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mgconnor13

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Posts posted by mgconnor13

  1. BE A HARD TARGET!!!! lock your doors and windows, light your property, alarms the door and windows. Always think PREVENTION!!!! PREVENTION!!!! PREVENTION!!!!!! if you are too hard a target they most likely won't bother you. Think in terms of is the risk worth the reward? Most criminals are scavengers and only go for easy pickings. Walk around your property and try figuring out how you would break into your property, then fix those weakness. Counter your enemy by learning to think like them. Also draw our your property and ID all the in/out routes, hiding places, fields of views and points of importance.

     

    DIY UPGRADES: Dead bolt you doors, re-enforce the frame with angle iron so the frame can't be broken. Lock your windows, wood sticks are cheap solution. Perimeter lights are always good to have. Personal article insurance policies are cheap too. My dogs are a couple shelter rescues and they bark at anything and every thing. Alarm systems are worth the cost.

     

    I keep my Glock 22 and an AR15 with a light as my HD guns. Only reason I use an AR and not a shotgun is I learned to shoot/ fight with an M16/M4 so it's what I'm the most familiar with.

    • Like 2
  2. When I was in Baghdad we where in an old office building near the edge of town. The cafeteria was separate from the main building with a breeze from the second floor over to a stair case that lead down to the cafeteria/ make shift gym area. Every one through the breeze way at night was creepy (maybe it was all the bullet hole in the wall about head level) We had the building fortified pretty good with cameras, 24 hr guards, and 20ft walls with razor wire around the whole place, etc.... I lived down in the basement with the rest of my team, another platoon lived on the 2nd floor. The guys on the 2nd floor side from time to time their doors would rattle like some one was trying to open the door, things in the room would move, etc.. It became a fairly common thing and a few guys tried "picking a fight" with it but it would only rattle the door never open the door and go in. Several time people heard a little girl laughing on the second floor. I know at least on guy saw a little girl running around the second floor as he was walking down the breeze way.

     

    My Grandma had stories about how the house they grew up in was haunted. After her dad died a ghost meet people at the door more then once, people that didn't know he had died assume it was him taking their coats etc... The ghost would also walk around the house at times. It left for good when one day, it was blocking a hallway and would not let my great grandma walk by. She told it to move and it didn't so she walked through it, said it was really weird but it never came back after that.

  3. The idea is to make a target that is as real as possible. I thought about a steel plate with accelerometers mounted to it to register hits with a solenoid that releases to allow the target to fall. Possibly a ball joint so the target can fall back, spin, fall forward etc.. to add to unpredictably. I have the mechanical part figured out but the electronics is what has me stumped.

    • Like 1
  4. The 40S&W is based off 10mm that they tamed down. S&W did there home work designing the round and there is a reason it now dominates the LE market. 40 gives you almost as much capacity as a 9mm but gives you heavier bullets with a larger diameter similar to the 45. Glocks use what is know as an unsupported chamber which early on contributed to brass failure. 9mm and 45ACP are much older cartridges compared to the 40 S&W so manufactures already have lots of designs, research and tooling dedicated to 9mm/45acp.

     

    Personally I really like 40S&W because it gives me almost as much capacity as a 9mm but almost as much power as a 45. Will say the recoil is pretty snappy but not enough to bother me.

    • Like 1
  5. I've seen targets that fall after one hit but does any one make a target that falls after a random number of hits say 1-7 hits?

     

    Real world people don't always go down after just one hit. I've seen targets systems that are mounted on robots with "kill zones" that activate a kill switch that stops them but nothing that provides realistic shooting where a undetermined number of direct hits will drop the targets forcing the student to keep shooting till the target goes down. The idea is to get students used to not just double taping but rather being aggressive, aware and actually shooting down the target.

     

    Does any one know of a system like that?

    • Like 2
  6. When I was deployed running out of food and water would have killed us a lot quicker then the enemy ever could have which is why we spent so much time fighting to keep supply convoys on the road. If you have accesses to drinking water and food to last you at least a week ( and I don't mean an easy week I mean you busting your butt 12+ hrs a day), you have a decent cushion to buy yourself time to find more supplies. Fuel is important too, being able to keep yourself warm and cook/ boil water is key. Having a propane grill with several tanks is an easy fix for cooking.

     

    Do a few simple things, get dead bolts for your doors/ re-enforce your house, have plenty of non perishable food and water on hand, some cash, non electric tools, radio, and a weapon with sufficient ammo and you have a decent head start to handle a lot of situations.

     

    I keep a "get home" bag in my car that has food/water wet weather gear, some dry clothes, blanket, flash light, lighter, spare batteries, duct tape and some other things that I would need if I had to make the 30 mile walk from work to home should by vehicle go down.

  7. Apple has mastered an almost cult like following of there products and have done it by shaping the image they want their products and user present.

     

    Any one remember how the IPod had white ear pieces and apple products where the only ones that had that? I was all about shaping an image to promote there products. Every time you use an Apple product in public you are advertising for them. Also Apple has set up there system so you have to commit to the apple way of doing things which ultimately leads you to using more apple products

  8. The shipping container is a good idea. Dig a hole, poor a slab, drop the container and encase it in cement for your own fall out/ tornado shelter.

     

    Realistically a good safe bolted down, an alarm system and some heavy doors with dead bolts would probably be the easiest thing to door. You could line the room with heavy duty "book cases/ shelves" that have expanded steel bolted to the back and bolt those to the floor as a way to reinforce the walls. Dogs are also useful to have around, and insurance. Personal article policies are fairly cheap, I have all my high value items insured against damage, theft etc...

  9. If you have a basement I would put a safe room down there bolt your safe to the floor with an alarm system for the house. Liberty Safe also makes walk in vault doors if you want an actually turn a room into a walk in safe.

     

    Looked into Kevlar "plywood" sheets? DuPont makes boards for storm shelter rooms.

     

    Also get a personal articles insurance policy so if anything happens your high value items are covered.

    • Like 2
  10. I have 3 ARs in 5.56 so I have plenty spare parts, mags, to run them and I can cannibalize one if I need too. My wife wants a pistol in 40S&W probably a Glock so we can share mags/ bullets. You can never have too many of the same guns/bullets, always lone them out to friends/family if SHTF.

     

    Commonality is cheaper/easier and requires less training so in the long run the more your collection has in common the easier it will be for you.

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