I did a course that cost $700 from a guy that used to work for the Diplomatic Security Service. This is some stuff that he covered and I don't know how much these guys paid but this info's pure gold.
This the most accurate and reasonable way to shoot around vehicles. Lots of classes shoot in and around them but none go over the lack or protection they provide. Also good to see an instructor teach target up,target down method. Follow the threat until it isnt.
Dan Trebune Which is as likely to happen as winning the power ball and mega millions in the same week! Only an idiot wastes time preparing for something that is never going to happen. This is the wealthy are reading the WSJ while hourly workers are wasting their time and money on this nonsense.
I always forget how much just common knowledge gives you an advantage is so many different situations. Hearing him explain what’s inside of a vehicle made me realize how little people know about the world around them. I can’t believe Mikey’s giving us this shit for free. Mike, if you read this, please consider doing couples or family courses. My wife shrugs me off when I try but I know for a fact she’d retain the info that way. I’m willing to bet every guy that comes through your courses has a wife at home that’s the same
@King James I've served with the British Forces and have a wife that's served with the R.A.F. We listen to each other in regards to survival. More importantly we trust each others skill sets and experience.
I had my wife go through the same pistol and rifle courses I did with an instructor from 7th group. I moved on from those beginning classes but I wanted to make sure she had a base.
I love how Mike uses real life situations and applies them to everyday scenarios efficiently. He doesn't stray off and does a great job keeping students engaged. Thanks for another great video Sir!
Would have been nice to see one live run but nonetheless this was great. One thing i learned that i had never heard before was never give up your feet in a gun fight. Key take away
Retired Marine Force Recon, man brother this is some outstanding training. I love it you open my mind to so so many absolutely great tactics. This is definitely some high speed low drag training thank you so much for taking the time to make these videos. God bless God speed and Semper Fi.
Is there a part 2? Fantastic video. Unfortunately, kevlar lined doors in patrol cars are few and far in between. I had to take classes outside of my agency training to learn these lessons. We are trained that the patrol car is your life line. But as one old timer told me 20yrs ago and Mike touched on it, why get in a gun fight when you can just run him over with a 2 ton missile.
I’m blown away that I am allowed to be taught this material! I’m so thankful to be able to protect myself and more importantly, others. This knowledge leads to confidence, which allows me to take control and effectively protect. Thanks Mike and this channel for releasing this to us!
When I was the deputy director of a gov sponsored force on force training facility I was chastised by LE for preaching the same things, especially the skip and penetration topics. I’m glad to see the information being excepted. Another great video Mike and I wish you were around the circuit back in 2002. Will-
He literally tells you what to do and teaches this info for free with this videos. He gives you a great canvass to paint on but you have to perfect the art. Thanks again great vids
That's the 'better than nothing' response. And you'll often see LE in the V of the open door and the A pillar. Better than nothing, but agreed, there has to be the second part of that training: better than nothing, but not good enough' emphasis.
@@durgan5668 yeah, that's something I never heard or just didn't quite understand maybe. I always knew cars were shitty cover except for a couple small parts, I suppose I should have made the connection to try and get away as soon as possible on my own but never did
Another great knowledge bomb Mike, thanks for sharing! You're right regarding the (steel)rims, during a similar course, I've tested it with my 7.62 x39 from 30 meters and it went through like it was butter. These were steel core rounds. Mike, keep up the good work!
To be honest I don’t feel like I’m ever going to need this information but I’m glad I found someone who has such a massive knowledge base and is a fantastic communicator.
Thank you so much for sharing this kind of material. Very useful. I am an American living in South America and the odds of an encounter such as this is at least tem times more likely than in US streets. Thank you sincerely. And thank you for your service.
Thanks to Mike and the Fieldcraft crew! Any chance you could do some video training on how find water sources in a survival situation? Especially in desert and mountainous terrain. Thanks again for all the useful content!
Esoteric Fitness I watched that one today. Shawn has a beautiful property. Love Vigilance Elite! But I’m looking for tips on finding water where it’s less abundant. :)
I'm jealous of Shawn Ryan's setup. I could maybe get rain collection systems, but no abundant good water sources in my area. Small drainage ravines at best.
