You'd better have a great bolt-cutter, or better yet, a hydraulic bolt-cutter. Even the smallest US military armory can have some mean physical security. Very heavily reinforced concrete, ultra-thick metal doors with big fat steel hinges, Locked things inside licked things, inside locked things. It is all designed to make delay you and force you to make as much noise as possible. They are also connected to other facilities so any attempt at a break-in immediately alerts law enforcement and other military facilities. There isn't a lot of ammo in there too. Only enough for guard duties. Ammo is stored in separate facilities. So breaking in, even in a Zombie apocalypse, is more of a job for an Army, than a small group. Not to mention you'd have to contend with some rather fit Zombies along the way. It could be way easier to hit a Police station, for example.
I was so naive when i was young, i thought that the weapon the Army would issue me was mine to keep, even after I discharged. But I was wrong, it wasn't my weapon. They gave it to some Afghanistan guy.
Here s a fun fact. In 2023 101 military weapons went missing in Switzerland last year including 88 fully automatic assault rifles. On average the Swiss lose over 100 weapons EVERY YEAR.
@@ZenZone_Soundscapes Most of the small stuff is kept at their home. They have ammo dumps statically placed around the Country to issue in case of a attack.
That sounds excessive for a country that prides itself in precision and organization. Swiss small arms are amongst my favourites, the venerable Swiss Luger, to the Schmidt-Rubin rifles transitioning to the SG510 (Sturmgeweher 57) then into the SIG 550 series of military weapons are among my favourites across the eras.
@tomwanks9123 أمريكا لم تعد كالماضي فلا أحد يخشاها ، فالحوثيون في اليمن لا تعترف بها وأجبرت بارجاتها على مغادرة البحر الأحمر ، كما أن سمعة أمريكا سقطت في الحضيض بعد حرب غزة أما ديمقراطيتها الكاذبة فعرفها كل من كان متأثراً بها .
@@tomwanks9123 أما في الحرب الأوكرانية فأتضح للجميع بأن السلاح الغربي ليس له فاعلية مؤثرة في أرض المعركة وحتى أن الكثير من الدول بدأت تخشى تصدير أسلحتها للأوكران كي لا تكتشف بأنها عبارة عن خردة أي ( لا شيء ) مقابل الأسلحة الروسية التي تفوقت في الميدان ، هذا المخزون إللي في الفيديو فقط بارع في قتل الأبرياء وتدمير الدول الفقيرة التي ليس لها أي قوة .
In Da Nang in 1969 I had to check out a 45 to transport a KY-8 crypto transceiver to Camp Tien Sha for programming. The armorer told me if I lost that weapon they would take $50 out of my pay. Yeah, it was a Colt, US Property stamped on the frame. I would gladly have paid $50 for it if I could take it home with me.
Did RVN '66-'67, 1st Mar Div. 0311, I paid $50 MPC to an RF, it was a .45, came with two magazines, and a leather holster, used as a back up weapon to my M-16, just before I went back to the world, I bought a transistor radio at a PX, gutted it, put the .45 in it, with one magazine, and mailed it home to Taxachusetts, it made it. True story. I don't recall what make it was, that was 57 years ago.
I was security forces in the air force and worked as an armorer for a few years. Definitely the best job in the air force. I had so much fun with that job.
No, this small cache will never be used. Its the airforce: wth do they want with small arms? Besides, as Marchenko proved... base commanders are so full of themselves he could give them the day + time window, and still penetrate at will [on schedule].
I don't know about whether the Marines actually keep their weapons separate from them on commercial flights, but I was in the army and when we deployed to Iraq and flew on a commercial chartered plane, we had our weapons on us. I had my M4 on me as I entered the plane and I kept it on the floor right next to my feet the entire time, and so did everyone else.
I was TDY to a Dutch military unit for 6 months in the early 80"s. They kept there small arms and a base load of ammo in there living quarters. Just locked up in their locker. It saved a lot of time during alert drills.
@@SnowmanTF2 well tell you they’re pretty well stocked if it’s only like an emergency type of use thing. man, they got a really nice selection of stuff in there. And lots too !
@@auxmike718 Given there are signs in English and something Asian, it may just be prepositioning material. So if need to surge presence quickly, already have weapons/etc in the region to be issued, and just need to fly in the people.
How times have changed I used to have to sign my name on a piece of paper to get my personal weapon out of the Armory from a guy we called two gun Jimmy.
I "was" two gun Jimmy back in the day. God, what I would have given for barcode scanning versus the nightmare paper method we used for transferring small arms.
@@YulanNimdiyaEkanayaka106 Wow, the fighting has been going on for 20 years, and in the end, he orders them to return to the united priorities, and this is called withdrawal. I understand, and it is a loss, and this is what half the world says from the West. They say that the will of the Taliban is stronger than America. 🤣
@@WioWio-sf5pc I served in a war where people wearing flip flops blew up armored vehicles with fertilizer and cell phones. Trust me, tech and quality of tech has nothing to do with the overall outcome of a long term fight.
If you're talking about Afghanistan we gave those weapons to the Afghan Police and military who then defected to the Taliban or abandoned their weapons and posts, if we took all the weapons and left the defenseless, clowns like you would be saying we never even gave them a chance, I was in the army for over a decade and my unit was in Afghanistan for 13 months patrolling the Afghan/Pak border, so I know what I'm talking about. Get your facts straight and do some research before looking like a dumbass again.
