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Max Velocity Tactical – The Warrior Mindset And Training Progression

Saturday, February 3rd, 2018

This is a follow up post to Max Velocity Tactical’s The Warrior Mindset and Firearms Culture, which can be viewed here. This blog post is published here with permission from the author.

SAS-Oman-1-1“Out of every one hundred men, ten shouldn’t even be there, eighty are just targets, nine are the real fighters, and we are lucky to have them, for they make the battle. Ah, but the one, one is a warrior, and he will bring the others back.” – Heraclitus

“Warrior Mindset is more than aggressiveness and determination, it is about over coming challenge and adversity. It’s about possessing, understanding, and being able to utilize a set of psychological and physical skills that allow someone to be effective, adaptive, and persistent. It also allows someone to use optimal decision-making, psychological techniques, physical and tactical skills learned in training and by experience.”

“The goal of a Warrior Mindset is to integrate the psychological with physical and tactical training to add a dimension that is often overlooked, but necessary to achieve maximal performance of a skill. If you only talk about mental toughness, but don’t actively train it, you haven’t developed into a complete warrior….regardless of what physical skills you have developed. You’ll find, with proper training, that you can possess the power to overcome any obstacle and change your outcomes if you train yourself mentally. This is the point in which you will truly bring out the Warrior Mindset within yourself.”

his post is a follow up to my previous post on Warrior Mindset and Firearms Culture. It would be worth reading that post, which you can do at the link below:

LINK: ‘The Warrior Mindset and Firearms Culture’

In case you didn’t bother with the link yet, a little review here:

Firstly, to focus on the positive. If you consider yourself a self-reliant and capable individual, then you need to action the warrior mindset. By your thoughts, actions, training and capabilities, you are working to become an embodiment of the warrior mindset. This is not something that you need to be concerned about only if you are in a martial profession, because in the great American tradition of individual self-reliance, we should all be capable self-reliant individuals. Thus, you are a protector of yourself, your family and your children. However, what is mostly missed is the fact that the utility of developing the warrior mindset and associated tactical skills, is not simply tactical capability. No, development of an effective warrior mindset is a positive character building process and will filter across and benefit all areas of your professional and personal life.

If we dedicate ourselves to the pursuit of tactical training in order to develop a warrior mindset, then we are directly concerned with developing:

  • Physical Fitness and Strength.
  • Hand to Hand Self-Defense Skills.
  • Skill at Arms.
  • Tactical Skills & Knowledge.
  • Physical & Moral Courage.
  • What is often missed, but is essential to a true warrior mindset, is talked about in the quotes at the top of the page:

  • Problem Solving & Decision Making Ability.
  • Performance Under Stress.
  • Psychological Resilience.
  • ‘Will to Win.’
  • Teamwork.
  • Leadership Qualities.
  • Situational Awareness.
  • Communication Skills.
  • These are the character building qualities that are essential to a warrior mindset and which will bleed across into your personal and professional life.

    In this post, I want to examine the training side in a little more detail, so on that note, some more from the previous post:

    The next issue is one of ‘tactical training’ and the current trends in American ‘tactical’ instruction. There are many instructors out there with real training and operational experience who should know better. But much of the current trend in rapid firearms manipulation and gaming, if left at that, will get you killed in a real tactical scenario. Does it have training worth? Yes. Does competition have training worth? Yes, in context. But if you wish to progress to a full warrior mindset you must see firearms manipulation and ‘gaming’ as simply a progression to more complex tactical range training. In essence, most of these students are stuck in a training zone that is going to be detrimental to them, and also does not allow them to develop the skills and qualities mentioned as part of the warrior mindset.

    But there is often an unwillingness to progress to true tactical training, due to misunderstanding / ignorance, and also a lack of willingness, skill or facility on the part of schools to teach it.

    The target of today’s post is therefore the ‘mainstream’ tactical training culture. This seems particularity apt with my just having returned from SHOT Show. Between the gun derp, fudds, and the cool guys I didn’t know which way to turn. Huge fun though!

