Fear & Loading: Veteran-Business Success Story

by
posted on November 1, 2017
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
fl_lede_37-psr.jpg

Frankie McRae has a slightly different approach when he teaches self-defense with a gun at Raidon Tactics, which is based about 30 minutes north of Fort Bragg in N.C. His decades of experience in the U.S. Army—including as a Green Beret stationed at the U.S. Army’s Special Operations Center of Excellence—shows, yet it quickly takes a back seat once the conversation turns to helping students survive a criminal attack.


Frankie McRae talks with Justin Coufal, director of marketing at Raidon Tactics, in front of one of the facility’s classrooms.

He never mentioned heroics overseas when I visited, although he did confirm multiple deployments. That single-minded passion is refreshingly rare in this age of overnight social media celebrity. I’m sure he’d share a story or two during classroom breaks, but it might take a crowbar to pry them out.

Don’t get me wrong. He’s friendly, knowledgeable and has the kind of military plagues and awards on the walls that confirm his expertise, but once you walk in the door, it’s about you and your loved ones.

During my visit he demonstrated how fast a perpetrator can close the gap and stab someone from 10 yards. The exercise was a painful reminder that successfully drawing from under concealment at that distance, while under stress, is a challenge, even when you abbreviate the process to simply rotating the handgun directly above the holster to engage.

His suggestion: Start the draw, while stepping out of the direct line being taken at you by the bad guy to buy lifesaving time (and distance, because their momentum will carry them past). Rotate to maximize your ability to keep the criminal in your sights. It’s common sense, but there won’t be time to stop and decide on the move when a blade-wielding attacker is closing the gap.

To commit it to memory, instant memory, it takes lots of practice with monitoring by an experienced instructor. It sounds as simple as chewing gum and walking at the same time, but it’s easy to cross your feet and wind up on your back at an unthinkable time. I begged off when he offered to demonstrate with one of the “stun” knives he employs with students willing to add stress to their reps.

Unfortunately, most ranges won’t allow you to draw from leather, much less add footwork and electrified props. Thankfully, McRae’s wife (who didn’t want to be named or quoted) purchased the 37 PSR Gun Club about the time of his retirement. She remodeled the clubhouse and classrooms, constructed a shoot house that can be converted to multiple configurations and included “lanes” where you can shoot from/around a vehicle, from elevation, atop a cargo container, put up steel plates, negotiate barricades and more.

At 45 minutes south of Raleigh, N.C., and a half hour from Fayetteville, N.C., it’s a dynamic-shooting resource for a lot of tar heel shooters. Gun rentals are available, and gear/ammo is also for sale. McRae even offers a canine training class, when enough people sign up or it’s requested by law enforcement. Shooting matches are held every month, too.

It’s not quite the “American Dream” you might expect from Norman Rockwell, but there’s no denying the way the McRae’s have renewed their “vows,” in a business sense—after all those deployments and years apart—is one of those unusual stories that set the shooting sports apart from nearly every other industry.

Latest

Steyrscoutii 01
Steyrscoutii 01

Review: Steyr Scout Mk II

Steyr Arms updated its Scout rifle design with a Mk II version several years back. Faced with heavy competition, is it still the benchmark for the "general-purpose rifle?"

Canadian Law Enforcement Agencies Disregard “Buyback"

The National Post, a Canadian news source, reports that “the majority” of law-enforcement agencies across Canada are disregarding their federal government’s mandated Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program (ASFCP).

Safariland Parent Company Announces Acquisition of Alien Gear Holsters

Following a court-supervised bankruptcy auction, Safariland's parent company, Cadre Holdings, announced it would acquire Alien Gear Holsters and other assets from Tedder Industries in a $10.3 million deal.

I Have This Old Gun: Sauer 38H

During the inter-war years in Germany, domestic makers produced many well-regarded handgun designs, but one of the least-known is the Model 38H from Sauer & Son.

Review: EOTech Vudu 3-9x32 mm SFP

Smaller than most LPVOs, this more traditional riflescope setup is compact enough to be useful for multiple shooting tasks.

Remington Reintroduces .22 Short Loads

Remington Ammunition announced that it is once again producing the versatile, user-friendly .22 Short.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.