Yup,, but they don’t want us to have the right to bear arms.. It’s a battle every day.. everyday they the government who are supposed to protect and defend the constitution look for ways of taking away our rights…Thank god our founding fathers are geniuses… and you know the one that really pisses me off the billons of dollars of the peoples military weapons and equipment left behind in Afghanistan for the Taliban..
@@8015007 Yup. Leftist politicos and some ammo manufacturers don't want that brass you paid for with your taxes being sold to you for a fair price for reloading.
@@8015007 no, because they recycle it to make new cases. If you reload you know once fired or twice fired brass can get finniky in a gun other than the one it was fired in. Not to mention the logistics and tracking that would be required to make sure each individual case has not been reused to many times. Much better to melt them down, draw new cases and start from scratch, these are military arms and at the industrial scale involved theres really not any substantive additional cost to deprime wash and melt down the stuff over resizeing and tempering cases. With the added bonus of new, fresh reliable ammo
Retired USAF, was in West Germany when the USSR was still big and scary. We were a nuke base plus Wild Weasels so we were gonna get vapoirized withing minutes of the ballon going up. We were a test bad for a few special trials and the usual exercises and outsiders poking around. Chernobyl went down while I was there with my 4 yr old daughter. Not one time did they issue me a weapon. I had my own modest armory in base housing. We needed weapons training as their was little or no Army around to protect us and they were all gonna suddenly get real busy elsewhere. We were on our own.
@@my67falcon I was an SP at Hahn. When Wuschheim AB closed we ended up getting all their Security Police. We always thought GLCM troops were a tad off.
Only prob is...we the people! The gov asked for US, when needed? & they/us...may need again. Don't get it twisted, the "they" is us. Reason for 2A. Get it?!!!
And don’t leave for the range till 9am, stuck at the range ALL day while staff weenies get to drive the pov. Don’t get me started on “just a simple wipe down.”
They’re mainly for their Security Forces (what they call their military police) and for other airman to pick up a weapon to defend the base if all hell breaks loose
Every military person on that base will have an issued weapon (or 2) which is held in an Armoury, there will be enough spares and parts to fix those weapons. Most infantry personnel will be cross-trained in different weapon systems so depending on their task they can be issued so they may be trained and issued an M4 as an initial issue, but if he is also a Machine gunner he will have one available then there will be side arms (Pistols), anti-tank, you name it once qualified on a weapon system they will be able to get issued one, they do not take them all with them at 1 time it depends on the task if visiting units go for exercises or redeployment they may not be able to carry their own weapon so there need's to be spares to issue them at their new location, I did a course at a french base but we travelled as civilians so could not take weapons so we got issued theirs for the duration. There will be enough weapons in an Armoury to issue 2,3,4 times the amount of personnel stationed at that base.
Nothing like the British army’s armory then we don’t hand our mags in we keep hold of them and the keys are kept in the guard room and only some ppl can sign them out then they open the main door to the armory then each company has there own room in the main armory then they open that door to get to the weapons unless it’s changed from when I was in that’s how my old reg worked anyway
This video is about the US Air Force. From what you have said, the British Army operates very similar to the US Army. Magazines were a personally item issued at the unit level that you kept and maintained yourself. You only turned in magazines (at least the ones that were issued to you) when you left the Army or changed units.
Just curious, What are the inventory controls when the Fed Govt. abandons hundreds of millions of dollars of weapons, gear and ammunition in Afghanistan?
@@11bravo72 Haha brother just saw the name. Too much vodka got me. So many keyboard warriors nowadays, hard to tell who is real and who is not. No disrespect to you. From an ex-31B.
I used to be the weapons custodian for an Air Force Reserve Medical Group. We had 105 troops. Our weapons stores consisted of over 125 M-16 and 55 M-9. And they all were practically brand new since medics only qualified once every other year at that time.
Heh. Cool. I guess the weapons I carried during the two wars I was in, on the ground, including being embedded with Iraqis for 12 months, were all pretend. Dumbass.
And in the USAF, we are issued ammo with our weapons. Pistols will have 1 in the pipe with safety off. Not in an ammo can with a wire tamper seal like in the army. There's nothing like having to block your ammo after a 14-hour shift....
@@PzychoSixx - I saw magazines in the arms room. I did not see any live rounds until they cut to a different location. There was also a big red amnesty (Prohibited Items) can in the video for any errant live rounds. Also, in the Army, magazines were personal items issued at the unit level. You did not draw them out of the armory each time you needed them. You kept and maintained them yourself. You also loaded them yourself. So, the issued with “one in the pipe” analogy would be pretty ridiculous in that instance. Not to mention unsafe. Basic gun safety would be to hand a person a weapon with the mag well and chamber empty and exposed. The bolt or slide would be pulled to the rear. Preferably, rifles would be handed while “shotgunned”. By the way, did you really trust your life to a weapon that someone else loaded? How did you check the barrel for obstructions? How long did you leave the mag spring compressed? I have so many questions about that. But, I guess it’s no different than jumping a parachute from the riggers section. 🤷♂️ Thank you for your service.