    I just put out a post describing the current upgrades to the Velocity Training Center, and what we are doing to the class curriculum in 2018 (‘Hostile Environment Advanced Tactics (HEAT) classes: 2018’). What I am describing in that post is a state of the art facility at the VTC, combined with a curriculum that is designed to be a genuine tactical training progression. Thus, what we are doing is unique, with our mix of live fire, UTM force on force, and leadership training offerings, conducted in a designed and developed facility. This is why we attracted the attention of US SOF, who are now regularly training at the facility. Why? They can do more there, with greater freedom, than they can do elsewhere.

    Now, I will address one thing before I go on: I have called the class progression ‘advanced tactics.’ But are they or are they not ‘advanced?’ Here is the thing: all tactics come down to TTP’s (tactics, techniques and procedures) executed well. Thus, it is all about good solid basics. You do of course have to have the right TTPs in the first place, and of course we do, because we are professional soldiers with the right training and operational experience. All tactics come down to being basic in the end, or you will not be able to execute them under fire. At the end of the day: ‘brilliance in the basics.’ There are no ‘secret-squirrel super-secret drills’! However, just because drills are basic does not mean they are easy to execute, and certainly it is not easy to execute a drill as a tactic in the face of the enemy! ‘Shoot, move and communicate’ is easy on paper, but to actually execute that effectively in a combat environment is not so. So why ‘advanced tactics’? Because we are progressing students to legitimate small unit tactics, which I have chosen to call hostile environment tactics, which in the sense of any other ‘tactical training’ is genuinely advanced training.

    I see a lot out there about firearms training in various feeds: Instagram, Facebook, Blog Posts, etc. What gets me is when I see instructors swiping at the industry because of such and such reason why training needs to be better, or any number of other interpretations and nuances that make up these articles, yet I see them all lumped into the same box. And yet here I am doing exactly that same! Yet, my claim in my defense is that I am standing on another hilltop, looking over at the ‘mainstream’ and voicing my disapproval. What I am not doing, is trying to get to the top of the mainstream hill by climbing on the back of others, stomping them into the mud. I fully realize here at MVT that we will always be a boutique operation, simply because of the quality and nature of what we do, the challenge of it, and how we need students at the intersection of many different qualities that make them want to seek the warrior mindset. So much out there seems to be mutually exclusive, where you have ‘gun guys’ who never do PT, and cross-fitters who don’t like guns, and what we need are warriors who like to do PT and shoot guns and do tactical training, and invest in themselves! Thus, we focus on Heraclitus’s nine fighters and one warrior, and I do not see that changing anytime soon.

    The universal problem with the ‘mainstream’ tactical training market, as I see it, is this: there are forever instructors talking about how to be better, how to do better, many such examples. But uniformly, what they are all really talking about, is the minutiae of weapons manipulation. There is usually very little ‘tactical’ about the subject matter. It is just this drill versus that drill. Thus, they are focusing on the ‘shoot’ part of ‘shoot, move and communicate’ where doing so may actually, without proper tactical context, be of detriment to students. Yes, there may be movement, but it is usually a bit of running around, without tactical context. Maybe even carrying a sandbag or two. Yes, I get it.

    So perhaps it is a short-sighted method of training? For perspective, we must not forget that much of the weapon manipulation and cool-guy stuff we see on flat ranges has far more to do with selling stuff than with any real training. After all, it is an industry, of firearms, gear and related merchandise, and much of what you see is marketing. There is nothing wrong with that, cool-guy gear and firearms sell, and this is either direct marketing from the companies themselves, or via training companies or instructors who are perpetuating an image and doing product placement. Let us all just remember that, when we are making training decisions.

    The secret is, to get to a level of effective tactical competence with a rifle, does not take that much training. You will need to continue to train to prevent skill fade, but once you get to a good level, you can spend the rest of your life getting better by very small increments. Great as a hobby. What you need to do is put that shooting skill into context with a proper training progression – this will also prevent you learning training scars by constant cool-guy shooting drills that will perhaps get you killed in a real survival situation. There are many types of instructors out there, and some only know what they know, and they may be good at weapon manipulation minutiae, but you cannot expect them to teach tactics if they do not have a professional grounding (plus ability to teach). When on the other hand you get professional soldiers of whatever flavor, they should know better. They do know better. They know that training involves progression to tactical training ranges, and that without that progression, it is worthless as combat preparation, a fun hobby at best. They also know that the job of a SOF soldier is not simply to shoot. It is way more complicated than that, and involves development of the qualities that I have listed at the top of this post.

