarcity, the prepper will have a higher likelihood of finding the correct caliber of ammunition (assuming he is not chambered for “exotic” rounds) for at least one of his guns. Therefore it is important to consider how common each caliber is of the guns you intend to carry.

In rural, lightly populated areas, the dual weapon concept may entail a long gun in .270 or .308 for long distance game and/or personnel and a short gun in .357 or .44 magnum for personal defense and small or large game. For urban areas, it might make more sense for the prepper to carry a .223 long gun and a short gun in either 9mm or .45 because of the unpredictability within a dense population setting, the greater load carrying capacity, the likelihood of shorter fighting distances, and smaller concern for hunting wild game. Generally, the urban prepper will lean towards smaller, light-weight rounds with larger combat loads; the rural prepper will want at least one weapon in high-powered .30 caliber or larger, but may choose between either a large caliber or a small caliber round for the second weapon. In either case, the rural survivor must be prepared to use his dual weapon system in an urban setting and vice-a-versa.

While ideally, we would be able to carry our weapons collections with us and use each weapon for its specific purpose, in reality, if we find ourselves displaced from our homes, we will probably have to make a quick decision about which weapons we choose to carry. Because it is unfeasible to carry more than three weapons (two is probably more reasonable), we should be prepared to take into account our present situation and be ready to adapt to a situation that is not immediately foreseeable.

Medicine:

Again, the paradox lies in the problem of specific versus general application. In combat, I was faced with the choice of carrying numerous items with specific applications or carrying general first aid items that may not be able to fix a specific problem I could have been faced with.

Generally, when procuring medical supplies, the prepper should consider the spectrum of medical scenarios. In military terminology, this spectrum can be described as everything between sick call and a Mass Casualty (MASCAL) event.

Sick call is mainly preventative and is essential to the functioning of a unit. Assessing and treating problems at the sick call phase often prevents a small medical problem from becoming a larger one that could endanger the health and well being of the entire unit. While often overlooked by preppers, the most frequent type of medical care people require in the field is preventative.

For sick call, the medical personnel should carry a small First Aid pouch. That is everything from cough drops to Band-Aids, to Tylenol. Many medics pass these types of items off as unnecessary, because they are focusing on the potential MASCAL situation. What they forget is the effect these little comforts have on enhancing morale and preventing small boo-boos from becoming big problems.

Please don’t get the idea that all I carried for sick call were cough drops, Band-Aids, and Tylenol. In addition to these essential products, I carried treatments for blisters, antibiotics, pain killers, ice packs, ace bandages, thermometer, blood pressure gauge, Benadryl, saline, diphenhydramine (an antihistamine), and more. But, I say again, my purpose here is not to get into specifics about what to pack. I am not trying to espouse a list of the “right stuff,” that a cookie-cutter prepper needs to buy; rather I want to express a coherent framework for choosing the items that you, exercising personal judgment, ought to consider taking when weight, space, and time are of the essence.

There is abundant literature regarding preparing for MASCAL scenarios. In particular I would refer you to one of the copies of the Ranger Medic Handbook floating around on the Internet.

MASCAL is the worst-case scenario; it occurs when multiple members of your party or friendly parties are injured. In large-scale scenarios, MASCAL includes triage, treatment, and evacuation of patients.

Suppose you and members of your group are convoying from point A to point B for whatever reason. After many miles, one of the drivers falls asleep, swerves, and rolls the vehicle into an embankment. As the senior medical personnel in your group, it is your job to decide who can be saved and who cannot. This is the first step in triage. You then must arrange your patients into categories based on the amount of care they need. In a small accident, formal triage is not so essential so I won’t get into those categories here.

What is essential is determining who can live and who will die at that particular moment and then treating those most severely injured who still have a chance at surviving. While taking responsibility for those needing immediate care, you must simultaneously direct those who are capable, including the walking wounded, to provide care to those other patients who you have determined can survive though you are too tied up to treat immediately. This is where the Combat Life Saver training becomes critical in survival preparations. The better trained the members of your group, the better they will be able to fall into supporting roles in a medical emergency. The Combat Life Saver curriculum can be found online.

The most common acronym you will hear in emergency medicine is “ABC,” standing for “airway, breathing, and circulation.” In some military circles, the order has been changed to “CAB,” in order to stress hemorrhagic bleeding over airway concerns. Rather than engaging in a debate regarding which one is correct, I recommend leaving it up to the senior medical personnel to decide the order of treatment and establish that standard within the group. In any event, after you determine the casualty’s level of consciousness, the first step in treatment involves addressing the patient’s ABCs.

Every member of your group should be taught the proper way to open a patient’s airway, whether it is the jaw-thrust, for suspected trauma, or the head-tilt-chin-lift for all other cases. They should also know how to insert either a nasopharyngeal airway or an oral pharyngeal airway. The steps for these tasks can be found in the Combat Life Saver manual. Additionally, you should teach your members basic CPR. Though the CLS course is designed for active fire scenarios, in which CPR could create more battlefield losses, in most situations requiring emergency medical care on the battlefield, knowledge of CPR would be more beneficial than harmful. Anyone seriously interested in survival should take it upon himself or herself to receive CPR training.

Every member of your group should also know how to identify and stop arterial bleeding. They should understand the progression from applying manual pressure, to applying pressure dressings, and finally applying a tourniquet. They should also know when the situation dictates that they go directly to the tourniquet.

The last step to emergency care treatments not covered in the CLS curriculum, which any practical adherent to emergency medicine ought to recognize, is the treatment of fractures and most importantly, the appropriate treatment of potential cervical-spine injuries. The old CLS curriculum disregarded the potential adverse effects improper movement of a patient with a c-spine injury could have on the patient, including paralysis or death. When cervical-spine/neck injury is expected, special care must be given to the patient, immobilizing his head, before and during transport.

There are plenty of products available for patenting the airway, providing rescue breathing, stopping arterial bleeding, splinting fractures, and stabilizing c-spine injuries. I would advise you to familiarize yourself with these products and use them in training scenarios in order to better utilize them should the need occur.

When preparing my aid-bag, I am anticipating having to address everything between sick call and MASCAL. I know that to focus on any area at the detriment of another would be folly. In addition to the sick-call items, mentioned above, I carry a non-rebreather mask, nasopharyngeal airways, combi-tubes, e-tubes, CAT tourniquets, QuickClot Gauze, Israeli Bandages, to mention just a few things. But remember that none of these things are useful if you don’t know how to use them. The important thing to remember is that as a survivor, you will probably be faced with having to assist someone who can’t breathe, someone who is bleeding out, or someone whose neck is broken. Take what you can and be as prepared as possible, but also be prepared to use what you have around you when the situation arises; you may not end up in the situation you expected, and you may just have to improvise a solution.

One of the most common and useful training scenarios I have experienced is the direct fire drill. It may be conducted mounted (in vehicle or on foot). What the drill does is train the group to function as a unit. In each direct fire drill, simulate being on patrol and being attacked. The unit must react to the attack, thus familiarizing themselves with tactics and weapons. In each of these scenarios, a member of the group should be designated as a combat casualty. The group will then have to function as a unit to suppress the attackers, triage, treat, and evacuate the casualty. Thus your combat training will involve a deeper dimension than simple react-to-fire drill; your unit will learn how to fight through a worst-case scenario.