Excellent introduction to manual weapon tracking with clipboards and maybe barcodes. But there are other US military installations with RFID weapon tracking systems, where an RFID tag with no battery is attached to each weapon, making it scannable from a distance, without line of sight. RFID weapon tracking systems track both personnel and weapons, ensuring that:only personnel with current weapon qualifications who are NOT in *Do Not Arm* status can be issued their ASSIGNED weapons known to be in good repair. The system maintains a roster of all personnel and their status along with a complete inventory of all hardware, including ammo, gear such as holsters and radios, and non-lethals such as Tasers and asps. At the issue/return window, an RFID reader scans everything passing through the slot, displaying a picture of each item scanned to the armorer. Signature pads can be used to display a list of issued items to the receiver, who then acknowledges receipt by signing. All events are captured in a database and never deleted, with unlimited reporting. The system has optional features, such as a complete inventory of spare parts and tracking of weapon repairs, test firings, cleanings, and inspections. A portable RFID reader can be used to scan all the items in the armory quickly, identifying which items are in and out of the armory. One base that trains personnel for overseas deployment trains hundreds of personnel each week. They are able to set up a new person, issue a weapon for training, and assign the selected weapon to the person, in less than one minute. The main obstacle to RFID adoption is inertia, even though the system dramatically reduces and simplifies the work load on armorers. There is also resistance at nuclear sites, based on the incorrect belief that RFID readers could interfere with nuke electronics.
This footage is nearly a decade old. Some of this footage is from a Holoman AFB vid circa 2015 called "Airmen of the Armory". I did not check all the footage, but many of these channels simply edit govt shot footage, put some music over it, never give any credit to the original nor the time from for which it was shot.
Yea, here I break into the place, get so overwhelmed they find me the next day dead of a heart attack but with a smile only Some people will understand!😊
Imagine serving a country that doesn’t trust you with firearms and locks them up.. Imagine being on a military base and being attacked and all your weapons are locked up..
@@larry648 remove magazine, check chamber. It’s that simple. It’s those who check their chambers & then remove their magazines shouldn’t be in the “Armed Forces”.
@@brianoswald1067 new LE troop, long SAC ORI shift, and a complacent NCO at the barrel. 5.56 will get your attention going off indoors. I jacked a round and hit the floor. I thought I was in deep 💩 for jacking the round, but those of us that did got a “good job”, those that didn’t were asked why not?
The biggest mistake I made in the Air Force was taking an afsc that would be profitable after i got out, a desk job that I hated. I wish I could go back and be an armorer, something i would have enjoyed and been passionate about.
@@TheREALLibertyOrDeath - The Air Force definitely needs them. Especially their Security Forces and Special Operations Forces. The Army and Marines just need more of them.
when I served I never owned a weapon. Now that im a civilian I have two two safe full of shotguns, handguns, assault and sniper rifles. you should be worried more what some civilians got.
Democrats are very worried, it's why they keep trying to take away your right to have guns, but will release criminals caught with illegal guns all day long.
The Marines are the only ones who build their own sniper rifles, the rest buy them from companies. It is a specialty in the Marines that requires an apprenticeship to become a gunsmith. They are taught all aspects of gunsmithing, including threading barrels, and chambering barrels to exacting specifications. The school is in Quantico. Marines are Riflemen, they care about their weapons. My Dad was a Marine.
There's nothing remotely classified in these videos. There are armories connected to every major post in the US military. You'll see the same things in over 750+ locations around the world.
There is so much technical material in these videos. I would bet that Russian, Chinese, etc. experts go over them with a fine tooth comb. I can't help but imagine they are able to glean useful information. ?
@@tonyphillips3842 as others have already pointed out, this video is old enough that their rank is on their shoulders. All of those members would have ets already
Read that someone doesn't agree with this method?!?!? Notes: Tanks don't get parked at barracks, grenades are not under pillows, Adm's/Gen's daughter ain't hangin out with the 86ers...this is the mil at piece-time (currently?!?). Don't like it?, don't be a p*ssy and put you/name on blast!
imagine finding this place during a zombie apocalypse
You just picked the setting for the next level in the game Im developing :)
You'd better have a great bolt-cutter, or better yet, a hydraulic bolt-cutter. Even the smallest US military armory can have some mean physical security.
Very heavily reinforced concrete, ultra-thick metal doors with big fat steel hinges, Locked things inside licked things, inside locked things. It is all designed to make delay you and force you to make as much noise as possible.
They are also connected to other facilities so any attempt at a break-in immediately alerts law enforcement and other military facilities.
There isn't a lot of ammo in there too. Only enough for guard duties. Ammo is stored in separate facilities.
So breaking in, even in a Zombie apocalypse, is more of a job for an Army, than a small group. Not to mention you'd have to contend with some rather fit Zombies along the way.
It could be way easier to hit a Police station, for example.
Knowing the Airforce the doors would be wide open
@@CptFugudude, took all the fun right out of it!😂
Little to no ammo kept at the armory.
They are stored safely and securely when they are around Americans but when in Iraq they are handed out like fun coupons.
When u have sappers in the wire u want your guns out the door fast.
