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Sunday Sermon: Accuracy > Speed

Can you hit your target?

If YES, how quickly?

I see plenty of video evidence all over the range of social media showcasing speed but almost, with a select few exceptions, none showcasing accuracy at anything beyond arm’s length. Many people move to the second point before thoroughly addressing the first because the second looks better on camera or that is what they are seeing over and over online.

In any fight involving gunfire there are two ways that fire can be considered accurate. Effective fire and suppressive fire. Effective fire hits the target directly, damaging and disabling. Suppressive fire controls the target’s movement.

From a personal protective standpoint effective fire is what we are dealing with. It would be a wildly rare defensive gun use that sees a civilian or LEO using a sidearm (or rifle) for suppression. With the exception of belt fed weapons or a team using multiple rifles a single defensive shooter does not have the ammunition to maintain suppression. Suppression also damages the area suppressed, a significant concern where collateral damage to bystanders and property must be accounted for.

Effective fire, shots delivered to the center mass of the chest cavity or CNS to disable a threat’s ability to fight.

What do you do to assure you can deliver those shots at necessary distances? I’ve seen shooters miss an 18″x30″ target at 5ft. The shooter was so focused on getting a shot off they didn’t bother to make sure it hit what it needed to.

https://gatdaily.com/skills-maintenance-evaluation-speed-accuracy/

The drill at the link is my humbling favorite. Dot Torture requires one box of ammunition. It works two handed, one handed, and off handed shooting. It works multiple targets. It works drawing from a holster. It works reloads. It does this all in 50 rounds using 10 small targets.

You get no points for speed in Dot Torture. Only hits count.

You may very well get no effect on a threat if you do not connect rounds.

Someone trying to kill you will not care how blindingly fast you missed them.

Many Reloading Accidents are Preventable

The following pictures are not intended to scare people away from reloading. Literally millions of rounds of ammunition are safely reloaded by consumers every year. But these pictures are intended to point out the need for quality education in order for someone to be able to reload safely. There are risks associated with either a “careless moment” or a freak accident that still could have been prevented.

The injury depicted in this first picture occurred before the reloader in question even used his priming equipment. He was filling an aluminum priming tube the way countless aluminum priming tubes are filled, by pushing the soft plastic tip against primers to push them up into the tube. The only difference is, one primer accidently ignited as it was being picked up, which caused a chain ignition of only seven other primers that had already been loaded into the tube. One can only imagine what would have happened if he had been near completing loading the 100 primers the tube was capable of holding.

Priming tubes with proper shielding (typically a steel tube surrounding the aluminum tube that holds the primers) are quite safe. But as you can see, loading that tube in the first place could be a tad dicey. This reloader now uses a vibratory tube filler. It is also possible static electricity, rather than pressure, caused this ignition. A simple $5 static-guard wrist strap could have prevented that from occurring. And SAAMI recommends all presses that use bulk priming devices be properly grounded (against static ignition) and the tubes of primers be properly shielded to protect the operator (regardless of the source of ignition).

This second picture resulted from a very experienced (thirty-year reloading veteran!) having a momentary lapse in judgment. While it is possible to safely seat a primer more deeply in an empty case (if it were not seated to the proper depth initially), it should never be attempted –as this person did – to seat the primer more deeply once the cartridge is complete, that is, including powder and bullet! While the subsequent explosion of the cartridge “only” threw shrapnel from the case as it split apart, the operator was close enough to the explosion that a piece could just as easily hit an eye.

Want to know more about these two occurrences and other avoidable risks, accidents and hazards associated with reloading? Read, “Things They Don’t Tell You About Reloading” by certified metallic cartridge reloading instructor, Joel F. Guerin. Click here (https://ReloadingAtoZ.com) to buy the book. Use coupon code “GAT” at checkout for free shipping!

We Like Shooting Double Tap 049 – I would not drink that

Welcome to We Like Shooting’s Double Tap, Episode 49, Tonight we talk about gun tech, we’ll answer your questions on Dear WLS, we’ll talk about NOT GUNS, and revisit past gear

Source: https://welikeshooting.com/show/double-tap/dt049/

We Like Shooting 233 – Lack Toast Intolerant

Welcome to the We Like Shooting show, Episode 233 – tonight we’ll talk about Flamethrower Bayonet, GSG MP40, AGP Arms Mag extension, Athlon Outdoors, guns, shooting, firearms, nra, 2ndamendment and more!