My old wilderness guide was look for birds. If they are flying in a straight line they are probably coming from water. If they are flying in curves or waves they are probably looking for water.
I am glad you are posting this information for free. This video is a great recruiting tool for your in-person classes where you can get a hands-on lesson.
In paintball, knowing a particular opponent, I might make a certain move knowing how they will react to it. But what if I knew the other team knew that I knew...now things get interesting. High stakes, high speed poker. We also learned the importance for mobility, of staying on your feet. For carbine, I think "rice paddy prone" is the most useful field position. And if facing multiple opponents, who will be trying to flank and get angles on you, your job may be to change a flanking "T" in to an inline "I"...but your opponents may know that, too....again, high stake, high speed poker. When targets are shooting back, things get way different. While I have lots of experience with incoming gelatin encapsulated paint, I gather Mike has lots of experience with incoming copper encapsulated lead.
Play paintball for 20 years see a lot of similarities on tactics and strategies. The use of Extreme angles high-speed movement and also spider walks cannot lose your feet. But when it comes down to it extreme accuracy is the name of the game.
Been awhile since I played paintball...the biggest difference I see is ammo. Huge ammo capacity allows more sustained fire substantially affects reality of the fight.
@@ryanday9737 Moreover is compressed time of a paintball match. Key lesson of paintball is optimal use of cover by being fully ambidextrous, which is the theme of my channel.
Learned something new today, this was colossally very detailed and gave me a new perspective on how to shoot and move. Awesome vid! Definitely need to take one of his classes.
Very good info to remind people what and how to handle a task. Lessons taught 40 years ago in LEO Academy's have changed after incidents like the Miami Shootout and the LA Bank Robbery. Don't let yourself be underguned or believing concealment is cover. In the old days a USPO mailbox was good as it was steel. A tree may not be able to stop an AK round and zip right through. Learn the difference between Cover and Concealment.
Mike G provides some of the best and most comprehensive training that is available to LE and CIV personnel. I have trained with him and his team and they are exceedingly professional, safe and free of acrobatic bullshit on the range.
During this shutdown do you think you might do a Q&A podcast ? Myself and a couple other snipers I work with would love to see some long gun videos like using loopholes etc. But love the content hope to see more soon.
Excellent! Just excellent, well done, great lecture and on point. I'm glad to see a prime vendor putting this information out. There's a lot of folks putting out some bad dope on the use of vehicles and the tactics surrounding them.
First thing first is your videos are amazing! Great information and tips as well as tactics. Really enjoy your stuff Mike and that interview with Shawn was totally badass. Definitely a humble person. But any way or any reason their are no videos on smith & wesson 2.0??
@@michaelkusjanovic9954 I'm in the same boat, and slowly doing so. But it's a very valid point, Michael. To be effective, you can't be wheezing 30 seconds into an event. My wake up call was when I was trying to outrace a wildfire with buckets of water before it made it to the brush at the edge of property. Yes, I did it, but honestly, I was ready to just become bbq and let it be someone else's problem there at the end. I did buy 100 more feet of hose, but yeah, this gut has to go.
@@michaelkusjanovic9954 Working the problem, I'll get 'er done. Jeep is in the shop, having an upgraded bumper and winch put on, as well as general maintenance. When I need it, I want it to be able to perform to be able to protect the family. Trying to catch up on stuff I should have done 5 years ago, in 5 weeks. "Better late than never" wasn't exactly what I was striving for, but it is, what it is.
How's the gut, Jeremy? Some unsolicited advice...take a class anyway...you're gonna be motivated by how much fun it is, how useful it could be and how much better off you and those in your charge to protect and provide are if you step up and own your responsibility. Sign up, Jeremy, get up, get going, stop waiting...there is nothing to wait for...youre wasting time waiting. Get up! You can do this!
Interested to see how to easily cheaply put/clip/bolt on some basic (crude but effective) small arms vehicle armor? 🤔 maybe able to weld something up with hinges etc that can be draped over the vehicle in a home garage when trying to drive out of a city during a break down in law and order
I would like to sit through a few of his training classes because of his ability to communicate. And I can explain the car parts if needed. The A pillar is very strong. But not across it. It is made to not compress, as he stated in a roll over. I believe it is probably brittle from being made to not compress.