Big difference they don't gp blasting kids in schools
@@bibiayube677 didnt see you bark when nick girls go around blasting each other out.
Yeah to the Iraqi Military and police who then used those weapons to fight and defeat ISIS. How stupid do you feel now?
Even better biden left thousands of this for free to the taliban in Afghanistan
I was so naive when i was young, i thought that the weapon the Army would issue me was mine to keep, even after I discharged. But I was wrong, it wasn't my weapon. They gave it to some Afghanistan guy.
@@TurkishKB You mean Taliban.
Or the cartel
😂. Same Afghanistan was for nothing and I did two tours as a dumbass grunt.
@@xIGxPRECISION the Mexican Army and then the Cartels.
Blame Trump for surrendering to the Taliban!
Those are the cleanest rifles I have ever seen. You can tell they barely get used.
It's is the AF after all
Here s a fun fact. In 2023 101 military weapons went missing in Switzerland last year including 88 fully automatic assault rifles. On average the Swiss lose over 100 weapons EVERY YEAR.
sounds like someone who works there is stealing them
@@ZenZone_Soundscapes Most of the small stuff is kept at their home. They have ammo dumps statically placed around the Country to issue in case of a attack.
That sounds excessive for a country that prides itself in precision and organization. Swiss small arms are amongst my favourites, the venerable Swiss Luger, to the Schmidt-Rubin rifles transitioning to the SG510 (Sturmgeweher 57) then into the SIG 550 series of military weapons are among my favourites across the eras.
And you know this because ... you never been to Switzerland in your life. Nice try buddy, stick to stories like the earth is flat.
@@fletsepopje I live in Switzerland. Google the figures then GFY
كل هذه الأسلحة والأعتدة والطائرات والدبابات والطائرات المسيرة والتجسس لم تستطيع حسم المعركة في غزة ، كم أنتم جبناء يا أمريكا ؟
as if you people would know the first thing to logistics or organized inventory
@tomwanks9123
أمريكا لم تعد كالماضي فلا أحد يخشاها ، فالحوثيون في اليمن لا تعترف بها وأجبرت بارجاتها على مغادرة البحر الأحمر ، كما أن سمعة أمريكا سقطت في الحضيض بعد حرب غزة أما ديمقراطيتها الكاذبة فعرفها كل من كان متأثراً بها .
@@EmadMuhammed-b3xthat still doesn't mean you guys can do logistics and organized inventory
ever worked a day in a warehouse?
@@tomwanks9123
أما في الحرب الأوكرانية فأتضح للجميع بأن السلاح الغربي ليس له فاعلية مؤثرة في أرض المعركة وحتى أن الكثير من الدول بدأت تخشى تصدير أسلحتها للأوكران كي لا تكتشف بأنها عبارة عن خردة أي ( لا شيء ) مقابل الأسلحة الروسية التي تفوقت في الميدان ، هذا المخزون إللي في الفيديو فقط بارع في قتل الأبرياء وتدمير الدول الفقيرة التي ليس لها أي قوة .
@@EmadMuhammed-b3xthat still doesn't mean you guys have any organized industry to speak of
In Da Nang in 1969 I had to check out a 45 to transport a KY-8 crypto transceiver to Camp Tien Sha for programming. The armorer told me if I lost that weapon they would take $50 out of my pay. Yeah, it was a Colt, US Property stamped on the frame. I would gladly have paid $50 for it if I could take it home with me.
But in 1969, when the dollar still had value, that would be like $950 today. :)
Did RVN '66-'67, 1st Mar Div. 0311, I paid $50 MPC to an RF, it was a .45, came with two magazines, and a leather holster, used as a back up weapon to my M-16, just before I went back to the world, I bought a transistor radio at a PX, gutted it, put the .45 in it, with one magazine, and mailed it home to Taxachusetts, it made it. True story. I don't recall what make it was, that was 57 years ago.
@@terry_willis Not correct
@@Aex3f4correct it then
@@terry_willis ~$430 not 950
I was security forces in the air force and worked as an armorer for a few years. Definitely the best job in the air force. I had so much fun with that job.
Why did you leave ?
But do they have the plasma rifle in 40 watt range 😂
" Hey just what you see Pal"
@@panzerfaust6th263 oooozie nine milimetuhh ....
@@lezimmy_ lol
HAHA
We don’t have the 40 watt in stock but we have 20 watt
Chair Force doesn’t have to worry about bar codes wearing off in combat 😂
Air Force: we’re safer if those weapons stay in storage.
I laughed and I was in the Air Force. 2001-2005
@@joeg5414 🫡
@@joeg5414 You was also in the army on another video from 2001-2005
No one on the ground feels safer without the Air Force on standby to come bail them out.
@@toesandsoles I thought he was in the Navy from 2001-2005?
I like how we all universally store all the PAS-13s the same way in every arms room 😂
All I was thinking was "man I'm glad that's not my hand receipt."
My Scottish father had to take his Lee Enfield rifle and 200 rounds of 303 home on leave with him during the second world war.
Impressive maintenance and systemization. This is a major strength of the air force
No, this small cache will never be used. Its the airforce: wth do they want with small arms? Besides, as Marchenko proved... base commanders are so full of themselves he could give them the day + time window, and still penetrate at will [on schedule].