Nobody is Coming to Save You… No Matter Their Job

Sheriff Scott Israel of Broward County

Scott Peterson, former Deputy Sheriff of Broward County, had one job.

He failed.

Four minutes, the time Peterson spent outside the building while students and faculty were under attack. Four minutes where he let them fight and die when he was the only one equipped for that fight.

His job was that fight.

He failed.

Peterson was the School Resource Officer for Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. He held that post since 2009. He was a 23-year veteran of Broward County Sheriff’s Department.

He was the assigned police officer. The county resource. The government response.

He failed. The government’s man extending civic protection, did not.

Scott Peterson may be the most reviled man in the country this morning. It’s a special cowardice that leaves an armed uniformed officer doing nothing while those specifically in his care are killed.

Hundreds of thousands of officers and veterans, millions of citizens are wishing today to have taken Peterson’s place… even had they died in the effort.

Peterson’s shame will live forever. He failed.

Peterson is not the title image of this article. That man is Scott Israel, Sheriff of Broward County.

Sheriff Israel, you failed.

Peterson failed in the moment. Israel failed much earlier. Israel has gladly thrown Peterson to the wolves.

The Sheriff failed to provide Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School an officer who could do the duty assigned. The one duty that surpasses all others in importance. The Sheriff too failed Peterson by putting him there in a position he was not ready or trained to shoulder. He failed to lead a department that would follow up on the information about the shooter, Cruz.

The FBI failed to communicate their information.

The systems put in place for protecting Parkland’s children…

Every. Single. One…

Failed

The loudest response to this failure is to give that system more to do. Great plan.

I read and hear vague vaporous concepts calling out for gun bans and the abolishment of the second amendment. Yet when challenged to solidify why those would be effective solutions suddenly…

“Well I don’t know exactly, I’m not an expert.” Understanding that is crucial to the value of your contribution on shaping policy.

“We HAVE to do something.” How about something effective in place of something emotionally driven but logically misguided according to readily available data that happens to be politically convenient to ignore at the moment.

“You just love guns and hate kids.” You’re absolutely right. My hatred of children drove my discussion with my close friends about the security at their children’s school. Whether or not they had surveillance and controlled access and is it effectively enforced. Are there active shooter plans and how thorough they are. Were they interested in any personally accountable steps like a panel of armor in their kid’s bags, talking with the faculty about communication between rooms and persons. Volunteering at the schools to be an extra set of eyes if nothing else.

“THE STUPID EVIL TERRORIST NRA IS PREVENTING THE GOVERNMENT FROM PROTECTING US!!!” No firearms rights organization had any hand in the influencing the FBI or Broward County Sheriff (Who seems to be politically opposed to the NRA anyway). Feelings to the contrary are just that, feelings.

Unproductive emotional projectionist concepts do not produce good policy.

 

Nobody is coming to save you.

Again. Still. And always. The first responder to a situation in front of you… is you.

We Like Shooting Double Tap 050 – Imbecile

Welcome to We Like Shooting’s Double Tap, Episode 50, Tonight we talk about gun tech, we’ll answer your questions on Dear WLS, we’ll talk about NOT GUNS, and revisit past gear

Source: https://welikeshooting.com/show/double-tap/dt050/

Strength and Disability

From Dr. LateBloomer

I have always been a relatively strong woman physically. Not in a “gym rat” sort of way, but in a naturally “built like that” kind of way. I’ve never been the wispy, delicate sort. As a result, I have always taken for granted my ability to easily rack a slide and handle a double action revolver trigger. Although I understood on an academic level that some women had trouble with these things, it was not something that I had to take into consideration on a regular basis. Until now.

For the past few months I have been dealing with a slowly creeping nerve impingement issue. The result is numbness, tingling, and slow loss of grip strength and fine motor skills. It is worse in my non-dominant hand, but the right is also involved. My physician and physical therapist have been working on pinpointing and correcting the cause, but these things take time.

I realized this morning that the local IDPA season starts in about 6 weeks. I also realized that this hand issue may affect my shooting choices. Although I have never managed to get classified in revolver (I was out of town when the past few classifiers were held), I have puttered around with shooting my S&W 686SSR at matches for the past few seasons. With this revolver, stages requiring support-hand-only shooting have been challenging but do-able. This year, I fear they may be impossible.

The little bit of basement dry fire I have attempted confirms that I’d best leave the wheel gun at home in the safe and shoot semi-auto SSP instead. Even racking the slide on my Glocks and M&P takes much more effort than it used to. This is deeply concerning to me, but I am hoping that this is a temporary condition.