Please don’t leave this article thinking this is in any way an exhaustive list. If lists were the end-all to survival, preparing would be easy. It is not. Whatever you do will reflect your personal knowledge base, your needs, wants, and those of the members in your group. Rather than thinking about survival in terms of things you need for what you expect, think about survival in terms of maintaining flexibility in the face of uncertainty.



Insight on TEOTWAWKI from Quilting, by Don L.

Life offers us inspiration in the oddest times and ways. My wife is a third generation rag rug weaver but also has many other endeavors, such as baby quilts. She has a craft show coming up and wanted to finish the three quilts she had started. My occupation stems from working in the operating room and I have developed a fairly fine sewing skill so I offered to help. Little did I know this would give me insight in the preparations I am currently working on.

As I was running a fine invisible stitch on the inside of the seams it dawned on me that in my seeking info on TEOTWAWKI, I hadn’t seen any articles on stockpiling sewing supplies. We take for granted buying new clothing easily and inexpensively. I began to ponder the rag material that she uses to make her rugs and the thread we need to attach one end of the rag to the next. These can be old clothing, towels or sheets as well as end of cloth bolts made by commercial material mills. Now apply this thought to a time when you can’t buy new clothes or, even more stressful, have growing children who outgrow clothes. Sure there may be some sort of bartering, but if we are seeking self-reliance, then having necessary items on hand for mending or tailoring new clothes becomes essential.

I have begun sending my wife out to buy patterns on sale for your basic run-of-the-mill clothes, such as pants, shirts, and jackets. I am a lucky man with such a talented wife! We are stocking up on patterns for men, women and children. This also serves a two-fold purpose, the first being self-provision but secondarily, it becomes a marketable skill that could bolster our household income. Patterns can be as little as 99 cents and we have even found them at yard sales for 25 cents.

Our next phase is to start stocking up on essential materials. Things like denim, cotton, wool, jersey, and so forth, allowing for a variety of necessary clothing items. Fabric store often run specials and sales. Another good source for material is the fabric stores in the nearby Amish country, they tend to have larger amounts for lower prices. Also their selection reflects more of the need to have items. While at our local supermarket we came across a closeout deal on needles. How many people have not given any consideration to sewing needles? We put several packages in our cart along with spools of corresponding thread. Once again there is a secondary purpose we can use for ourselves or barter for needed items. Yard sales have rendered many “bolts” of  cloth from people who have given up on sewing and crafts.

Add to the sewing inventory items like stick pins, pin cushions, sharp scissors, snaps, Velcro, buttons. My wife has jars of buttons from every shirt or whatever that no longer had any use for that just in case repair. We have yarn and darning needles on hand as well. I also began to think of heavier duty materials and invested in one of those awl types stitching apparatus. I bought additional spools and needles for it as well. My wife used it to make me a denim wrap for my butchering knives and tool. It is awesome everything close at hand and well protected.

In a TEOTWAWKI situation we have begun to secure the tools needed to reused, recycle and repair in the area of clothing. Many of us have that favorite whatever and wouldn’t want to dispose of it if it had a hole but this becomes more crucial when you can’t replace the item. My wife is looking for other sources of education to support this phase of preparation. She is on the look out for any other type of sewing related courses like knitting.

My next venture is to learn more about tanning hides. We butcher our own beef and pork so learning to make full use of those hides would be invaluable. So now I want to acquire tools for working leather. We can only begin to think of the multiple uses of tanned hides in a time of need. The list of uses are unlimited by nothing except your imagination and available resources. Add to this list of material the hides of animals we hunt. You could make shoes, belts, slings, wallets, holsters and so on!

I realize the preparation must focus around the basics such as food, weapons and water but how will maintaining those items or acquiring them be impacted if you have leaking boots or a coat will holes in it. Tattered gloves will not protect you from frost bite. Most of these items can be packed in small packages other that large quantities of material but still are light weight. The plethora of usage is beyond the time required to gather.

This new area of prepping has allowed for us to prepare for the grown of our children as well as provide for others in our fledging group. It also gives us a marketable skill that can lend to bartering for things we need. Here is a starter list.

  • 20 spools of thread in base colors: black, white, brown, green, blue and gray
  • 10 spools of thread in secondary colors: red, pink, orange, yellow and so on
  • 20 packages of sewing needles
  • 10 packages of straight pins
  • Sheers 2 regular, small, and pinking shears
  • Basic clothing and undergarments patterns, male, female, and various children’s sizes
  • Material, basic colors in cotton, denim, wool, jersey, flannel and fleece
  • Add-ons, buttons, zippers, Velcro, snaps and latches

The second area of prepping I want to lend information on is to buddy up with other people who have jobs in operating rooms. The reason for this is the sheer volume of items that aren’t used but since they came in pre set up kits can not be used on another patient. These items can include but not limited to things like Army Battle Dressings (ABDs), various other dressings, sutures, sterile items and other useful things for TEOTWAWKI. A lot of these items have ended up in my stash and that even includes basic surgical instruments that have minor flaws.

A lot of times these items go to the local vet’s office which saves them a small fortune but they still charge you for it as if they bought it new. You wouldn’t believe the resources that are available if you find someone who works at your local hospital. At times supplies are opened for surgery and the case cancels leaving a great bounty of supplies for the cache of medical supplies. I just took home a huge bag of cotton balls. I have countless lap sponges which I used for rags and when they are worn out they get dipped in something to serve as fire starters.

I can not speak on other areas of a hospital since I have no experience there. You can imagine the money you can save if these people share a 1/3 of what they collect. Imagine adding band aids, dressings, ABDs, casting material, Ace wraps, suture and so on for no cost this would be a  logistical blessings for preppers. This can free up some additional monetary funds for other crucial items.

With all the talk about food preparation I have been getting food grade buckets from another department within my hospital for free, These 5 gallon buckets were filled with soda lime used in the anesthesia machine to filter CO2. I bought some mylar bag and using a method I learned from JWR’s nonfiction book started going to my local grain dealer and buying corn, oats and wheat for long term storage. Companies who have the market on this may charge up to $60 for a 5 gallon bucket. I can buy 50 pounds of it for 15 dollars and that will fill about 2-3 buckets.

Not only does this serve as long term grain storage for our group but it will serve as grain for livestock as well till first crops come in. I find items that serve a more versatile area are what I seek out. To me it is better to have one item serve multiple purposes that to have several items that sever only one. I tend to shop around. I am working on picking up food grade plastic barrels with removal lids. I can collect rain water, store items and so on. My current venture is reloading equipment, lead bars and bullet molds. That way I not only reload but can cast my own bullets if need be.

Having kids in our group I have stocked up on regular board games, cards and books for the children when the event takes place. Add to it a stash of sports balls, air hand pump to help pass the time of life without electronic entertainment. I realize they will all be busy helping maintain our homestead but they need to have something to enjoy as well as adults on the rare moment things slow down. Books also offer education since many I own are about this for mention situation. But have added many works of fiction and non fiction, I have included army field manuals, medical books and how to books.

We are slowing prepping at our place in the country. Each week affords us new ways of becoming more self reliant.