Sad that the world need places like this
Omg- I love this country.
I don't know about whether the Marines actually keep their weapons separate from them on commercial flights, but I was in the army and when we deployed to Iraq and flew on a commercial chartered plane, we had our weapons on us. I had my M4 on me as I entered the plane and I kept it on the floor right next to my feet the entire time, and so did everyone else.
God bless America !!!
Greetings from Uzbekistan 🤘🤘🤘
Air Force: can I get a cafe latte with my weapon please
What do you need? Neo/John Wick "Guns, lots of Guns.
You forgot: besides a miracle! That’s what comes first!
I was TDY to a Dutch military unit for 6 months in the early 80"s. They kept there small arms and a base load of ammo in there living quarters. Just locked up in their locker. It saved a lot of time during alert drills.
Yeah, it’s a bit ridiculous they can’t trust the troops to just keep their weapons in the barracks.
@@auxmike718 This is an air force base, if the mantence crews need a riffle something has not gone according to plan.
@@SnowmanTF2 well tell you they’re pretty well stocked if it’s only like an emergency type of use thing.
man, they got a really nice selection of stuff in there.
And lots too !
*their
@@auxmike718 Given there are signs in English and something Asian, it may just be prepositioning material. So if need to surge presence quickly, already have weapons/etc in the region to be issued, and just need to fly in the people.
How times have changed I used to have to sign my name on a piece of paper to get my personal weapon out of the Armory from a guy we called two gun Jimmy.
I "was" two gun Jimmy back in the day. God, what I would have given for barcode scanning versus the nightmare paper method we used for transferring small arms.
@@UnfrozenCavemanTraderThat sounds like a nightmare just thinking about the constant paperwork to keep track back then.
@@Terica-qu6hm- it was a nightmare. Every piece of equipment required a hand receipt. Wanna borrow a stapler? HAND RECEIPT.
Every guys dream gun room!
Серьёзное оружие в руках проффесионалах . Парни знают своё дело .
Долой фанатиков !
Нет войне !
Парни , спасите этот мир . На вас вся надежда .
The Taliban defeated them, what use are their weapons? And get tired 😂😂
@@عمادكيمنك-س6ن Defeated, LOL Tell that to the thousands of dead Taliban.
@@عمادكيمنك-س6نthaliban doesn't defeated them, us troops leave from Afghanistan. Joe bidden orders
@@YulanNimdiyaEkanayaka106 Wow, the fighting has been going on for 20 years, and in the end, he orders them to return to the united priorities, and this is called withdrawal. I understand, and it is a loss, and this is what half the world says from the West. They say that the will of the Taliban is stronger than America. 🤣
No war! ❤
Guns guns and more guns
You can never have enough
@reaperct3454 Yeah that's Americas big problem right there guns are for war not playing with.
Taliban: thanks.
muricans with ar15s want to fight the goverment.....🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@WioWio-sf5pc I served in a war where people wearing flip flops blew up armored vehicles with fertilizer and cell phones. Trust me, tech and quality of tech has nothing to do with the overall outcome of a long term fight.
All of the weapons stored in that armory should be available to purchase by any law-abiding American citizen, no exceptions.
DAMN RIGHT!
Who are you afraid of? Answer: my fellow Americans.
@@BartmanMi Civil War 2.0: Capt.LGTV "vs" Bigot Man.
Next war will be a fair fight. We all got the same gear now ! Thanks Joe !
nah, you have old washed gear from the late 90's-2005, outdated garbage lol
If you're talking about Afghanistan we gave those weapons to the Afghan Police and military who then defected to the Taliban or abandoned their weapons and posts, if we took all the weapons and left the defenseless, clowns like you would be saying we never even gave them a chance, I was in the army for over a decade and my unit was in Afghanistan for 13 months patrolling the Afghan/Pak border, so I know what I'm talking about. Get your facts straight and do some research before looking like a dumbass again.
@@Dexsuo
Still better prepared then the lie of a war Bush put us in.
@@Dexsuo they didnt make mraps in 2005
@@mediaisthevirus 2007 my mistake. bro thought he was making a difference
Woow....how sweet... it's like a candy store....👌
There’s an even bigger American storage facility worth billions and it’s located in Afghanistan
That bullpop. That trillion lmao
Bravo america i love you god bless you amen
Just remember folks, every single bit of that building is owned by we the people are tax dollars paid for every single bit of that.
Yup,, but they don’t want us to have the right to bear arms.. It’s a battle every day.. everyday they the government who are supposed to protect and defend the constitution look for ways of taking away our rights…Thank god our founding fathers are geniuses… and you know the one that really pisses me off the billons of dollars of the peoples military weapons and equipment left behind in Afghanistan for the Taliban..
I love the western military industrial complex
потому что он предоставляет тебе работу ?
@@podoroznik-7591because we're superior
Wow the ever lasting power the United States🇺🇸
the usa army is built and ready for war is mind blowing.....
Are they ready for a Civil War? That's the theme of Trump and his followers.
This isn't the army, it's the air force
@@chrisclark9373 wtf thats even more crazy lol
The summary of this video is as follows:
People of the world, we are a country like this
don't mess around anymore
There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self.
Look at them destroy all of that good brass.