    It would be easy for an uninformed reader to take away from what I have written so far that MVT does not care about flat range drills. Not so. We are very good at teaching weapons manipulation and combat marksmanship, correctly and with the right context for combat application. This is because we understand fully how important the aspects of the training progression are. You need to be able to manipulate your weapon as second nature so that you can get your head out of it while in contact, assess the situation, scan, communicate, and execute a drill at team level in order to be able to stand a chance of survival or victory. On the flip side, much flat-range shenanigans focus on worthless drills that are hollow shadows of what they are supposed to be, and may in fact be dangerous. Have you ever seen students mag-dumping at the 7 yard line then ‘scanning’ a small sector with their eyes glued to the sights? Or the fake robot ‘scan’ that sees nothing?

    My beef is with the lack of tactical context to shooting training which purports to be ‘tactical’ when in fact it is not. At most, what I see in so many Instagram feeds is an over-focus on minutiae which lacks the bigger tactical picture. I can set up targets and sprint around pew-pewing them all day. Fun, but am I going to do that in a firefight? The minutiae that I refer to is the over-focus on aspects that do form part of the training progression, such as barricade drills, reactive / reflexive fire, all that, but which however become a be-all and end-all in themselves. If as a trainer or student you lack tactical context or knowledge, and you have no way to do real tactical training, then it stands to reason that you will spin down the rabbit hole of minutiae and the pursuit of ever faster or varied shooting drills.

    The above having been said, could be taken as an indictment of any competition or fun shooting drills. Again, not so. Competition is a great way to gain training, have fun, learn things and practice. If that is all you ever do or have done, then you are missing the big picture. If you have conducted some real tactical training with all the benefits to positive character development, it is no thing at all to have some fun at a competition while understanding the true context of it.

    I read a post from a company called Guerrilla Approach that popped into my feed. It was interesting. It made many of the claims that I have listed above, by which it focused on ‘better’ ways to do what in fact were just more drills on the flat range. The author, Aaron, seems like a good guy, and he is a former Green Beret, relatively young (former 18X I think). He made a comment in the post about how he was doing shoot house training as a young buck, and noticed how the ‘cadence fire’ of the instructors was lacking; how they shot sporadically, and only shot when they had a good center mass shot. In essence what he was unwittingly saying was that he had been a victim of flat range shooting drill training, which was not how the instructors with experience were conducting themselves. The cadence fire of so many drills that you see simply did not cut it in a dynamic shoot house situation. What do we also have to do in CQB? How about target discrimination / PID, along with problem solving, decision making and effective communication. Fast eyes, fast hands, slow feet.

    Another thing that he wrote was that we have learned a lot, by which I think he really meant about shooting, during the GWOT. That is absolutely true, and we are so much better at the shooting we teach, from the current manual of arms taught for the AR, weapon manipulation, to effective combat marksmanship, than we ever were before. But the flip side is that due to the nature of many operations in the GWOT, we have forgotten much of small unit tactics. This is a disadvantage of those young enough to have not spanned pre-9/11 and then the GWOT – their relative tactical training and experience is lacking, regardless of how many CAS missions they have seen. We see much creeping in now that is GWOT influenced and could be very dangerous, particularly if we are looking towards conflict with opposition forces such as North Korea. However, that topic is for another article. Suffice to say, at MVT we are keeping SUT alive as a school of excellence, we disregard nothing that has been learned more recently, but we also try not to forget past knowledge.

    But so what? Is there any relevance to my observations? What difference does it make whether people want to go pew-pew on the range as much as they like? Why is it any of my business? Well, at the end of the day it all comes down to your perspective, and what you are trying to achieve. If you are looking to invest in yourself, and develop the warrior mindset then you have to go beyond just shooting. You need to be challenged and grow. This is applicable whether or not you are in a martial profession, are a prepared citizen hoping not to have to utilize small unit tactics at some point, or simply growing yourself. Because the character building aspect of such martial pursuits will have benefits for you in the here and now, both in your professional and personal life. Going back to the list at the top of the page:

    If we dedicate ourselves to the pursuit of tactical training in order to develop a warrior mindset, then we are directly concerned with developing:

  • Physical Fitness and Strength.
  • Hand to Hand Self-Defense Skills.
  • Skill at Arms.
  • Tactical Skills & Knowledge.
  • Physical & Moral Courage.