What range is that? Looks like a football field, is it an old astroturf field that someone bought from a stadium, because that sounds like a great idea. Easy to pickup brass, no mud when it rains, the yard markings are perfect, and if the under-padding is there it is good for more dynamic training where theriskof falling rises.
This opened my eyes. My #1 thought was to get behind a car if shots are fired. I have one question.. What about the older cars that have stronger metal used?
it'll still go right through...Shot plenty of them with plenty of different rounds. Any type of rifle round or high velocity pistol round will zip right through.
Thats some good advice. Especially the part when he said "dont give up your feet" thats the problem with most officers. They dont know how to swat or crouch with two feet still rooted into the ground. They are always crouching or swating with one knee and thats a big no.no. #cqbsalsa 🤣
This is real world stuff, most people will be in cars and pickups when things go down. Not in hummers and tanks. This is great stuff.
Only if I can't comandeer a Hummer or tank...actually I'd prefer a Bradley I think...
Speak for yourself With your lack of being semper paratus... Got my M1 Abrams years back but it is truly terrible on fuel.
@@johnryan4769 road hog... 🤣
@@wakanakapisihello5655 It's really compensation for my inadequacies as it Pertains to social encounters
Even then civilian hummers arent bulletproof
Mike Glover is an amazing guy.. You can tell he truly cares for people.
I did a course that cost $700 from a guy that used to work for the Diplomatic Security Service. This is some stuff that he covered and I don't know how much these guys paid but this info's pure gold.
Classes are $325 ish
Was it the VCQB course through Centrifuge Training?
@@skinnyllama420 info?
If this is gunfighter 2 then $475
Did this course while in the army. Really good stuff
This the most accurate and reasonable way to shoot around vehicles. Lots of classes shoot in and around them but none go over the lack or protection they provide. Also good to see an instructor teach target up,target down method. Follow the threat until it isnt.
Dan Trebune
Which is as likely to happen as winning the power ball and mega millions in the same week! Only an idiot wastes time preparing for something that is never going to happen. This is the wealthy are reading the WSJ while hourly workers are wasting their time and money on this nonsense.
Great except that this is about as likely as winning the lottery in terms of something that is going to happen to these people.
Similar to a training course used in my agency. His instruction in moving around the car and not losing your footing is very important .
I always forget how much just common knowledge gives you an advantage is so many different situations. Hearing him explain what’s inside of a vehicle made me realize how little people know about the world around them. I can’t believe Mikey’s giving us this shit for free.
Mike, if you read this, please consider doing couples or family courses. My wife shrugs me off when I try but I know for a fact she’d retain the info that way. I’m willing to bet every guy that comes through your courses has a wife at home that’s the same
Exactly.
Ask yourself why your wife shrugs off the advice of her husband - the man deigned to protect her.
@King James I've served with the British Forces and have a wife that's served with the R.A.F. We listen to each other in regards to survival. More importantly we trust each others skill sets and experience.
@King James All jokes aside pal, What I said wasn't an attack - I'm legitimately asking; Why doesn't his wife trust his experience?
I had my wife go through the same pistol and rifle courses I did with an instructor from 7th group. I moved on from those beginning classes but I wanted to make sure she had a base.
I love how Mike uses real life situations and applies them to everyday scenarios efficiently. He doesn't stray off and does a great job keeping students engaged. Thanks for another great video Sir!
Mike is always a badass.. He thinks of shit you wouldn't think of but when he says it... it makes so much sense. A true american hero
Would have been nice to see one live run but nonetheless this was great. One thing i learned that i had never heard before was never give up your feet in a gun fight. Key take away
Mike same for me! Great take away!
Rick
Retired Marine Force Recon, man brother this is some outstanding training. I love it you open my mind to so so many absolutely great tactics. This is definitely some high speed low drag training thank you so much for taking the time to make these videos. God bless God speed and Semper Fi.
I love the free information. Great teaching points. Hopefully we get a continuation video.
Is there a part 2? Fantastic video. Unfortunately, kevlar lined doors in patrol cars are few and far in between. I had to take classes outside of my agency training to learn these lessons. We are trained that the patrol car is your life line. But as one old timer told me 20yrs ago and Mike touched on it, why get in a gun fight when you can just run him over with a 2 ton missile.