Nonetheless, I am trying to be philosophical, and take this situation as a learning experience. The elderly, the disabled, and the less physically strong may have to deal with obstacles in learning to shoot which I have heretofore taken for granted. I’m going to do my best to pay attention to these things as I go along in the future. Life, as they say, is the ultimate teacher.

So, I’m going to take this opportunity to urge firearms instructors and internet keyboard warriors to occasionally “disable” themselves in some way, and then try to shoot like that. Besides the obvious non-dominant hand use, perhaps try wrapping a hand in an ace wrap and then shooting with that hand to adversely affect grip and dexterity. Using double or triple layer trauma gloves will affect touch sensitivity. Try smearing lip balm over shooting glasses to simulate cataracts. Tie shoelaces together or use a locking knee brace to simulate mobility issues.

Not only would all of these drills be a good “tactical” exercise in how to stay in the fight if one is wounded, it might also grant some clarity and understanding about the challenges faced by future students or comrades. We know that the elderly and disabled are often chosen as targets by the criminal element. Understanding their physical challenges may help us as instructors better help them to be able to defend themselves with firearms.

If nothing else, you will have moved your own self farther up the learning curve, and that is never a bad thing.

 

Let’s Make a Deal: President Trump’s Line on Gun Control. Proposes Bans

Image from CNN coverage of the speech

Yesterday the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump, signed a memorandum directing the attorney general to set rules “banning all devices that turn legal weapons into machineguns.”

“GUN AND MAGAZINE BANS. Gun and magazine bans are a total failure. That’s been
proven every time it’s been tried. Opponents of gun rights try to come up with scary
sounding phrases like “assault weapons”, “military-style weapons” and “high capacity
magazines” to confuse people. What they’re really talking about are popular semiautomatic
rifles and standard magazines that are owned by tens of millions of
Americans. Law-abiding people should be allowed to own the firearm of their choice.
The government has no business dictating what types of firearms good, honest people
are allowed to own.”From Donald J Trump on the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

This view apparently hasn’t held, was never held to begin with, or is simply not politically convenient right now so they are going to play on technicalities .

“Whether we are Republican or Democrat, we must now focus on strengthening Background Checks!” President Trump tweeted.

It appears bans are and ‘universal background checks’ may be back on the table from the President who promised, “The Second Amendment to our Constitution is clear. The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed upon. Period.”

 

Readers, I am a reasonable man with friends and family who run the political opinion spectrum. I am willing to entertain and discuss any possible solution to help respond to, reduce casualties from, and prevent attacks.

I am not willing to give merit to meritless ideas for the sake of security theater. I am not willing to let a platitative measure that feels good and will fail to prevent a massacre pass on merits it does not possess.

I’ve been part of the security industry for over a decade. This has all been in a post 9/11 world. I’ve seen effective security and I’ve seen security ‘shows’. I’ve participated in both. It was part of the various jobs and individual assignments. There were situations we could handle and situations we couldn’t, regardless of the public perception.

 

“The eight-year assault on your Second Amendment freedoms has come to a crashing end.” – President Donald J. Trump

Until it was restarted because “Do Something” Trumps “Do Something Effective”

STREAMLIGHT® INTRODUCES PROTAC® HL 5-X USB

 Brightest Addition to Tactical Light Series Offers 3,500 Lumens, Multi-Fuel Options

EAGLEVILLE, PA, February 15, 2018 – Streamlight® Inc., a leading provider of high-performance lighting and weapon light/laser sighting devices, introduced the ProTac® HL 5-X USB rechargeable system, the newest and brightest addition to the ProTac® series of tactical lights.  Delivering up to 3,500 lumens, the new light comes with two of Streamlight’s new 18650 lithium ion batteries with an integrated micro USB charging port and a charge cord.  A ProTac HL 5-X with four CR123A batteries is also available.

The ProTac HL 5-X USB offers three selectable programs and is powered by either two rechargeable 18650 USB batteries or four 3-volt CR123A lithium disposable batteries. This multi-fuel capability enables users to charge the light on the go, or insert cell batteries when a charging source is not available.

“The ProTac HL 5-X USB is one of the brightest tactical lights on the market, with flexible battery options for every situation,” said Streamlight Vice President, Sales and Marketing, Michael F. Dineen. “The ideal hand-held flood light, the ProTac HL 5-X USB lets you see what is all around you, including hard-to-reach perimeters and corners.”

