Sunday, February 23, 2014

AAR, S&S Training Solutions CCW Airsoft




   S&S Training Solutions is starting to be a big name in the Kansas City area. They have been doing tactical training since 2013, after the owner/operators identified the need for a more 360 degree training environment in Kansas City. I personally met both Cole and Parker in late 2013, after they approached Mike and I about teaming up for a class on wilderness survival class.   Their outlook on training is simple, but rare. Get as many people trained as possible. S&S offers classes ranging from basic pistol marksmanship to 24 hour tactical field exercises. The classes they offer range from 30 dollars to 120, which is a huge value given how in depth the training is, especially compared to other tactical training, which usually  prices itself out of a lot of people's range. 


    The CCW Airsoft course is the first training class I was able to attend with S&S. First off, it started right on time, which is always a bonus. Waivers were signed, and everyone was checked for live weapons and ammo as they came in. We started the course with some classroom instruction. The instructors first went over the agenda for the day. They spoke about the physiological responses to stress, how your body will react to dangerous situations. The importance of learning about those body alarm responses cannot be overlooked. If you get into a self defense situation, and your own body surprises you with its response, that is one more thing you are fighting against, beside the obvious threat.

    We watched some videos that focused on events where a concealed carry weapon was deployed in self defense, and the instructors talked about everything from the CCW holders tactics versus the bad guys tactics, to the response of the unarmed people around them. They also showed a brutal video of a home invasion where a woman was unarmed, and incapable of defending herself against her attacker. Parker and Cole stressed the need to be armed even when in the home, as a weapon in the safe does nobody any good when the bad guy kicks in the front door or, even worse, walks through the door you simply didn't lock.
One way to avoid flagging no-shoot targets is the extended "Sul."
    After the videos, we focused on some topics that don't get covered a lot in depth on the "square range." We practiced presenting the firearm on a threat, giving loud verbal commands to the aggressor, engaging them, and finally doing a solid search and assess. The instructors did a great job of driving the point home with the search and assess. They asked for confirmation of fingers held up, or even presented a second threat, to ensure students weren't doing the cursory head snap that many of us fall into the habit of doing on the range. We also practiced avoiding "flagging" or muzzle sweeping non-combatants as they crossed our field of fire.


   We also practiced disarming a downed aggressor after the shooting stopped, calling into 911, and what would likely happen when the police arrived to the scene. This was an excellent part of training to me, because it is simply overlooked in most schools. At best, it is usually talked about, but in this course, we had actual emergency service dispatchers to take the 911 calls, and an active LEO to simulate the response of a police department to a home invasion or shots fired scenario. This included the option of getting "hooked up," being ordered to the ground, disarmed and handcuffed by a LEO. Simply put, a law enforcement officer doesn’t know who the good guy is, coming into a home on a shots fired called. You will be disarmed, and likely put in cuffs. Training to deal with that situation beforehand is a huge benefit, and seems to be rarely covered in defensive shooting courses. The class benefited from having two emergency service dispatchers that played their parts in the training, and ran us through the standard questions.

1 Hour lunch break, in the Independence Square. Parker from S&S stayed behind to secure the training area and all equipment. I ate a hotdog for the first time in about three years at Updog, a "gourmet" hot dog joint. I regret nothing about that chili-bacon dog with (glorious) onion rings.

After lunch is when the shooting started. S&S started out students from a good distance away, simply drawing and firing at each other in a "duel." This accomplished a few things; testing the airsoft guns for   working on weapon presentation from concealment, moving off the line of attack, shooting at another human being, and finally, removing the fear of being hit with an airsoft gun. Most of the people in the class had not been hit with an airsoft round before.
function,

From the duels, the class was moved into some realistic situations where a concealed weapon may be employed. The situations included simulated office and home situations, a gas station robbery, movie theater active shooters, and defending yourself in the extreme close quarters of an elevator. I took a nice shot in the chin with one of the airsoft guns (my own gun that I had loaned out, no less). It seemed like everyone got the chance to get to be good guys, bad guys, and innocent bystanders.