Why the hell are they doing that? Just so we can’t get cheaper ammo
@@8015007 Yup.
Leftist politicos and some ammo manufacturers don't want that brass you paid for with your taxes being sold to you for a fair price for reloading.
@@8015007 As a pointless gesture towards "gun safety".
@@8015007 no, because they recycle it to make new cases.
If you reload you know once fired or twice fired brass can get finniky in a gun other than the one it was fired in. Not to mention the logistics and tracking that would be required to make sure each individual case has not been reused to many times. Much better to melt them down, draw new cases and start from scratch, these are military arms and at the industrial scale involved theres really not any substantive additional cost to deprime wash and melt down the stuff over resizeing and tempering cases. With the added bonus of new, fresh reliable ammo
They could sell as reloading brass for more money. Dumb.
Retired USAF, was in West Germany when the USSR was still big and scary. We were a nuke base plus Wild Weasels so we were gonna get vapoirized withing minutes of the ballon going up. We were a test bad for a few special trials and the usual exercises and outsiders poking around. Chernobyl went down while I was there with my 4 yr old daughter. Not one time did they issue me a weapon. I had my own modest armory in base housing. We needed weapons training as their was little or no Army around to protect us and they were all gonna suddenly get real busy elsewhere. We were on our own.
You had weapons in your house? In Germany??
@@MrJal67 He said : base housing.
Spangdalhem I take it. I was at Bitburg after a tour in GLCM.
@@my67falcon I was an SP at Hahn. When Wuschheim AB closed we ended up getting all their Security Police. We always thought GLCM troops were a tad off.
@@daveb2280
Yea, we were an odd lot. I was at Comiso for GLCM.
lol 1:20 "Do not Arm" has a list of all the psychos for you to read
It’s a legal thing I’m sure - certain people with criminal convictions cant be armed (a certain orange guy for example) 😂
@@asksearchknockorange guy? Dont tell me you are a low iq leftist
The Orange Man won again despite the eight years of lies you filthy heathens kept spewing. Cope and seethe.
Happiness mainly comes from our own attitude, rather than from external factors.
Well said thank you
imagine having that base being abandoned overnight and our enemies roll in with shopping carts like in Afghan a few years back
Pity they didn't have that in Afghanistan.
Yeah when the Afghan Police and Army either defected to the Taliban or abandoned them.
@@Bobby-fj8mk You can't even point out Afghanistan out on a map.
Thank you for protecting and keeping us safe. May God bless each of you and keep you safe. We love you and WE SALUTE YOU!!!!!!!
First time watching your video, really enjoyed it. Got to see a lot of things didn’t makes me Even more proud that I am American. Great job
Awesome showing
Been there done that. Keep up the good work and make sure that count matches up!
My nephew was in the Air Force Security Force for 6 years. We always got weapons issued from the armory.🤜🤜🤜
So he was in the Airforce so why did u say we exactly? And where else would the weapons be issued from bar the armory?
🇵🇸فلسطين حره ابيه ❤❤❤❤❤❤من جنوب اليمن
This is cool but I want to see where the bulk supply of crayons for marines are stored.
That’s in Fort Knox
In some sailors backside.😂
The video is really educating - I am passionate about the military and arms.
Holy crap! National Defense, Marines!! Give them modern lathes and tools, especially material handling!
Only prob is...we the people! The gov asked for US, when needed? & they/us...may need again. Don't get it twisted, the "they" is us. Reason for 2A. Get it?!!!
@@sachmo0196 Can you try to type even more disjointed?
@@sachmo0196 ...what? You do know sentence structure is a thing, right?
чтобы занимались мирным трудом ? они же разбегутся...
1SG: Weapons draw tomorrow 0800.
PSG: Be here for weapons draw at 0500.
And don’t leave for the range till 9am, stuck at the range ALL day while staff weenies get to drive the pov. Don’t get me started on “just a simple wipe down.”
If the weapons are cared for and tracked so carefully.... why the heck did so much gear get left in Afghanistan?!?!?
Politics.
I think they said they need to leave immediately
Fascinating thanks for sharing with us 👍
We should do what "The Fighting Bunch" did and reclaim what is ours.
США , МОЩИ и СИЛА !
@@rgmilanoita5962cry
Take care of the armory.
Lives depend on it.
imagine being able to print money and buying endless amounts of guns
невозможно бесконтрольно печатать деньги, потому что произойдёт скачёк инфляции.
914Th ARG! I was in the 914th when it was an Airlift Group!
The Security Forces are the Air Force’s largest career field- maybe for a good reason?
i love USA❤🇺🇲
Might be a dumb question, but why does the force that mainly fly's planes need so many small arms?
They’re mainly for their Security Forces (what they call their military police) and for other airman to pick up a weapon to defend the base if all hell breaks loose
Every military person on that base will have an issued weapon (or 2) which is held in an Armoury, there will be enough spares and parts to fix those weapons. Most infantry personnel will be cross-trained in different weapon systems so depending on their task they can be issued so they may be trained and issued an M4 as an initial issue, but if he is also a Machine gunner he will have one available then there will be side arms (Pistols), anti-tank, you name it once qualified on a weapon system they will be able to get issued one, they do not take them all with them at 1 time it depends on the task if visiting units go for exercises or redeployment they may not be able to carry their own weapon so there need's to be spares to issue them at their new location, I did a course at a french base but we travelled as civilians so could not take weapons so we got issued theirs for the duration. There will be enough weapons in an Armoury to issue 2,3,4 times the amount of personnel stationed at that base.