The ProTac HL 5-X USB uses the latest in power LED technology for extreme brightness.  When using 18650 batteries, it delivers 3,500 lumens on high, and a run time of one hour and 15 minutes. It also provides 2,500 lumens and a run time of 1 hour and 30 minutes on the high setting when using CR123A batteries.  Run times on low are 10 hours and 30 minutes, and 11 hours and 30 minutes, respectively.

The light features a TEN-TAP® programmable switch, which allows for user selection from among three programs: high/strobe/low (factory default); high only; or low/medium/high.

Fabricated from 6000 series machined aircraft aluminum with an anodized finish, the ProTac HL 5-X USB features a multi-function, push-button tactical tail switch that permits one-handed operation. It also has a “sure grip” rubber sleeve to ensure users never lose their grip.

The ProTac HL 5-X USB is 9.53 inches in length and weighs 1 pound, 2.4 ounces with four CR123A batteries and 1 pound, 3.4 ounces with two 18650 rechargeable batteries.  The light has an IPX7-rated design for waterproof operation to one meter for 30 minutes, and is impact resistance-tested to one meter.

Available in black, the ProTac  HL 5-X USB and the ProTac HL 5-X have MSRPs of $175.00 and $145.00, respectively.  Both come with a lanyard and Streamlight’s Limited Lifetime Warranty.

 

About Streamlight

Based in Eagleville, PA, Streamlight, Inc. has 45 years of experience making tough, durable, long-lasting flashlights designed to serve the specialized needs of professionals and consumers alike.  Since 1973, the company has designed, manufactured and marketed high-performance flashlights, and today offers a broad array of lights, lanterns, weapon light/laser sighting devices, and scene lighting solutions for professional law enforcement, military, firefighting, industrial, automotive, and outdoor applications. Streamlight is an ISO 9001:2008 certified company.  For additional information, please call 800-523-7488, visit streamlight.com or connect with us on facebook.com/streamlighttwitter.com/Streamlightinstagram.com/streamlightinc; and youtube.com/streamlighttv.

A Lesson in Self Immolation Chapter 2: X-Products

X-Products CEO James Malarkey believes in the Second Amendment but…

But believes that right is actually a privilege. Believes that licensing is not an infringement.

Apparently believes the $350 50rd magazine that his company designed and sells is a right but not a right to own because there should be a heavily regimented process to acquire it… like a National Firearms Act or some other series of stringent controls on this inalienable right that he so strongly supports.

Mr. Malarkey seems awful full of his namesake.

Malarkey; Noun, informal.

meaningless talk; nonsense.
“don’t give me that malarkey”

 

Soldier Systems has two full pages of Malarkey’s malarkey where he lays such pearls of wisdom as:

“Instead of outright banning it, allow people to have some kind of licensing,” he said. “I think it would weed out a lot of crime.” – from an earlier interview he did with CNN

“…I also believe gun ownership is a privilege and that is nearing a tipping point.”

That which is a right is not a privilege, James. That which is a privilege is inherently not a right.

“… however there should be a regimented well-regulated structure to how you should achieve those rights.”

You keep using that word… right… I do not think it means what you think it means.

We regulate the abuse of rights.

We illegalize a right’s violation.

If we “structure” how you use the right, it is not a right.

He then goes into his full licensure layout of this fundamental inalienable right we should not give an inch on… he says that too, I’m questioning his abilities in english comprehension at this juncture.

You can read his whole plan about how to regulate a right through license here at the SSD Screen Captures.

I will say… James, I disagree vehemently. I’m far from alone in that view. Good luck in the immediate sales future within the firearms industry.

Magpul makes an awesome drum magazine that holds ten extra rounds for a third the price and loads easier by the way. Oh and they do not heart the gun control.

 

SCAR MOD1 Project: MOD 0.5, Optics

A crucial part of modern rifle systems is their optical suites. Optics enhance the ability of the shooter to take advantage of the rifle’s base capabilities. However, optics are specialized instruments and their individual designs reflect their specializations.

Picking an optic, regardless of quality, that does not fit your rifle’s mission profile is a good way to waste resources.

A red dot or holographic sight is valueless on a 400-600 meter prairie dog rifle. A 3lb 35x zoom rifle scope will do nothing for you efficiently hitting targets inside 25 meters.

There are two methods for covering the optical choice conundrum.

The first is picking a primary optic and supplemental solutions. A variable power optic, a red dot (offset or top mounted on the scope), and iron sights is an often utilized set up. Many optics suppliers sell a combination of an optic and red dot as a package.