After a few hours, we went outside to the parking lot, and started working on some basics of defending yourself in and around a vehicle. S&S talked about leaving a reactionary gap when you come to a stop behind another vehicle at a red light or stop sign, as well as keeping an eye on your surroundings. The different scenarios included single and multiple attackers, distractions such as pan handlers, road rage type events, and being attacked before you can get to your vehicle. I had the chance to pack myself into a small four door car, and try to defend myself from a knife attack. For safety, all the windows in the vehicles were down, and the attacker, Mike in this iteration, came at me with knife jabs from a rear window, going for my neck. I sacrificed my support hand to keep some distance between myself and the   If you have never tried to defend yourself from inside a vehicle, I urge you to consider taking this kind of training. Its easily something that we could have spent many hours on.
knife (I wasn't able to trap or grip the attackers weapon hand) and shifted myself over the center of the vehicle to gain space and draw my firearm from concealment in my Crossbreed holster.

These situations emphasized a few key points in my mind.

-Having a concealed firearm is a great PART of your self defense system. However, a firearm simply will not do as your only tool in that system. An aggressor with a knife can cover a lot of ground before you can react, draw, and effectively engage them. As the OPFOR on one iteration, I was able to come into a small
break room and stab two people multiple times each before either was able to draw effectively. I was also
able to take one of the firearms from my victims and take aim at another student before they were able to engage me.

In this iteration, I was only able to kill one good guy. The other made me pay for it.
At this distance, your firearm isn't always your best bet.
In the real world, bad guys don't like to attack from a distance. They like to be within your reactionary gap before they announce their ill intent. If a person draws a knife on you when they are already within contact distance, drawing your firearm may not be (I would say "is not") your best initial action. The same could be said for the elevator exercise I was the CCW holder in. I sat waiting for the elevator with one of the instructors as a role player. I did not know who the armed party would be, or what they would be armed with. I entered the elevator, and two people were already inside. They made small talk until, without any warning, Parker drew a gun. In the extreme close quarters of an elevator, drawing would have done nothing but get me dead in a hurry. I closed the short distance, and simulated strikes to the face of the attacker while keeping the gun off of me, ending with stripping the firearm from the attacker.  It wasn't a perfect application of some of the Krav Maga training I have received, but it was great practice.

 (Note: If it hadn't been Parker, who I have spent a bit of time with, I wouldn't have gone "hands on" in this training. It was not specified if it was allowed or not, but that is what my first reaction would be in a real world ECQ scenario. )

-Sometimes shooting is not the right answer. I was the concealed weapon carrier in one iteration of the gas station robbery scenario. Two bad guys entered the gas station, and immediately ordered everyone to lay on the deck. Two shooters ( who already knew I was the armed party, unfortunately), put me at an immediate disadvantage. Due to the fact that they made it clear that they were there to rob the store, I complied with their demands. The OPFOR got their money, and left the simulated gas station without a shot fired. Instead of trying to have a gunfight from an instant disadvantage, I chose to be a good witness. This is a point that S&S covered a few times. You have to use your best judgment, and quickly run your mind through your tactical options. I ran through the options in my mind, and figured that introducing my
gun into the situation would at best probably end up with me being shot, only to kill or wound one gas station robber.

In another situation, a student was presented with two individuals (Mike and I) in a fight near his vehicle at a stop. S&S was trying to see if the student would engage Mike, who was wielding a knife. We were given instructions to turn on the student if he did, our fight basically being a ruse to draw him from his vehicle for a robbery if possible. He did not engage either of us. It’s a very difficult, situationally dependent choice as an armed individual whether to insert yourself and your firearm into someone else's problems. Many times we have the natural reaction to want to help people. Unfortunately, you probably don't know who you are getting involved with,  who the bad guy really is, or even if there is a good guy in the fight at all.

Well inside the reactionary gap.
-Try to maintain a reactionary gap, and attempt to always be aware of your surroundings.
-Be prepared to react at all times. I constantly wargame in my head how I would react if a person I meet in a gas station spontaneously attacks, or if someone in the elevator draws a weapon on me. I feel like that came into play in this training, to my advantage.

In closing, I would definitely suggest to anyone who carries concealed to take this training. Its inexpensive, but you get way more than your money's worth.  Shooting on a square range, or even in a more open environment where you can shoot and move, will not fully prepare you for engaging a fully mobile and armed threat, especially in every day situations. S&S delivered a very professional, well planned and executed training day. I left better prepared to face a threat in everyday life and in my mind, that means the mission was accomplished.

(All pictures belong to S&S Training Solutions. Check them out on Facebook, or their website here.)

Kyle
DSPS
23FEB2014





1 comment:

  1. Good review Kyle, And good to meet you yesterday The guys at S & S are great

    ReplyDelete