A valid point
I’m blown away that I am allowed to be taught this material! I’m so thankful to be able to protect myself and more importantly, others. This knowledge leads to confidence, which allows me to take control and effectively protect. Thanks Mike and this channel for releasing this to us!
I agree 💯
When I was the deputy director of a gov sponsored force on force training facility I was chastised by LE for preaching the same things, especially the skip and penetration topics. I’m glad to see the information being excepted. Another great video Mike and I wish you were around the circuit back in 2002. Will-
I have zero experience with any of this stuff.. ty Mike for taking the time to teach us.
Sound advice as always......great teaching from one of the best in the business. Thanks Mike and stay safe out there brother🇺🇸
Unless you live in the city, you typically have to drive anytime you leave the house. Super relevant. Thanks 🤙
He literally tells you what to do and teaches this info for free with this videos. He gives you a great canvass to paint on but you have to perfect the art. Thanks again great vids
wow, this was really eye opening. I've always been told to get behind the engine block and wheels
That's the 'better than nothing' response. And you'll often see LE in the V of the open door and the A pillar. Better than nothing, but agreed, there has to be the second part of that training: better than nothing, but not good enough' emphasis.
@@durgan5668 yeah, that's something I never heard or just didn't quite understand maybe. I always knew cars were shitty cover except for a couple small parts, I suppose I should have made the connection to try and get away as soon as possible on my own but never did
Another great knowledge bomb Mike, thanks for sharing! You're right regarding the (steel)rims, during a similar course, I've tested it with my 7.62 x39 from 30 meters and it went through like it was butter. These were steel core rounds. Mike, keep up the good work!
I had a feeling I shouldn't have parked my Jetta there...
👍🏻😂😂
Were u trying to score a touchdown?
One of the best blocks of instruction I’ve heard
First off Great instruction. Second, I've shot on countless ranges across the US but I've never shot on a range that's astro-turfed.
Ya no shit!
We got ranges that have that nice shredded tire/rubber playground mat flooring out here in Nevada.
This is the Ceres PD training range in CA.
To be honest I don’t feel like I’m ever going to need this information but I’m glad I found someone who has such a massive knowledge base and is a fantastic communicator.
Mike is a beast man. Best instructor on earth.
Stay alert and dynamic. You got that right bro.
Thank you so much for sharing this kind of material.
Very useful.
I am an American living in South America and the odds of an encounter such as this is at least tem times more likely than in US streets.
Thank you sincerely.
And thank you for your service.
Mike you are the best hands down brother it’s a shame I am to far to tend your classes and learn from you. 😔😔
manage barricade offset to gain angles/advantage; more great content from FSC
Thanks to Mike and the Fieldcraft crew! Any chance you could do some video training on how find water sources in a survival situation? Especially in desert and mountainous terrain. Thanks again for all the useful content!
Absolutely!
Shawn Ryan Vigilance Elite just did one on that, good Content from him ova there too
Esoteric Fitness I watched that one today. Shawn has a beautiful property. Love Vigilance Elite! But I’m looking for tips on finding water where it’s less abundant. :)
I'm jealous of Shawn Ryan's setup. I could maybe get rain collection systems, but no abundant good water sources in my area. Small drainage ravines at best.
My old wilderness guide was look for birds. If they are flying in a straight line they are probably coming from water. If they are flying in curves or waves they are probably looking for water.
One of the best damn instructors I’ve ever seen!! And natural born teacher.
I am glad you are posting this information for free. This video is a great recruiting tool for your in-person classes where you can get a hands-on lesson.
In paintball, knowing a particular opponent, I might make a certain move knowing how they will react to it. But what if I knew the other team knew that I knew...now things get interesting. High stakes, high speed poker.
We also learned the importance for mobility, of staying on your feet. For carbine, I think "rice paddy prone" is the most useful field position. And if facing multiple opponents, who will be trying to flank and get angles on you, your job may be to change a flanking "T" in to an inline "I"...but your opponents may know that, too....again, high stake, high speed poker.