Nothing like the British army’s armory then we don’t hand our mags in we keep hold of them and the keys are kept in the guard room and only some ppl can sign them out then they open the main door to the armory then each company has there own room in the main armory then they open that door to get to the weapons unless it’s changed from when I was in that’s how my old reg worked anyway
This video is about the US Air Force. From what you have said, the British Army operates very similar to the US Army. Magazines were a personally item issued at the unit level that you kept and maintained yourself. You only turned in magazines (at least the ones that were issued to you) when you left the Army or changed units.
Just curious, What are the inventory controls when the Fed Govt. abandons hundreds of millions of dollars of weapons, gear and ammunition in Afghanistan?
"You lost the paperwork, too?!"
It's called Tax write-off...
Salam.setiap negara.bahagian Amra(terutama senjatanya dan amunisi).adventori akndikira setiap tahun itu perkara rutin wajib.
A write off!
Biden forgotten he is a president that time.
ENEMY: showing their wapon arsenal.
USA: thats CUTE
Good ol wapans
All this organization is great to see. What about the 80 billion dollars worth left in Afghanistan?
Every Legal natural born American should be given one on their 10 birthday.
Losing one will keep you out in the field for as long as it takes to find it.
Or locked down to company area/base.
Air Force M4s, M9s and SAWs look pretty damn new. It’s like they are barley used 😂😂😂
and the berettas look clapped out.
As a 14 year active duty veteran when and where did you serve?
@@tb7771 as a former active duty member. Figure it out 🤣
@@11bravo72 Haha brother just saw the name. Too much vodka got me. So many keyboard warriors nowadays, hard to tell who is real and who is not. No disrespect to you. From an ex-31B.
I used to be the weapons custodian for an Air Force Reserve Medical Group. We had 105 troops. Our weapons stores consisted of over 125 M-16 and 55 M-9. And they all were practically brand new since medics only qualified once every other year at that time.
Chair Force storing weapons instead of using them is so on brand.
Heh. Cool. I guess the weapons I carried during the two wars I was in, on the ground, including being embedded with Iraqis for 12 months, were all pretend. Dumbass.
Bullets are kept somewhere else.
in the Army base where they are put to good use.
Did you not see the drawers full of 30rd 5.56 mags?
And in the USAF, we are issued ammo with our weapons. Pistols will have 1 in the pipe with safety off.
Not in an ammo can with a wire tamper seal like in the army.
There's nothing like having to block your ammo after a 14-hour
shift....
@@PzychoSixx - I saw magazines in the arms room. I did not see any live rounds until they cut to a different location. There was also a big red amnesty (Prohibited Items) can in the video for any errant live rounds.
Also, in the Army, magazines were personal items issued at the unit level. You did not draw them out of the armory each time you needed them. You kept and maintained them yourself. You also loaded them yourself. So, the issued with “one in the pipe” analogy would be pretty ridiculous in that instance. Not to mention unsafe. Basic gun safety would be to hand a person a weapon with the mag well and chamber empty and exposed. The bolt or slide would be pulled to the rear. Preferably, rifles would be handed while “shotgunned”. By the way, did you really trust your life to a weapon that someone else loaded? How did you check the barrel for obstructions? How long did you leave the mag spring compressed? I have so many questions about that. But, I guess it’s no different than jumping a parachute from the riggers section. 🤷♂️
Thank you for your service.
God bless the American taxpayers
Excellent introduction to manual weapon tracking with clipboards and maybe barcodes. But there are other US military installations with RFID weapon tracking systems, where an RFID tag with no battery is attached to each weapon, making it scannable from a distance, without line of sight. RFID weapon tracking systems track both personnel and weapons, ensuring that:only personnel with current weapon qualifications who are NOT in *Do Not Arm* status can be issued their ASSIGNED weapons known to be in good repair. The system maintains a roster of all personnel and their status along with a complete inventory of all hardware, including ammo, gear such as holsters and radios, and non-lethals such as Tasers and asps. At the issue/return window, an RFID reader scans everything passing through the slot, displaying a picture of each item scanned to the armorer. Signature pads can be used to display a list of issued items to the receiver, who then acknowledges receipt by signing. All events are captured in a database and never deleted, with unlimited reporting. The system has optional features, such as a complete inventory of spare parts and tracking of weapon repairs, test firings, cleanings, and inspections. A portable RFID reader can be used to scan all the items in the armory quickly, identifying which items are in and out of the armory. One base that trains personnel for overseas deployment trains hundreds of personnel each week. They are able to set up a new person, issue a weapon for training, and assign the selected weapon to the person, in less than one minute. The main obstacle to RFID adoption is inertia, even though the system dramatically reduces and simplifies the work load on armorers. There is also resistance at nuclear sites, based on the incorrect belief that RFID readers could interfere with nuke electronics.
This footage is nearly a decade old. Some of this footage is from a Holoman AFB vid circa 2015 called "Airmen of the Armory". I did not check all the footage, but many of these channels simply edit govt shot footage, put some music over it, never give any credit to the original nor the time from for which it was shot.