Letter Re: A Technique for Decanting Oil Into Small Containers

Sir:

I found many years ago that oil by the gallon like WD-40 is cheaper than small cans of three in one. But, how to get the oil from the gallon jug to the small can?

I took about four inches of surgical tubing, and pressed it onto the end of the squeeze can. Hold the small can with cap up. I took a small pill bottle, and filled it from the big gallon jug.

Hold the small can upright, and put the end of the surgical tubing into the small bottle of fluid. As I squeeze the small can, bubbles blew. When I released, fluid came back into the small can.

I’d be squeezing air out, and the fluid stayed in the bottom of the small can. I could refill a small can in a minute or less. – C.A.Y.



Economics and Investing:

Forbes: Nitty Gritty Numbers Suggest Downward Spiral

Gold Will Outlive Dollar Once Slaughter Comes: John Hathaway

Reader John L. mentioned a piece by Doug French: Bank Failures in Slow Motion

Items from The Economatrix:

Imminent Big Bank Death Spiral

Piercing The Mystery of the Gold Market

Shipping The Housing Market Overseas

The Coming Silver Shortage

Moody’s: US Companies Hoarding Almost $1 Trillion In Cash

ForeclosureGate Explained: Big Banks On The Brink

The Tipping Point Has Arrived



Inflation Watch:

Gonzalo Lira: Signs Hyperinflation Is Arriving

The market is ‘baking in” significant inflation. Investors are buying United States government bonds that effectively had a negative rate of return, because these bonds offer a guaranteed protection against inflation. (TIPS). The investors who took part in the $10 billion auction are betting that inflation, now at about 1 percent annually, will rise to a level that more than compensates for the premium they paid.

The Inflation ‘Genie’ Unleashed: “By reducing real interest rates and trying to break the psychology of ‘Why spend today when I can buy goods cheaper tomorrow,’ they are hoping to drive growth that would be more commensurate with a pickup in employment,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York.”

Reader S.D. in Dallas notes: “The price of a vegetable side dish at our workplace cafeteria is increasing next week from $1.29 to $1.49, a 15% increase. Last year the price was $0.89, so the prices have almost doubled in the last two years. The price on all menu items have increased also, so most days I choose to stay a bit hungry on vegetables instead of paying an extra $3.50 for an entrée! I also avoid the meat because it does not taste natural. I can’t wait to start raising rabbits!”

Chart of the Week: Inflation in the Real World

Overnight Rates Soar to 13% on Shortage of Peso Bills: Argentina Credit



Odds ‘n Sods:

Reader Edmond H. notes: “An item I like is the Pak-Lite flashlight. It is perfect for the pocket, pack, purse, or in the car or truck. It is essentially a 9Volt battery with two LEDs and a switch mounted on top. A strap was included on mine. I purchased one for each for every member of the family. It often takes the place of my Surefire which is overkill for many simple chores. It has a dim and a bright light setting. If the battery ever goes dead, just pop on a new one. Their web site says [each battery lasts] 200 hours on bright, and 1,200 hours on dim. I just know it is lasting a long time with no sign of weakening. Durable, its been dropped on dirt and rocks with no damage.”

   o o o

New Hidden Missile System Unknown To Feds

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Directive 21 (one of our advertisers) will have a booth at the Self Reliance Expo on Nov. 5th and 6th 2010 in Sandy, Utah.



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"We shall have lost something vital and beyond price on the day when the state denies us the right to resort to force." – Supreme Court Just Louis D. Brandeis, as quoted by Alfred Lief, The Brandeis Guide to the Modern World (1941), p. 212, published by Little, Brown & Co., Boston.



Note from JWR:

Today we present two entries for Round 31 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, B.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and C.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

Round 31 ends on November 30th, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



My Lessons Learned From a Recent Tactical Shotgun Class, by Greg C.

I recently took part in a Tactical Shotgun class with the US Training Center and learned a great deal. I am obviously not an operator and have not engaged dozens of insurgents, but I feel the training I received was logical and correct. I’ll skip all of the obvious safety and protection comments which were part of the training and very well covered. I’ll also not discuss the media hatchet job performed on their earlier incarnation “Blackwater”. Here are my lessons learned from the three day class:

  1. Tactical does not mean cool looking, adorned with a plethora of accessories or clad in black. Tactical means light weight, easy to manage and successful in your mission. Eight pounds of shotgun, ammo and a light on your shotgun is manageable. Twelve pounds is less so. Speed and accuracy wins every time. Light weight equals speed. Accuracy is up to you.
  2. Equipment should be minimized. You don’t need a laser sight, a spare light and multiple side saddles. You need A light (singular), a sling and a source of ammunition replenishment (speedfeed stock, A side saddle (singular), ammo belt, shell pouch, etc). Firing off eight hundred rounds with your selected equipment will tell you all you need to know about it. I saw after market parts flying off left and right—unfortunately even some of my own—occasionally factory parts from Remington 870s and Mossberg 590s. By the end of the class most students had taken half the extraneous stuff off their shotguns. Robust designs usually have the least amount of failures because they have the least amount of components that can fail.
  3. Train the way you plan to fight. If you are going to bring an ammo belt to a fight, don’t practice with a shell pouch. If you are going to bring a side saddle to a fight, don’t practice with a bandolier. Use the shotgun you are going to have access to in a tactical situation, not a different weapon. You must know how your weapon functions, because they are all different. And you must know how to feed your weapon from somewhere other than the magazine tube.
  4. Tailor your ammunition selection to your mission specific goals. Will you be shooting in an area that has paper thin walls? Will you possibly be “unlocking” doors and need breaching ammunition? Do you need to have precision or is it okay if a few of the projectiles stray a bit? Can you only have a single projectile?
  5. Pick at most two types of ammunition you want for a mission—imagine breaching a door with a slug, or thinking you have a non-lethal round chambered only to find out after the firing you had double aught buck. In a firefight, time doesn’t slow down, it speeds up. Your skills diminish, even if you are an experienced gunfighter. You won’t be able to keep track of the five different rounds you want to carry, so don’t. Pick two. And don’t think for a minute you can play “count the rounds” like you do when watching Dirty Harry.
  6. Learn how to reload quickly. If you have time, opportunity and cover, execute a tactical reload (load the magazine tube). Even if you only have two of the three, perform a tactical reload. If you have one or none of the three, perform a speed load. The speed load consists of turning the shotgun 90 degrees counterclockwise, dropping a round into the ejection port while the forearm is back, then shucking the round into the chamber. It’s better to have that next round on hand, than a full tube without one in the chamber. It’s all about having the next round. Depressing the trigger with no “boom” is more than an unfortunate event. Oh, and when tactical reloading, keep the butt on your hip or stomach and hold the muzzle towards the sky. Load the shotgun while looking straight ahead to keep an eye on your target and most importantly, finger off the trigger. With a little practice and discipline, you won’t need to look down to reload—just watch your target instead.
  7. Diagnosing failures on the fly is critical. Is it a soft malfunction which you can clear by shucking the foreend, or do you need to dump the weapon (or sling it over your back) and reach for your pistol? Unless you have an obvious problem like a stovepipe hull sticking out of the ejection port, you will likely not know exactly what you have (double feed, binding of action arms failing to load a round, etc). The first thing you should do is rack the shotgun action, make sure safety is in the “Fire” position and fire the weapon. This should handle about 90% of malfunctions. If it doesn’t, you may need to consider the above situation. Hard malfunctions usually require removing a shell from the receiver. This could consist of using your fingers, or a pliers/multitool to remove a shell. You may even need to go to a kneeling position and strike the recoil pad sharply on the ground while depressing the action lock lever to eject the spent casing. This must be done with care as you can break parts of the shotgun. Obviously, the hard failures take a lot longer to overcome. Again, time, opportunity and cover are needed to defeat a hard failure. This also underscores the importance of a sidearm.
  8. The fundamentals are key. There are seven: Grip, Stance, Sight Picture, Sight Alignment, Trigger Control, Breathing and Follow Through. These really apply to all shooting, but I think are especially important to shotgun work.
    1. Grip—this consists of the best way to hold onto a shotgun for firing and retention. A pistol grip isn’t necessary, so don’t let the movies fool you. A solid buttstock it a good idea if you are firing more than a few rounds. Aid your recoil with a proper grip and you will be able to require your next target more easily. The most important part of your grip is finding the pocket of the shoulder and mounting the stock in that crease. If you haven’t ever fired a shotgun (I hadn’t), it really isn’t that bad, unless you don’t have the stock buried in there. Leaving the stock an inch away from the shoulder pocket and then firing will leave a bruise. Find the shoulder pocket by pointing your arm out—where your chest meets your shoulder is the pocket.