When targets are shooting back, things get way different. While I have lots of experience with incoming gelatin encapsulated paint, I gather Mike has lots of experience with incoming copper encapsulated lead.
Play paintball for 20 years see a lot of similarities on tactics and strategies. The use of Extreme angles high-speed movement and also spider walks cannot lose your feet. But when it comes down to it extreme accuracy is the name of the game.
Played for 7 years. I agree.
Been awhile since I played paintball...the biggest difference I see is ammo. Huge ammo capacity allows more sustained fire substantially affects reality of the fight.
@@ryanday9737 Moreover is compressed time of a paintball match. Key lesson of paintball is optimal use of cover by being fully ambidextrous, which is the theme of my channel.
I take away things every time I watch one of your videos. Always good stuff!
Absolutely needed this! Thanks! It’s a-shame vehicle CQB isn’t addressed that much at all!
Learned something new today, this was colossally very detailed and gave me a new perspective on how to shoot and move. Awesome vid! Definitely need to take one of his classes.
Flannels make everything more tactical
Automotive engineer with VW here. There is absolutely a D pillar reinforcement; it's typically an inner, reinforcement, and outer panel.
Love listening your explanation. So to the point, simple and all make sence!!! Thank you for that!!!
Great information for everyone. Thank you so much, now it's my job to practice
Very good info to remind people what and how to handle a task. Lessons taught 40 years ago in LEO Academy's have changed after incidents like the Miami Shootout and the LA Bank Robbery. Don't let yourself be underguned or believing concealment is cover. In the old days a USPO mailbox was good as it was steel. A tree may not be able to stop an AK round and zip right through. Learn the difference between Cover and Concealment.
Great Job Mike nailing many of the key points of vehicle dynamics. I love your channel.
Thanks for all these vidz you putting out Mike!!! God Bless ya for it.
very nice facility mike is a great guy and is a wealth of knowledge THANKS MIKE
That is the cleanest range I have ever seen.
Awesome video! We want more videos with Raul. Mike give Raul more exposure, he is awesome too!
Great video Sir! I can't wait to get the money to come to your training camp for the weekend!! Thank you!
I love seeing the scope of gear people wear to these classes. I wanted to see the rotor shot at!
Hahaa, kewl shiet usually right
The dude in the full multicam combat set with shemagh...
@@vahebaldemian when you wear a suit to a cheesy nightclub 🤣
@@ifell3 😄😄 bet the barn its legit Crye too...he probably had it set out like a kid the night before the first day of school
@@vahebaldemian love it!! Still awaiting to see a traditional cowboy turn up!!
350 engine block is cast iron............besides that I loved the video. I truly enjoy this channel.
And that's why I've wrapped all my vehicles in paracord!
Lined mine with kevlar blankets. Put inserts on doors of my trucks. Behind seats also.
Mike G provides some of the best and most comprehensive training that is available to LE and CIV personnel. I have trained with him and his team and they are exceedingly professional, safe and free of acrobatic bullshit on the range.
During this shutdown do you think you might do a Q&A podcast ? Myself and a couple other snipers I work with would love to see some long gun videos like using loopholes etc. But love the content hope to see more soon.
Mike keeping rice paddy prone alive and well...heels down too 🙌💪😂
It's a blessing to have warriors like Mike sharing their vast knowledge.
Excellent! Just excellent, well done, great lecture and on point. I'm glad to see a prime vendor putting this information out. There's a lot of folks putting out some bad dope on the use of vehicles and the tactics surrounding them.
Outstanding information!
Dang I wish this was longer!!!!!!!
New sub here. It is great to see common sense explained. Thank you Mr. Glover
Very good useful information on how to utilize a vehicle to your tactical advantage.
Nice guys . . . just came upon your channel . . . gonna watch some more of what you guys doing ;-)
Respect, from a German . . . living in the UK ;-)
This would be a great class to take.
First thing first is your videos are amazing! Great information and tips as well as tactics. Really enjoy your stuff Mike and that interview with Shawn was totally badass. Definitely a humble person. But any way or any reason their are no videos on smith & wesson 2.0??
Great stuff! I would like to see the rest of this class.