    What is often missed, but is essential to a true warrior mindset, is talked about in the quotes at the top of the page:

  • Problem Solving & Decision Making Ability.
  • Performance Under Stress.
  • Psychological Resilience.
  • ‘Will to Win.’
  • Teamwork.
  • Leadership Qualities.
  • Situational Awareness.
  • Communication Skills.
  • These are the character building qualities that are essential to a warrior mindset and which will bleed across into your personal and professional life.

    How do we do that? We must put in place a training progression that includes fundamentals through weapon manipulation to combat marksmanship. We then progress to tactical live fire ranges with unknown reactive targets, working as a team, in a dynamic scenario-based environment. We must include constructive force on force training in an SUT / CQB environment. We should also include mission planning and leadership training. In fact, the progression is really a loop. We move along it but circle back to the flat range to keep progressing our skills. Of course, such tactical ranges need to be designed and run by professionals in order to maintain high standards of safety. This is all what we do at MVT, and why the VTC is designed as it is, along with the class curriculum.

    Now, posts such as this one often elicit a visceral reaction from some quarters. This is to be expected, when people do not hear what they want to hear, and when egos are dislocated. Let’s take a quick look at the why of that:

    In this and my previous ‘The Warrior Mindset and Firearms Culture’ post I essentially told everyone to get off their asses and do hard stuff. That is not unusual, although even the softest of these types of calls to action get push-back, because many are living in a fantasy land, legends in their own lunch break. What is new here is the call for ‘gun culture’ to move beyond square range work and into more realistic applications of using firearms for fighting. For many, square range classes are the hard things we are supposed to go do – to suggest this is not good enough, and that there is better, is heresy. Particularly for the industry which is happily making money off of cool guy merchandise and tactical fan-boys.

    Thus by denigrating the status quo in the current industry, I have committed the tacticool heresy of criticizing what a lot of people have come to see as the pinnacle of training. This therefore attacks not just the fudds, but also a lot of the tacticool types out there. Tying this to the warrior mindset also attacked a lot of folks of the type who have invested themselves in the huge ‘punisher’ logo and safe full of guns part of our culture. In reality lots of people talk a lot about warrior mindset, yet I don’t know many who actually seem to know what they are actually talking about – mainly because they have never been tested, and never been forced to improve: essentially, untested egos. I also said the magic word, warrior. I therefore riled up the wrath of the fudds who don’t think they need to be one, and the tacticool types who think they already are. That word, warrior, makes it about the the reader’s identity.

    https://maxvelocitytactical.com/2018/01/31/warrior-mindset-firearms-culture-2/

    SHOT Show 2018 – American Defense Innovations Stinger

    Monday, January 29th, 2018

    IMG_0468

    This is the American Defense Innovations Stinger. One of the more unique products to be found at this year’s SHOT Show, the Stinger is a ‘Rapid Deployment Bayonet’. It is designed to mount to the underside of a forend via Picatinny rail, and features an aluminum housing which deploys a large pseudo spike-style bayonet. The mechanism works by depressing a recessed button on the underside of the housing and dragging it forward so the unit locks into place.

    The Stinger is expected to start shipping around April-May 2018, and is being distributed by Paper City Firearms.

    www.papercityfirearms.com
    americandefenseinnovations.com

    MCTSSA Marines Conduct Combat Skills Training

    Sunday, January 28th, 2018

    By Sky M. Laron, Public Affairs Officer,
    Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity

    CAMP PENDLETON, Calif.—U.S. Marines with Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity sharpened their combat skills at multiple training locations across Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton Jan. 19.
    “Every Marine is, first and foremost, a rifleman. All other conditions are secondary.” This adage from Gen. Alfred M. Gray, 29th Commandant of the Marine Corps, has come to embody the fighting spirit of the Marine Corps.

    “No matter what our occupational specialty is, we are all Marines—we are all warriors,” said Capt. Joshua Lum, MCTSSA Operating Forces Support Group operations officer and training event safety officer.

    Lum, an infantry officer by trade, said the primary focus of this training was developing Marines’ mental and physical toughness, which was echoed by fellow event leaders.