      Something that is rarely discussed is how important it is to maintain your “Master Grip”. This involves always keeping your trigger hand on the grip. I’ve seen a bunch of “experts” who load with their trigger hand and keep the opposite hand on the foreend. What is easier to do, move your trigger hand back to the grip or move your opposite hand to the foreend? How about under duress? If you need to squeeze off a round, it is a lot easier to simply bring the shotgun to your shoulder and balance it with your off hand. Fumbling for the grip and trigger will cost you extra time and it could be difference maker. Keep your master grip. Load with your off hand.

    2. Stance—there is some argument here, but we learned a symmetric style stance. Feet shoulder width apart, slight bend in the knees and more body weight on the front of your feet. Your chin, knees and toes should be in alignment with a slight hunched over stance to handle heavier recoil of the shotgun. Think boxer stance. Keep your elbows in and head upright—a nice cheek weld to the stock will help with a clean view down the sights. Keep both eyes open to aid in seeing additional threats peripherally—this was a fight for me with my dominant eye, but I learned to blink the non-dominant eye as needed. Eventually I overcame the need to close one eye when firing. The most legitimate reason for keeping both feet collinear is to allow for you to swing the left or right with ease. Changing directions can be difficult if you have one foot far ahead of the other. [JWR Adds: Another advantage is that when wearing body armor with a ballistic panel insert over your chest, this stance also provides the most effective armor protection.]
    3. Sight Alignment—the correlation between the front sight, rear sight and eyes of the shooter is sight alignment. If you don’t have ghost ring or 3 dot sights, the bead should be placed in the middle, top half of the target projecting down the center of the shotgun receiver when viewed from the rear.
    4. Sight Picture—the link between the Sight Alignment to the target. The front sight should be in focus when aiming, not the target. Do not move your head down to the gun, thereby ruining your stance.
    5. Trigger Control—pulling the trigger smoothly to fire the weapon without altering the Sight Alignment/Sight Picture. This can be tough—you need to only move that one finger in a even fashion so that the discharge is a surprise. It is here that a typical flinch materializes when people anticipate the firing. A few soft malfunctions will make you aware of your flinch, if no one else is around to see you flinch when you practice. An inordinate amount of practice should remove the flinch.
    6. Breathing—a tactical situation will already rob you of your fine motor skills and even some of your gross motor skills. You don’t want to lose any more of those skills by depraving your brain and body of oxygen. You may find that you need to remember to breathe if you are uptight in a firefight.
    7. Follow Through—this is the conclusion of firing the weapon properly. There are three main components
      1. Trigger reset—enabling you to fire another round
      2. Sight Picture acquisition—after the weapon fires, you need to assess the situation with these three questions
        1. Did I hit the target?
        2. Was the shot effective?
        3. Do I need to make a follow-up shot?
      3. Scan for additional threats and if possible perform a tactical reload. Be sure to follow through after each shot. Several times (especially early on) I found myself firing, popping my head up and then ejecting the round—this is a deadly habit to form. Follow through after every shot.

I have been very impressed with the instructing at US Training Center and would highly recommend them. I have taken some armorer courses with them and will be attending further pistol and rifle classes as well. I have never attended any of the other schools that are frequently mentioned on Survivalblog, but for the reasonable cost, quality of training, and multiple locations (main campus in North Carolina and satellite locations in Northern Illinois and Southern California ), I can’t imagine a better place to learn. It is my understanding that as of October 1st of this year, the Northern Illinois campus will be changing their name to the North American Weapons and Tactical Training Center. But they will be retaining their staff and excellent training methods.

I have shot firearms for several years. This is my first experience with a shotgun however. I am looking forward to seeing how my skills firing other weapons have sharpened since taking the class. No matter where you are, find somewhere to train with good instruction. All of the magazine articles and opinions fall by the wayside when those shells are flying off to the side and you are suffering the weather, bugs and fatigue. As our friend Boston T. Party (author of Boston’s Gun Bible) says, “Ammo turns money into skill”. Indeed.

 



Training Sources for TEOTWAWKI, by Christopher E.