5:00 Mike is my spirit animal
Definitely informative. Thank you for the potentially life saving information
Extremely useful info, thanks Mike
Great video I’ve already learned a valuable bit of info in the first 2 minutes
Love the videos of your training classes. Getting some useful drill and tips out of them. Keep it up!
This looks like a solid fun class, would love to take it but my guts too big to be dynamic.
Lose that gut Jeremy.
@@michaelkusjanovic9954 I'm in the same boat, and slowly doing so. But it's a very valid point, Michael. To be effective, you can't be wheezing 30 seconds into an event. My wake up call was when I was trying to outrace a wildfire with buckets of water before it made it to the brush at the edge of property. Yes, I did it, but honestly, I was ready to just become bbq and let it be someone else's problem there at the end. I did buy 100 more feet of hose, but yeah, this gut has to go.
Jon Reese - Good luck with the gut management. It’s not at all easy to get it back under control and it just gets harder the older you get.
@@michaelkusjanovic9954 Working the problem, I'll get 'er done. Jeep is in the shop, having an upgraded bumper and winch put on, as well as general maintenance. When I need it, I want it to be able to perform to be able to protect the family. Trying to catch up on stuff I should have done 5 years ago, in 5 weeks. "Better late than never" wasn't exactly what I was striving for, but it is, what it is.
How's the gut, Jeremy? Some unsolicited advice...take a class anyway...you're gonna be motivated by how much fun it is, how useful it could be and how much better off you and those in your charge to protect and provide are if you step up and own your responsibility. Sign up, Jeremy, get up, get going, stop waiting...there is nothing to wait for...youre wasting time waiting. Get up! You can do this!
Highly impressed with the sum of content from your channel.
Appreciate your insight, Thank you for this lesson.💪😎🇺🇲
great instructions... just kept getting distracted by that guy in the shemagh lol
Yeah he’s pretty tacti-cool eh
Great topic, great points, great video. Well done.
Can you make a part 2 to show the drill. Thanks.
Interested to see how to easily cheaply put/clip/bolt on some basic (crude but effective) small arms vehicle armor? 🤔 maybe able to weld something up with hinges etc that can be draped over the vehicle in a home garage when trying to drive out of a city during a break down in law and order
I would like to sit through a few of his training classes because of his ability to communicate. And I can explain the car parts if needed. The A pillar is very strong. But not across it. It is made to not compress, as he stated in a roll over. I believe it is probably brittle from being made to not compress.
Wow.... So Much Useful Knowledge... It's Like Drinking From A Firehose. ..... Good Stuff!!!
Mike, great presentation!
Good information to keep in mind. 👍🏼
Excellent
What range is that? Looks like a football field, is it an old astroturf field that someone bought from a stadium, because that sounds like a great idea. Easy to pickup brass, no mud when it rains, the yard markings are perfect, and if the under-padding is there it is good for more dynamic training where theriskof falling rises.
This opened my eyes. My #1 thought was to get behind a car if shots are fired.
I have one question.. What about the older cars that have stronger metal used?
it'll still go right through...Shot plenty of them with plenty of different rounds. Any type of rifle round or high velocity pistol round will zip right through.
@@michaelpegram3683not behind an old school engine block
Centrifuge Training does great Vcqb classes, backed by real world data.
Best video I’ve seen on the topic...Subscribed
Don't give up your feet in a gunfight, excellent!
Great video! Much respect for sharing the knowledge.
I would love to hear how you would interact with people in a bugout situation. How to assess threat . Friendly. Leave them alone?
Excellent knowledge thank you.
Yes and thank you !
Man, I have to make it up to Ceres for these classes!!!!
“Bled out on the scene like he should of...😂
Very good instructions, but I wonder if owning an older car would provide more protection.
Look at that lack of social distancing. Ahh simpler times weren't they, such simple times they were indeed.
G Lover is the man!
mike glover is just a badass version of kenny powers
Awesome video and Great content. 💪🏽👏🏽👊🏽
Appreciate the video great job wish it was longer much appreciated
Thank you guys! Great video
another awesome video from mike
Thats some good advice. Especially the part when he said "dont give up your feet" thats the problem with most officers. They dont know how to swat or crouch with two feet still rooted into the ground. They are always crouching or swating with one knee and thats a big no.no.
#cqbsalsa 🤣