@@guyintenn yea theyre wearing abus
and who had the genius idea to use bar codes near the barrel
Let alone the US left 775,000 M4’s behind in Afghanistan.
Exactly. Who TF is signing out for those weapons?
Yea, here I break into the place, get so overwhelmed they find me the next day dead of a heart attack but with a smile only Some people will understand!😊
I'm surprised they let you film in here. insane footage
They will give it Taliban too..
😂😂😂😂😂
That's one beautiful armory 😢
Don’t show this to biden he’ll send to Afghanistan
Imagine serving a country that doesn’t trust you with firearms and locks them up.. Imagine being on a military base and being attacked and all your weapons are locked up..
Bullet stop? It’s called a clearing barrel.
And it’s a mechanical solution to a training deficiency. Just like the 3 round burst.
@@brianoswald1067 I saw it get popped a few times.
@@larry648 remove magazine, check chamber. It’s that simple. It’s those who check their chambers & then remove their magazines shouldn’t be in the “Armed Forces”.
@@brianoswald1067 new LE troop, long SAC ORI shift, and a complacent NCO at the barrel. 5.56 will get your attention going off indoors. I jacked a round and hit the floor. I thought I was in deep 💩 for jacking the round, but those of us that did got a “good job”, those that didn’t were asked why not?
The biggest mistake I made in the Air Force was taking an afsc that would be profitable after i got out, a desk job that I hated. I wish I could go back and be an armorer, something i would have enjoyed and been passionate about.
Nothing says aviation MORE than an armory tour-- WTF???
Right? They don’t even need em really
@@TheREALLibertyOrDeath - The Air Force definitely needs them. Especially their Security Forces and Special Operations Forces. The Army and Marines just need more of them.
God Bless American Service members and War Veterans 🇺🇸
USA VOTE 💙
Switching a gun is faster than the reloading
Shame they gave so much to the Taliban.
Great Job 🙏
when I served I never owned a weapon. Now that im a civilian I have two two safe full of shotguns, handguns, assault and sniper rifles. you should be worried more what some civilians got.
Democrats are very worried, it's why they keep trying to take away your right to have guns, but will release criminals caught with illegal guns all day long.
Air Force Armory of practically never used rifles.
The US must feel so proud, suppling these to countries who use it on innocent, unarmed people thousands of miles away. USA! USA!
Name one major country that doesnt sell arms duffus
I don’t think many servicemen are firing their rifles at civilians thousands of miles away.
@@matthewjones39 no you misunderstood me. You know how the U sends arms to a country in the Middle East to help conduct a genocide.
The Marines are the only ones who build their own sniper rifles, the rest buy them from companies. It is a specialty in the Marines that requires an apprenticeship to become a gunsmith. They are taught all aspects of gunsmithing, including threading barrels, and chambering barrels to exacting specifications. The school is in Quantico. Marines are Riflemen, they care about their weapons. My Dad was a Marine.
i swear this show shows our enemies things they dont need to see
I was about to say the same. I'm surprised they didn't include the address.
Our enemies are perfectly capable of seeing whatever they want without TH-cam.
There's nothing remotely classified in these videos. There are armories connected to every major post in the US military. You'll see the same things in over 750+ locations around the world.
I mean is a video really going to hurt THAT much? After all, we gave the Taliban a key to Bagram, fully stocked.
they got all they needed to see in Afghanistan thanks to Biden / Harris
貴重な映像ありがとうございます
U.S. Air Force has some of the most skilled shooters of all military forces....
Just kidding....
Regular AF personnel? No.
AF special forces groups? Yes, they can do all those things that Rangers do.
There is so much technical material in these videos. I would bet that Russian, Chinese, etc. experts go over them with a fine tooth comb. I can't help but imagine they are able to glean useful information. ?
No they wont, every official pr video released everywhere is reviewed plenty of times before it is allowed to be released.
@@jessicaregina1956 Glad to know that.
@@jessicaregina1956 Their are some ignorant individuals in the chat.
@@jessicaregina1956 What about the "do not arm" list at 1:20 showing every mentally and possibly criminally disabled airman for the world to read.
@@tonyphillips3842 as others have already pointed out, this video is old enough that their rank is on their shoulders. All of those members would have ets already
Good show!😊
Read that someone doesn't agree with this method?!?!? Notes: Tanks don't get parked at barracks, grenades are not under pillows, Adm's/Gen's daughter ain't hangin out with the 86ers...this is the mil at piece-time (currently?!?). Don't like it?, don't be a p*ssy and put you/name on blast!
* Peace-Time
All this video showed me is that the U.S. Air Force runs its armories the same way every other country does. No secrets to be seen here.
At least 2 separate areas I saw English and Chinese writing in the armoury, what's that all about?
It's Japanese, not Chinese.
@@長岡隆太郎 Look at the brain on Brad! Regardless, what's that all about?
@@長岡隆太郎still containing some Chinese characters. I'm sure the Chinese can understand the first line 😂
CALL Q IMMEDIATELY!
@Neil-Aspinall who have we been allies with since 1945 genius?
I understand they need the guns, but they are the Air Force😂