The reality of the situation is that tactical combat, survival and self defense training is not something that can be mastered in a week or a month.  Training needs to be consistent to the point where the drills become as a reaction that you don’t even have to think about it…. The point is that terrorists and threats to you have been in serious training for a long period of time while many of us still see the concept of learning the inner workings of firearms as being premature.
Private survival training in the present day has often been seen as an invitation to police repression.  Examples such as the Black Panthers in the 1960’s and the Militia movement of the 1990’s are often sighted.  For the most part these organizations stayed within the law and were mainly small groups of private citizens trying to exercise the same Rights as the founding fathers did at Lexington and Concord.  The focus of these organizations was to make an expression through show of force.
Private firearms ownership in America for anything other than target shooting and hunting has been made to appear unwise and even illegal.  For that reason people have become more dependent on the government for their defense than ever before. The reality is that in every one of the 50 states in the Union it is Legal to own and use a firearm in defense of life.   What happens when the National Guard is called up and sent overseas?  Do you know 30% of most local law enforcement are members of the Guard and reserve.  We are becoming more and more dependent on Federal Law Enforcement… and a dependant, defenseless people is an enslaved people.
So you have a desire to train, to become confident in what you carry, how you carry it and what to do with it but you are not a member of the law enforcement community or the federal military. What can you do? How can you train?
Unregulated Live Fire Self-training
“Grab some rounds and head to the local dump or the woods and Go shoot”- NO
This is the worst thing you can do. Worse even than not training. If you go to the local shooting pit and blast a box or two of shells out all you are doing is shortening the life of your weapon and reinforcing bad habits. If you typically are doing something incorrect, odds are- without the proper practice to correct that bad habit- all you accomplish is building the wrong muscle memory. Guess what you are going to do when the SHTF? You will fall back on your worst training which is this.
Avoid this!
Regulated Self Training of Firearms
Research your courses of fire that are available. Go online and Google ‘course of fire” and you will find any number of courses plainly outlined. These include Cooper Drills, Shoot and Move drills, Dozier Drills, the El Presidente, various courses used by law enforcement agencies such as the NYPD and LAPD, military courses of fire for rifles, pistols and shotguns. Go to an actual range (or build your own safe one using established range safety guidelines) and run these drills until you can do them correctly. Exercise your fundamentals of Sight picture, trigger control, good solid position, and breathing. Use actual targets instead of beer cans, washing machines and the like. Paper plates can be substituted.
Inquire around at local gun shops and sporting goods stores for local rifle and pistol clubs who offer regulated ranges and competition shoots in exchange for nominal fees. Many State Departments of Wildlife have free ranges that are open to the public at no fee. This will also introduce you to the best part of training which is networking. Make contacts with like-minded individuals that can help point you in the right direction for your goals.
Live Fire is only a small part of firearms training. You need to spend hours training with an unloaded and safe weapon for every minute you spend sending brass downrange. Again, exercise your fundamentals of sight picture, trigger control, good solid position, and breathing. Practice tactical reloads, administrative reloads, one-handed reloads (for if injured), drawing from cover, firing positions etc.
The Boy scouts
Yes I am speaking of the ubiquitous organization that is the Boy Scouts of America. They are faith based and are represented in every community large and small. They also are a cornerstone of one of the few organizations that still attempt to provide firearms training without profit. Get with your local troops and find out the contact for the Shooting Sports Council for your area. Volunteer your services as a Range officer for the Marksmanship classes they have during semi-annual jamborees. Many councils offer full fledged certified NRA Firearms Instructor certification classes at reduced cost (sometimes as low as $25) to volunteers willing to give up a few weekends of their time to help local scouts learn to shoot.
You can learn valuable skills, gain an expanded knowledge base and provide a legacy for our youth in the process. Again, you see the chance to network your training opportunities by making more contacts and sharing information.
Appleseed Groups
The non-profit Revolutionary War Veterans Association (RWVA) offers nationwide Appleseed Clinics that generally cost $70 for two days however, it is free for active military/guard/reserve, people who are under 21 years of age, and currently for 2010, women are also free. These provide training in long arms to a ‘rifleman’ qualification. They also offer longer week long courses and 30-hour instructor courses for much less than what you would get from the custom for-profit training academies.
Bring a rifle and a few hundred rounds of ammunition and put in some legitimate training. Spend your down time networking and making contacts to further your training.
PoliceOne Training Articleshttp://www.policeone.com/training/articles/ with hundreds of free articles such as “Training Police Recruits to Think”, Relevant and Realistic Firearms Training on a Tight Budget” and “Watch Behavior Indicators for Potential Violence” this resource is vital to anyone who is looking for training needs. While these are written by law enforcement and security professionals for use by law enforcement and security professionals many of the same concepts hold true for a TEOTWAWKI situation, CCW holders, and anyone who just wants to gain the upper hand in a bad life or death situation when the zombies come.
Emergency Management Institutes
Government and National organizations in partnership with colleges such as the University of Alabama- Birmingham Texas A&M and Tulane University officer online web interfaces such as the South Southern Public Health Partnership, FEMA’s Emergency Management Institute, and the National Emergency Response and Rescue Training Center
These institutes lean mainly towards Health and Safety aspects of Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism with dozens of amazing free courses such as “Food as an Effective Weapon of Terrorism”, “Preparedness: Factors for the Emergence/Reemergence of Infectious DiseasesApplied Epidemiology of Terrorist Events”, “Agro-terrorism”, and “Medical Effects of Primary Blast Injury” while they are dry are some of the best online training available from accredited sources.
Spend one night a week and devote four hours to one of these free classes. In a single year that is 52 classes under your belt. Take extensive notes that you can understand and create a chapbook with lessons you learned from each class. When the lights go out and the phones die the notebook can be your reference back to those night classes you took.
State Defense Forces
About half of the States in the Union offer a State Defense Force. These range from small relatively top heavy cadre groups such as the Mississippi State Guard to the large and very well organized 1000-manVirgina State Defense Force. Some 23 of these organizations are chartered by the state military department and work hand in hand with the local National Guard AG to perform “State’s only” service as directed by the governor. 
Many of these organizations offer membership regardless of physical conditions to residents with clean criminal records. They typically have monthly drills and an annual summer camp much like the regular National Guard. While some offer limited weapons training most are good for at least an introduction into basic military courtesy, field craft, land navigation, communications and other tasks that will come in handy post- TEOTWAWKI without being in danger of a federal call-up or the unfortunate stigma of ‘militia groups’.
The Red Cross
Well known for more than a century of community outreach the American Red Cross is in every community. Contact your local chapter and inquire about joining their Disaster Action Team (DAT). In exchange for agreeing to help with local disaster response inside your own county the Red Cross will provide all the necessary training. A DAT team member is required to have the following training, at no charge to the volunteer: Orientation to Red Cross, Introduction to Disaster, Disaster Team Training, Standard First Aid, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR), Mass Care, Shelter Operations, Damage Assessment, Family Service and Providing Emergency Service.
Some of these courses will be more involved than others and each will have its own opportunity to learn lessons and new skills. Networking with individuals on your team can pay great dividends.
Conclusion
So what are we looking at for training as far as an outlay in money?
 You can join your local State Defense Force for free, take classes online from the EMI, NEERTC and other agencies for free, catch the nearest Appleseed shoot for free (in some circumstances), help with the Boy scouts, browse online courses of fire and read your Police training articles all for free.
How about time?
Set up a schedule. Allocate one (four hour) night a week for online classes and articles. Schedule one full day a month (eight hours) to drill with your State Defense Force. Set aside one (four hour) night a week for regulated unloaded training with a safe weapon. Spend one (sight hour) full day a month on the range following a course of fire. Attend an Appleseed or Boy scout range when they come up to help brush up your skills and pass the knowledge along to others. Go to your Red Cross DAT team training dates.
This totals some 48-hours per month on average. This is a part-time job to learn the skill-set now that will be literally invaluable if the worst case scenario evolves and you have to utilize it.
As the old saying goes- it’s better to have it and not need it, then to need it and not have it.



Five Letters Re: ARs as Survival Combat Weapons

Sir:
I just read Dan in Missouri’s article “ARs as Survival Combat Weapons, by Dan in Missouri”/ I learned you need to take an AR-M4 and do all sorts of upgrades, buy a $250 chamber reamer, and about $400 worth of backup parts, and you evidently cant pull one out of the box and depend on it – what a sad commentary on the design being inherently flawed and constantly in search of an upgrade. With the AK, one can fire assorted qualities of ammo, neglect cleaning or maintenance for thousands and thousands of rounds, and generally ignore the weapon, and it still works.