    “Every Marine at MCTSSA has a duty to the Marine to the left and the right of them, and the basic combat skills that we performed during our event will keep Marines in an always-ready mentality,” said Sgt. Megan Birge, MCTSSA Network Operations Center Telecommunications and Data Systems administrator and training exercise officer-in-charge. “This mentality will ensure Marines are constantly ready for the fight.”

    Many of the Marines who fill the ranks at MCTSSA work on satellite antennas, radars, radios and computer systems enabling the technical support required by the operating forces. Yet, these skills are only part of what makes them effective in any battlespace.

    Several dozen MCTSSA buddy teams negotiated through five stations that not only tested their physical and mental toughness, but required them to use land navigation, combat lifesaver, radio configuration and combat reporting, aquatic endurance and hand-to-hand combat tactics.

    “Marines at MCTSSA are from technical backgrounds or non-combat backgrounds; we had participation from ranks of Private First Class all the way to the Sergeant Major and the XO,” said Birge. “It just goes to show that no matter the [military occupational specialty] or rank, training like this is important and needs to be done across all types of units in the Marine Corps.”
    With all the technology and advancements at Marines’ disposal, it is also important to remember the basics, said Birge.

    “Overall this was good training,” said Sgt. Spencer Trawick, MCTSSA Network Operations Center network administrator. “In combat, you are going to be doing much more than just your job.”
    Trawick, who was raised in the Rocky Mountains of western Montana, added that he was used to hiking and land navigation because he did that type of thing growing up. It was getting his hands on the radios and refreshing his combat lifesaver skills that he found most beneficial, he said.

    “Taking a break from the job and getting back to the baseline of what I signed up for was great,” said Trawick.

    MCTSSA Marines trained on mountain tops and underwater, and traversed dry creek beds and ravines, putting their combat skills to the test. At the end of the day, these technical experts will go back to their laboratories, raydomes and office spaces to perform the vital task of supporting the operating forces, but their own warrior skills will be front of mind.

    MCTSSA, the only elite full-scale laboratory facility operated by the Marine Corps, is a subordinate command of Marine Corps Systems Command. MCTSSA provides test and evaluation, engineering, and deployed technical support for Marine Corps and joint service command, control, computer, communications and intelligence systems throughout all acquisition life-cycle phases.

    180119-M-RY346-1003

    VIRIN: 180119-M-RY346-1003

    Sgt. Spencer Trawick, MCTSSA Network Operations Center network administrator, treats a simulated sucking chest wound at the combat lifesaver station during combat skills training Jan. 19, aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sky M. Laron)

    180119-M-RY346-1002

    VIRIN: 180119-M-RY346-1002

    Maj. Clayton MacAloney, MCTSSA Transmissions Engineering branch head, performs aquatic-based physical training or “Pool PT” during combat skills training Jan. 19, aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sky M. Laron)

    180119-M-RY346-1004

    VIRIN: 180119-M-RY346-1004

    Staff Sgt. Wendel Matney (left), MCTSSA operations chief, lands a pugil stick strike while sparring during combat skills training Jan. 19, aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sky M. Laron)

    180119-M-RY346-1001

    VIRIN: 180119-M-RY346-1001

    Sgt. Tekiera Edwards (left), MCTSSA assistant warehouse chief, and Pfc. Anthony Chavez (right), MCTSSA inventory management specialist, negotiate the land navigation course at the School of Infantry–West during combat skills training Jan. 19, aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sky M. Laron)

    SHOT Show 2018 – IWI TS12

    Saturday, January 27th, 2018

    IMG_0465

    The TS12 is a semi-auto bullpup shotgun and the first shotgun in the Tavor family of weapons. Chambered for 12 gauge shotshells, the TS12 features a 15+1 capacity (12+1 with 3″ shells), and, in a design that is somewhat reminiscent of the SRM Arms Model 1216, feeds from a rotating drum of three 5-round magazine tubes that must be manually cycled as one tube is expended. Being a bullpup shotgun, despite its 28″ overall length, it manages to house an 18.5″ barrel. A monolithic Picatinny top rail allows for the attachment of iron sights and/or optics, while M-LOK slots on the 3 and 9 o’clock positions of the forend allow for the attachment of accessories.

    The TS12 features an ambidextrous design, with feed ramps placed on both the left and right of the weapon for loading shells into an empty mag tube, while the charging handle can be switched from the left to the right, with the use of a tool. A crossbolt safety is placed a bit above the pistol grip, which can also be reversed for left or right shooters, as can the ejection port.