The second is picking one optical solution that covers the widest spectrum of performance and recognizing that you are making a compromise.

In actuality you’re compromising in either case.

If you utilize multiple optics you are increasing the size, weight, and complexity of your system. More possible failure points have been introduced. More maintenance and system checks are now involved to keep the optical system accurate. Utilizing the combination takes a more disciplined shooter who needs be able to decide between those optical system components quickly to address a shot.

If you utilize the single optic system you a compromising on the specializations the multiple gives you. You’re limiting control complexity and failure points. Simplifying an interface but removing a degree of flexibility by putting limitations on the capabilities of speed and/or precision.

The end user must make a careful study of not only the rifle’s required capability but the user capability and what system will allow the user greatest ability to meet the role requirement.

This choice was, in all honesty, the most difficult on this project.

The MOD1 is a modernized service rifle concept. It’s role is jack of all trades. It needs to be able to stretch its legs and effectively reach to 500-600 meters with an acceptable hit percentage. Equally it needs to perform in a close quarters setting.

The choice was the Trijicon ACOG Model TA31. While LPVOs continue to emerge as excellent optical solutions with increasing adoption and reflex optics are also very accurate in their own right, the ACOG is still my preference 10 years after I started using them.

Reflex optics were dismissed. The MRO, RMR, EXPS3, and CompM5 all posses strong merits and would serve the role but I felt they underutilized the accurate range potential. To increase that range potential a magnifier must be added. I did not want two optical mechanisms on the rifle to limit complexity. Reflex optics under performed on the requirement of simplified range and accuracy exploitation. The addition of magnifiers added more complexity and bulk than I deemed advantageous to gain back the range. Astigmatism was a contributing factor in the decision too, with the ACOGs solid reticle interacting better with my eyes than any projected or holographic reticle. I am able to utilize the reflex optics but I am more comfortable and confident with the ACOG.

Low Power Variable Optics (LPVOs) were dismissed. There is an increasing use of LPVOs within the serious rifle employment fields of special operations and competition. Several DoD solicitations are currently open for increased development and potential deployment of these optics. The merits of the optical system are strong however three factors placed the ACOG ahead. The rifle is not being employed in a precision or semi-precision role. The ACOG is a fixed system requiring very minimal manipulation to zero and none during operational use. The ACOG is a smaller and lighter system than any current LPVO.

I own one LPVO system with a second on the way. The rifle that optic is on is currently in a semi-precision role. The second optic will be going on a rifle in a precision/semi-precision role. The optics will allow easier exploitation of the maximum effective ranges on both rifles for the trade off of a mild increase in control complexity.

The reflex optical systems I own serve their purpose very well also. The practical range limits the systems are employed on are 200 meters and 300 meters respectively with 50 meters being the optimum target range. They are fast and accurate but begin to lose precision exploitation capability at range. That isn’t their operational strength and the carbines they are on reflect that mission and aren’t set up to be used in that role.

The SCAR MOD1 project is, again, building a service rifle. The target optimum range is 300 meters with capability to strike with effective sustained fire at 500-600 meters and be utilized in close quarters reflex style shooting. The system needed to be as minimally complicated and durable as possible while still offering increased ability to engage and exploit targets at any viable distance.

The TA31 best suited all these role requirements. It increases the ease of effective shots at distances greater than 100 meters through magnification and reticle design. Once properly zeroed it requires no manipulation to use the full optical feature array. Using the BAC the optic is effective in CQB and offers distinct advantages over iron sights in both speed and accuracy.

The SCAR MOD1 PIP continues. Optic chosen.

Mapping Out a Plan for the Year

From Dr. LateBloomer

I have decided that 2018 is my year to become better acquainted with a certain piece of family property – one that no living family member but myself has ever been to. I am hoping to use my new knowledge of the topography to begin hunting deer and turkey there. The problem is, that I’ve only visited the property twice – armed only with a small printout from Google maps, and a tax map.

Enter MyTopo.com, an online customizable map service located in Billings, Montana. Prior to finding this service, I would have had to purchase several topographic maps of the required USGS quadrangles and piece them together to get a full view of the property. MyTopo.com does also offer USGS quads for purchase, as well as GMU/hunting maps, but I wanted a custom map of the property.

MyTopo.com is so easy to use that even the proverbial direction-challenged second lieutenant that my vet friends joke about could use it (Editor’s Note: They are NOT proverbial. They are very real.). To begin, the user enters an initial search for the area of interest. In my case, I entered the name of the closest town. I then zoomed in and moved the map around the screen until the area I was searching for came into view.