I read a book by Col. David Hackworth, a decorated officer of the Vietnam war, where he talks about the AK. He hated the M16s, calling them ‘pieces of garbage’. When his battalion was constructing a fire base, a bulldozer uncovered the body of a dead Viet Cong soldier, complete with AK-47. Hackworth jumped into the hole, pulled out the AK, scraped the mud off it and told his men, ‘now watch how a real infantry weapon works’. He pulled back the bolt and fired off the entire magazine without a jam or mis-feed. He said the gun worked as if it had just been cleaned, instead of being buried in the mud for about a year. It may not have been the most accurate weapon, but it was unsurpassed for reliability. I have an article by Peter Kokalis discussing firing several hundred rounds through an AK, later to discover it had broken parts inside , all that time. Personally, I would think that if one might be in “extreme circumstances”, reliability is the only valid consideration- all else is parlor talk for the carport commandos and gear geeks- I wish Dan’s group well – shoot what works for you! I have a real Rhett Butler attitude about the “argument”: Just shoot what works for you. – K.T.

 

Sir,
I read with interest Dan’s evaluation of the AR for a survival weapon. While I am no fan of the 5.56 in FMJ I am told that civilian rounds can be quite effective. That said, if the 5.56 platform is your choice, then find rounds that reliably feed and transfer the energy into the target. The smaller FMJ round taught all of us GI’s to shoot a lot of rounds. We never counted on a first round stop. This generated into a ‘spay and pray’ mentality. While the lighter weight rounds meant that a troop could carry many more rounds (up to a 1000 for some), they carried all these rounds because they thought they needed them! Military channel did a special on sniper rifles and had a statistic that it took something like 55,000 5.56 rounds for each VC/NVA killed while 1.4 rounds of .308 from the Model 70 sniper rifles for each enemy. While I realize that means most 5.56 rounds missed, my point is that fire discipline seems to vanish if you don’t trust your rifle. It is also good to note that the British, Germans and Japanese all used bolt actions for their battle rifles to good effect in WW2. The M1 Garand was superior because it was an 8 shot, 30-06. The 30 caliber, semi-auto gave sustained fire when needed but the troops were confident enough in their weapon to use aimed fire when possible.

My main reservation with the AR platform (indeed with most .22 caliber platforms) is the absolute necessity for frequent maintenance to ensure reliable operations. I did carry the old M-16A1 in combat in SE Asia. I was totally underwhelmed by everything except the weight and clear air accuracy. The bullet had a tendency to tumble when shooting in foliage and became unreliable. Not so good in the jungle. In tough terrain it was difficult to keep the rifle reliably clean. A condom over the muzzle helped but I was never completely comfortable that the rifle would fire each and every time I needed it. I am alive today because of a 1911A1, not the M16.

The heavy cleaning requirement means that you must stock more cleaning supplies that for other rifles. Also, before deciding that it is reliable, put it in ‘field conditions’ for a month or two and see how well it functions. Being stored in a humidity controlled safe is not the same as two weeks in the field getting wet and dirty. Make sure the magazines function when dirty as well. Can you clean it in the field without losing small parts or needing special tools?

That said, the AK-47 seemed to fire forever. I’ve never run across one that was too dirty to shoot. Until recently, I’d never fired one. I assumed they were inaccurate since all of my experience had been from the ‘wrong’ end of the rifle. Having been shot at quite a bit, they always missed. I got my wife an AK because for her frame size and arm strength it was much easier to operate and fit her better. (Yes, the collapsible stocks would have help the AR here, but she didn’t want one as she found the T handle charging lever awkward to use). She shoots it well and out to 100 yards it is certainly well less than 2 MOA. Because of our age, I’m getting her a scope for longer ranges – neither of us see so well out passed 100 yards. A bit more recoil than an AR, less than say a 30-30 lever gun, but easily handled by my 5 ft tall lady.

7.62X39 ammo is readily available, cheap and can be had from Russian or US manufacturers. It has the further advantage of being a .30 caliber and hence more useful as a game rifle. Ruger makes their Mini-14 as a Mini-30 which is also the 7.62X39. While I can shoot the AK well I find the stock a little short for my 6ft 2in frame so I’m looking at a Ruger or a modified AK for my use. As to cleaning, remove the machinery cover and everything is laid out in plain sight. No tools needed to disassemble, no small parts and almost any cloth or shoe lace or reed can be pressed into service to clean it. Finally, clean or dirty, it functions.

I guess the question becomes one of what fits for you and what you think may be the use for the weapon. Being realistic, at 61 with a bad foot and caring for a mother-in-law with Alzheimer’s, I really don’t envision small unit tactics against an armed force. Being retired military, my suburban home is well laid out for point defense. I am well aware that a trained military unit (or paramilitary unit for that matter) can overcome any static defense if they are willing to pay the price to do so. I am also well aware that the odds of any of us facing a trained military unit are slim. Individual survivalist compounds stand small to no chance against well equipped military units either. (Think Branch Davidian outside Waco.) It is valuable to remember that from Viet Nam forward, the US Army never lost any major engagement. Irregular warfare is about fighting on your terms, not the organized military’s terms. If they can force engagement, you lose. If you are trying to defend a compound, they can force engagement. ‘Crowd Control’ is much different. Utilizing enough force quickly enough almost if not always resolves the situation in your favor. The Golden Hoard are very unlikely to utilize proper small unit tactics. Remove the mob leaders and the followers will go off to select new leaders who will lead them to softer targets. (think Korean store owners protecting their stores during the LA riots.)

If you have an M16 class weapon, find the most effective ammo, keep the rifle and magazines properly maintain (the Army has a lot of lessons learned here), and it should serve you well. If you haven’t purchased your battle rifle yet, find someone to let you handle several before spending a lot of money on the AR. You might find a really good deal (AK’s run for 1/2 to 1/3 the price of a good, solid AR) for a rifle that fits you and your needs better than the AR platform. Parting shot from another Military channel show (Top 10 Infantry Rifles- the AK was #1, the AR was #2) from the curator of a US infantry museum was (paraphrased, don’t remember exact quote) – If I was to be dropped down anywhere in the world or even on another planet and I could only have one rifle, it would be the AK-47. – Captain Bart

 

James,
While I realize you are aware of this, I wanted to take a moment to re-iterate this for your blog readers: the AR15 is not and never has been, a ‘Battle Rifle’. Period. It is, however, a very capable ‘Assault rifle’ which is a slightly different thing.

A ‘Battle Rifle’ is a large caliber, select fire (usually) long range rifle capable of carrying considerable power to the enemy at ranges out to 1000 yards. It is not designed for close combat (though it can certainly foot the bill) and isn’t always ideal for all environments because of it’s size and weight.

An Assault Rifle is a less powerful rifle (often smaller caliber but not always as in the AK47 with it’s 7.62 caliber bullet. However the Russian 7.62×39 cannot compete with the NATO 7.62×51 when it comes to power and range and therein lays the difference) designed for close quarter combat and assaults where range and power are less of a factor. Assault rifles are typically select fire weapons capable of high rates of fire with large capacity magazines.

Examples of ‘Battle Rifles’ are: M14/M1A, FN FAL, H&K G3 Examples of ‘Assault Rifles’ are: M4/M16/AR15 and AK47

Battle rifle range: 800+ yards Assault rifle range: 300+ yards

Power at 300 yards (battlefield average): M14 Standard with 150grain Full Metal Jacket = 1687 ft/lbs M16 Standard with 62grain Full Metal Jacket = 640 ft/lbs

Notice the M16 is 1000 foot pounds of force weaker at just 300 yards! That is significant when faced with drugged up criminals bent on liberating your retreat from you!