    IMG_0140

    We had a bit of time with the TS12 at Range Day, and it’s a weapon that takes some getting used to, due to its design being a bit unique. Loading the tubes is simple: you load the shells into a mag tube, then depress a lever within the trigger guard (opposite the trigger) to unlock the drum to switch to a new tube. A round is automatically chambered when a fresh tube is switched to the top position. A button to the rear of the feed ramp can be depressed to eject shells from the mag tube. It’s a fairly hefty weapon with a large rubber buttpad, so it it absorbs recoil pretty well, and its semi-auto operation means you can throw a wall of lead down range pretty quickly, especially when you get used to transitioning to a new tube, after a bit of practice.

    iwi.us

    SHOT Show 2018 – TBA Suppressors – Sicario Ruger MK IV

    Saturday, January 27th, 2018

    IMG_0370

    TBA Suppressors was displaying their wares at a booth in the 3rd floor NEXT Pavilion, and although it was the name of this product that caught our attention more than anything, after seeing what TBA had to offer we came out pretty impressed. The Sicario is a .22LR suppressor designed specifically to interface with a modified Ruger MK IV to function as an integrally-suppressed pistol.

    Despite being integral, the Sicario consists of a quick-detach two-piece system. The standard spec barrel on the Ruger is replaced with a ported barrel with a 1/2×28 thread pitch for mounting the monocore and sleeve.

    The end cap of the Sicario is broached for an allen wrench, although TBA designed it so you can disassemble it using the Ruger magazine, if need be.

    TBA also offers a ported adapter that threads onto any other 1/2×28 threaded .22LR barrel, which interfaces with the core and sleeve exactly like the replacement Ruger barrel. This allows the suppressor itself to be mounted to virtually any compatible .22LR firearm. In the gallery above, you can see the adapter, then mounted onto a S&W M&P .22 Compact, and finally with the Sicario suppressor mounted to the pistol.

    www.tbasuppressors.com

    SHOT Show 2018 – GlockStore SS80

    Saturday, January 27th, 2018

    IMG_0341

    In the same vein as Polymer80, GlockStore is now producing an 80% Glock pattern pistol frame, the SS80. The SS80 is a single-stack 80% frame that is compatible with Glock 43 components. Made of a nylon/polymer blend, the SS80 frame features a textured grip and double undercut trigger guard for comfort and control. A blank serial plate on the dust cover allows the maker to etch their own serial number for the pistol. Additional feature include an extended beavertail and extended rail system.

    IMG_0344

    Also as with Polymer80, the SS80 comes with a jig and drill bits to assist with completion of the frame.

    The SS80 is expected to start shipping mid-March.

    www.glockstore.com

    SHOT Show 2018 – Brownells Retro Rifle Line

    Thursday, January 25th, 2018

    Brownell’s Retro Rifle line is on display at their booth at SHOT Show. The full details of the line can be found here, but as a reminder, the Retro Rifle line consists of four 5.56mm and two .308/7.62 rifles built to the correct styling for US military issued rifles in the 60s, or in the case of the .308 rifles, built to Eugene Stoner’s original AR-10 design.

    BRN-16A1

    IMG_0477

    BRN-601

    IMG_0475

    XBRN16E1

    IMG_0476

    XBRN-177E2

    IMG_0478

    BRN-10A

    IMG_0471

    BRN-10B

    IMG_0472

    www.brownells.com

    SHOT Show 2018 – SOG Knives PowerAccess Deluxe

    Thursday, January 25th, 2018

    IMG_0438

    The PowerAccess Deluxe is a new multitool from SOG Knives. Made of 5Cr15MoV steel with a stonewash finish, the PowerAccess Deluxe has 21 tools, as well as a 12-piece hex bit kit, and the components can be opened while keeping the tool closed. This tool utilizes SOG’s compound leverage gripping power. With this feature, and the wire cutters, we were able to slice clean through a penny the rep had on hand.

    IMG_0436

    Another cool feature of this and other tools in SOG’s new line is the ability to retain a bit while the tool is closed.

    IMG_0442

    Here’s a shot of the PowerAccess Deluxe fully extended.
    www.sogknives.com