I then chose the type of map (topo, aerial, satellite, or a hybrid of topo and photo), the scale of the map, and whether private and public property lines should be included. There are a variety of map sizes available with the largest being 5 feet by 8 feet.

The basic level maps are waterproof, but the user may also choose to have their map laminated. One may also choose whether the map should arrive rolled or folded. I chose the folded option so that it would fit in my daypack more easily.

After the ordering process was complete, including the option of “naming” my map, MyTopo.com printed and mailed the map directly to my door. My package arrived inside of three days.

I could not have been more pleased with the finished product. My maps were printed on heavy, tear-resistant paper, which had a nice smooth finish. I opted for three maps, and they all turned out wonderfully, with the family property centered neatly in the middle.

I cannot recommend this service highly enough, and I plan to use MyTopo.com again in the near future for another piece of family property. Now, I just need to work on my land navigation skills!

 

Sunday Sermon: Fire for Effect

Ammunition is cheap. Lives are not.

Often in our efforts to practice our essential skills we short change round counts. We use less ammunition for one simple reason, it saves us money.

There are a number of training options that help us in that endeavour. I’ve detailed them a few times here https://gatdaily.com/skills-maintenance-limited-resources-using-deliberate-practice-low-round-counts/

But whether we use dry fire, low round count drills, training programs like MantisX or Targetize, or any combination thereof we cannot lose focus on the fact that in a fight we aren’t counting holes in an A zone and checking out phone apps and the shot timer.

In our practice we must remind ourselves that fighting is a ‘fire for effect’ event. Mentally notating the difference and pairing it with a live fire drill helps reduce the complacency bleed that can result from good scores in qualifications and competitions.

Half the battle is the conscious game. We are easily lulled into a sense of security based on scoring metrics. If we score well we like to translate that as we will fight well. But cleanly clearing an IDPA stage and cleanly drawing and addressing one or more moving and armed aggressors are not the same.

Using the competitive fields to test yourself and scoring metrics to grade your performance is valuable data but mentally compartmentalizing those scores and not letting them gain any artificial influence on your defensive mindset is critical.

So remind yourself constantly fire for effect, the only true scoring metric that will matter in the moment is an out of commision adversary. Not a single beat buzzer, A zone strike, or ring of steel impact matters nearly that much.

Shoot UNTIL you stop the threat.

We Like Shooting 232 – Bat Dad

Welcome to the We Like Shooting show, Episode 232 – tonight we’ll talk about Canon EOS M series camera, Sig Sauer, ZRO Delta and more!

Source: https://welikeshooting.com/show/232/

Soft Armor, Harder Target

Plate carriers are useful items. They place life saving ballistic protection between you and direct hits from incoming gunfire to your core. It carries your gear, spare ammunition, and medical supplies. Stopping an otherwise debilitating or lethal hit allows you another chance to move, to get cover, to return fire.

It allows you to stay in the fight.

But unless you are rolling out in an MRAP with an armed and armored team you’re probably not EDCing a plate carrier. Unless you are sitting with a badge in an office or a police cruiser you are probably not EDCing a vest.

Armor makes you a harder target. Carrying armor is not always easily accomplished.

AR500 Armor has made it easier to accomplish in two ways.

The AR500 Backpack Armor series has three pieces designed to fit into any space you could place a 15″ laptop with room for the laptop too. The rear panel of most backpacks has a laptop space or a hydration pocket where the soft armor and/or plate can slide in.

The Rimeleg panel is 1.6lbs and .46″ thick of IIIA magnum handgun rated protection.

The Level III 9.5″x13″ Coated Plate varies between .26″ and .48″ thick depending on the coating thickness selected. It adds 8lbs but can stop rifle fire up to 5.56/.223 and 7.62/.308.

The Hybrid gives you the same level IIIA magnum handgun rated protection but at a lighter 1.5lbs and .25″ thick. Pairing it with a plate and the 9.5lbs .51″ thick package covers both pistol and rifle impacts with the Hybrid padding the torso from the kinetic transfer through the plate.

Wear the bag across the chest to advance or while facing a threat. Worn properly on the back move away quickly.

Having the options is the first way AR500 is aiding.

Making them more available is the second.

Right now using the code BACKPACK25 at checkout AR500 is offering 25% off of their backpack armor lineup.

These options could get you and yours home safely. It is a choice you can make independently and personally to stay in the fight and survive.