Power at 800 yards (point for M14 and area for M16): M14 Standard with 150grain Full Metal Jacket = 700-1000+ ft/lbs M16 Standard with 62grain Full Metal Jacket less than 200 ft/lbs

Again, notice the massive difference? 200 ft/lbs won’t stop a 150 lb meth addict whereas 1000 lbs will!

Just looking at those numbers should tell you why the M1A is a better choice as a ‘battle rifle’ while an AR15 is a fine choice as an assault rifle perhaps. For one, a battle rifle needs to have the power to kill at long range as well as the power to kill/knock down at close range while an assault rifle needs high rates of fire, light ammunition, ease of operation with low recoil for rapid changes in sight picture — the AR15 is fine for this purpose but never confuse it for what it is.

Lastly, it is also very important to consider caliber. The 5.56 NATO round was chosen as the round of choice by politically motivated Generals — and I’m not kidding. Bear this in mind any time you consider this light caliber.

Let’s consider the M16 for a minute and it’s predecessor shall we? The M14 is chambered in 7.62 NATO (.308 Winchester) and has very similar power and ballistics to the older and well proven 30-06. It is incredibly simple, super reliable and has the power required to stop the enemy at any range. It can penetrate walls, provide accurate long range fire and has a removable box magazine and relatively high rate of fire.

However, it is heavy, hard to shoot for smaller stature shooters, can’t be fired rapidly while holding on target (lots of muzzle lift) and the ammunition is heavy and expensive.

The Army at first requested a 7.62 NATO rifle to replace the M14 and the AR-10 was developed for this purpose however about the same time there was a push for a smaller caliber, lightweight, rapid fire weapon to replace the M14 and the 5.56 NATO won out. It was said that it wasn’t designed to kill but rather to wound because 1 wounded soldier took two of his buddies to carry him off the battlefield thereby removing three combatants with one shot…something to ponder. Is this what you really want? Those 3 soldiers/criminals may choose to come back.

Now decades later the M16 continues to prove to be a reliable weapon which does what it was designed to do — but is that what you want for your retreat?

In my case I prefer the heavier M14 and Marines in Afghanistan and Iraq have gone back to using them in some cases; usually when dealing with Urban environments because the M16 can’t shoot through walls or when dealing with long open spaces because the M16 just isn’t capable of doing much damage out past 500 yards and even then it’s not a lot. However, I also realize that some family members can’t handle the big rifles very well, if at all and in this case the smaller, lighter and easier to shoot AR-15 is a good second. I’d recommend considering a slightly larger caliber though — like the 6.5mm for example. Anything to give a little more killing power (because that is what you are wanting whether you admit it or not) that you can count on.

Nothing worse then investing a ton of money into a shooting platform only to find that it won’t cut the mustard!

Lastly, the M14 isn’t just a battle rifle! It’s also an excellent hunting rifle as JWR has pointed out elsewhere. The M16? Not so much unless it’s gophers and groundhogs you are after.

So, in conclusion, the M16/AR-15 is NOT a Battle Rifle, it is an Assault Rifle and should never be confused with it’s bigger brother, the real battle rifle. The M14, FN FAL and others all rule the roost when it comes to ‘battle rifles’ and they are far far more capable then the smaller, less effective, less powerful but faster shooting little sisters.

It’s the M1A Scout Squad for me unless I’m shooting long range then the M1A Standard will do just fine thank you.

Semper Fidelis, – Erik

 

Jim,
Thanks for the great blog.  I find the information in it endlessly interesting and informative.

I almost hate to address this age-old subject.  That is, the effectiveness of the .223.  But I will because the people who read survival blog, and particularly those unfamiliar with firearms, deserve to hear other sides of the story. 

Dan has provided a good synopsis of the AR platform.  I have no argument with using AR-style weapons, provided that all of the perhaps numerous and expensive “required” and “recommended” items listed in his text are followed.  Performing all of these, however, might make the cost prohibitive for many people, and has certainly prevented me from buying an AR style weapon. However, for many people, including my brothers and nephews, it is just about “perfect.”  More power to them.

Firstly, while I have no argument with the AR-15 as a launching platform, I disagree that its use of the .223/5.56 mm bullet is effective to any appreciable range, particularly past 300 meters. Many studies over the last several decades have found that the .223 cartridge is insufficient for stopping a determined enemy beyond that range, and some would argue that 200 yards is more likely the true effective range. Some others might even say that it wouldn’t stop a determined enemy at 100 yards.  Dan mentions:

Max Range – 500 Yards: “This is the furthest that we expect to engage targets with our battle rifles out to.  This is largely limited to eyesight, and proper target identification.  The standard for a “marksman” by organizations such as the Appleseed shoots or manuals such as “Fred’s Guide to Becoming a Rifleman” is to be able to hit a man at 500 yards from any position, including standing.  I know this can be accomplished as I can do it, but expecting much more, especially under stress isn’t very practical.  Beyond this range, I’ll be reaching for my scoped bolt-action 308.  At this range, a 55 grain .223 round has 169 lb-ft of energy, which is more than enough energy for adequate penetration.”

While I and many other Marines have qualified with the M16 on the 500 yard line, oh those many years ago and prior to attending the gathering in Vietnam, which attests to its ability to “hit,” striking a man at 500 yards does not equate to incapacitating him in any way.  In fact, people have been hit with the 5.56 bullet at 100 yards, notably in one negligent discharge during Desert Storm in which a soldier was hit at that range and simply walked away after from it.

In his monograph, “Increasing Small Arms Lethality in Afghanistan: Taking Back the Infantry Half-Kilometer,” By Major Thomas P. Ehrhart, United States Army, (excerpted below and available in full as a 70 page PDF) the author directly addresses the notion of the long-range (beyond 200 meters) effectiveness of the 5.56 cartridge.  I would suggest that anyone who seriously considers using a platform that launches a .223cal/5.56mm bullet, particularly as a “survival” weapon to think carefully about what is required of such a weapon.

Which brings me to the second point:  A “survival combat weapon” is somewhat of an anomaly to me, and I think mixes apples with oranges.  To me, a survival weapon is one that will do many things, from shooting squirrels to deer to elk to stopping invading bipeds.  Because this would be truly remarkable piece of one could find it, one generally thinks in terms of possessing more than one “survival gun.”  For myself, I think of a .22LR for smaller game, and a rifle that launches .308 bullets for anything much larger, and most certainly in anticipation of “combat.” I do not, for instance, think of a .223 for shooting deer and elk.

I believe that a combat weapon, by contrast, is something much different from a pure “survival” weapon, for it has but one purpose, and that is to stop a gremlin from close range out to at least 500 yards.  Much as Dan notes, I would be reaching for a bolt gun chambering either a .308 or .30-06 cartridge if the ranges got way out there.  But for very close range and for anything out to about 400 yards, I would use and recommend a semi-automatic rifle in any one of several variants that fires at least a.308 (7.62 x 51mm) cartridge.

I would not encourage anyone to rely for life and limb and for putting meat on the table, which likely will equate to the same thing in a dire situation, on a 5.56 cartridge, regardless of which platform shoots it.  And I have two such, a tricked out Ruger Ranch Rifle which will shoot 1.5 MOA, and a Ruger 77 bolt rifle that will seemingly thread a needle with a .223 bullet. But I surely would not use either rifle for medium or large game, nor for any 500 yard shot, because the 169 ft/lbs of energy mentioned by Dan as being the slapping power at that range is woefully insufficient to do anything but irritate an attacker unless he is hit in the eyeball.  I add that the minimum energy level usually considered humane for taking deer-and-larger-sized animals is in the 900-1100 ft.lb. area. Of course, some might say that that is a “peacetime” figure, and maybe would get stretched in an end-of-the-world scenario.  For myself, in a SHTF situation, I would endeavor to get closer and hit the animal even harder with a single shot, both to conserve ammunition and to save my own energy in having to track a wounded animal.  I would want the animal to go down.

And that is precisely what I would want two-legged creatures to do, as well.  I certainly would not encourage anyone preparing for a societal collapse, particularly those who are inexperienced with firearms and firearms training, to rely upon a .22 caliber bullet for anything but the most close-in fighting and for shooting squirrels, in the case of the .22LR. 

I have selected portions of the 70 page monograph and copied them below.

In addition and for further information on this subject, see Gabe Suarez’s blog, 
http://www.warriortalknews.com/2010/10/the-general-purpose-combat-rifle-part-2.html
for his definition of a combat rifle.

“Two Dogs”, USMCR (ret.)

“Increasing Small Arms Lethality in Afghanistan: Taking Back the Infantry Half-Kilometer,” By Major Thomas P. Ehrhart , United States Army

Excerpt from Abstract:

“Operations in Afghanistan frequently require United States ground forces to engage and destroy the enemy, often at ranges beyond 300 meters.  These operations occur in rugged terrain [like mountainous areas in the U.S.? td] and in situations where traditional supporting fires are limited due to range or risk of collateral damage.  With these limitations, the infantry in Afghanistan require a precise, lethal fire capability that exists only in a properly trained and equipped infantryman.  The thesis of this paper is that while the infantryman is ideally suited for combat in Afghanistan, his current weapons, doctrine and marksmanship training do not provide a precise, lethal fire capability to 500 meters and are therefore inappropriate.”

“There are several ways to extend the lethality of the infantry.  A more effective 5.56-mm bullet can be designed which provides enhanced terminal ballistics out to 500 meters.  A better option to increase incapacitation is to adopt a larger caliber cartridge, which will function using components of the M16/M4.  The 2006 study by the Joint Service Wound Ballistics  – Integrated Product Team discovered that the ideal caliber seems to be between 6.5 and 7-mm.  This was also the general conclusion of all military ballistics studies since the end of World War I.”

Excerpts from text:

“Small arms doctrine defines maximum effective range as ‘the greatest distance at which a weapon may be expected to fire accurately to inflict casualties or damage.’  The maximum effective range of the M4 carbine is incorrectly listed as 500 meters for a point target and 600 meters for an area target.  These ranges only take into account the ability of the weapon and ammunition to hit a target and not the terminal capability of the cartridge. For example, the M1 Garand and M14 rifles, firing a 150-grain bullet, and the M16A1 firing a 55-grain bullet, all had the same maximum effective range of 460 meters.  Clearly, these ranges do not consider the terminal ability of the round to inflict casualties. As discussed earlier, the M855 cartridge is most effective to a distance of 200 meters after which its effectiveness is limited unless hitting a vital area of the target.” Pages 25-26

“In general, the requirements for the infantry squad are that they have weapons capable of reliable incapacitation from close range to a distance of 500 meters.  This capability does not exist in the current family of 5.56-mm ammunition, either with military or with commercial off the shelf ammunition, though efforts are underway to remedy the situation.  Currently, the infantry squad does not have this capability unless its designated marksman is armed with a rifle of 7.62×51 caliber.  Those armed with 5.56-mm versions of the SDM-R are marginally effective and then dependent on shot placement in the small vital areas of the enemy for their effectiveness.”  Pages 28-29

“The requirement for squad designated marksman to engage targets from 300-600 meters requires a caliber larger than 5.56-mm.  As discussed earlier, current 5.56-mm ammunition is not suited for ranges beyond 200 meters.  One solution is a purpose built rifle chambered in an intermediate or full power cartridge.  This rifle would be capable of precision as well as suppressive fire.  This capability currently exists in the M110 sniper rifle.  M110 sniper rifle is a semi-automatic sniper rifle whose lineage goes back to Eugene Stoner’s first creation of the AR10.  In appearance, it is a larger scale copy of the M-16, chambered in 7.62x51mm, fitted with a 3.5 to 10 power telescopic sight.” Page 49

See also: Battlesight zero. Page 49

Excerpts from Conclusions:

“The adoption of the M14 rifle and its full power cartridge was plagued with controversy and the political reaction resulted in the adoption of a marginally capable weapon known as the M16 and its 5.56-mm cartridge.” Page 56

“The environment of the Vietnam War was specifically a close range fight.  Under these conditions, the M16 as originally configured was moderately effective.  The combination of the M16 and 5.56-mm cartridge, the loss of the precision capability in the reorganization of the infantry squad, and the Trainfire qualification course, resulted in the complete inability of the infantry squad to engage targets beyond 200 meters effectively.” Page 56

“Further refinement of the M16 design and the requirement for a light squad automatic weapon resulted in a heavier 5.56-mm cartridge designed to defeat soviet troops wearing body armor on European battlefields.  This cartridge proved ineffective in Desert Storm and Somalia, but the short duration of those conflicts and minimal supporting data, did not warrant change.  The emphasis on urban operations combined with increased movement by vehicles necessitated the requirement for a shorter length weapon.  The resultant M4 carbine combined with the new 5.56mm cartridge further reduced the incapacitation capability of the standard issue rifle.”  Page 56

“Operations in Afghanistan quickly identified the shortfalls in equipment, training, and doctrine for engagements in mountainous terrain.  The M855 cartridge has limited effectiveness beyond 200 meters and therefore requires either an improved cartridge within caliber or the adoption of an improved intermediate cartridge, which can be adapted to a modified upper receiver group.”  Page 57

 

Mr. Rawles,

I read Mr. Dan’s article with using the AR series platform. It was well thought out with most of his recommendations except the use of the McFarland single-piece gas rings. As a team shooter for a US Military High Power Rifle Team I have seen more issues with McFarland rings than using the standard three ring set up. There are issues with McFarland rings not brand new along with them being either undersized and over-sized. The belief that the gaps between the three rings must not be aligned is a misnomer. I have seen master armorers take apart a bolt and upon locating a McFarland ring immediately discard it and replace it with the original factory style rings.

Sincerely, Dan in Florida



Economics and Investing:

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Odds ‘n Sods:

Reader E.H. wrote mention: “I recently got into a lot of chiggers. I had many chigger bites all the way up to my waist and some above, with a bad concentration in the crotch area. I put a light dusting of Gold Bond Medicated Powder all over the affected areas. I don’t know what I expected, but within 30 minutes, all itching was gone and 2 or 3 days later after renewing the powder at each shower the bumps were also gone. I’m amazed.”

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Some Schumer Coming? As Reid Falters, Schumer Subtly Stands in the Wings. (Thanks to Charley S. for the link.)

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Scott C. sent this one: Dangers to Global Crops that Could Dramatically Reduce the World Food Supply.



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man." – Luke 21:36