I'd suggest that this is a preference which depends for its usefulness on both the recoil severity and your ability to consistently apply the same amount of bending load to the fore end. It is not possible to use the mk.1 shoulder to accurately sense the difference between 2lbs of forward load and 4lbs of forward load nor is it realistically possible to continuously control that pressure during the firing cycle as your brain transitions from building your position to focusing on your sight picture and dynamically correcting your wind hold while consciously engaging the fire control system in a controlled manner. Brains don't symmetrically multi-process well.Kinda akin to what scope to get, or which caliber.
Different people use bipods differently.
My preference is heavy loading.
But that's just me.
This is exactly the reason that I practice and teach minimum biological input. It's been pretty well analyzed already but even without anyone going out themself and doing controlled experiments it follows from simple logic and the fact stated above that human beings lack internal instrumentation of sufficient accuracy and symmetric multi-processing capabilities sufficient to deal with loading bipods both heavily and consistently.Try a few different holds and see what responds the best.
I'd have to agree with where your going.I'd suggest that this is a preference which depends for its usefulness on both the recoil severity and your ability to consistently apply the same amount of bending load to the fore end. It is not possible to use the mk.1 shoulder to accurately sense the difference between 2lbs of forward load and 4lbs of forward load nor is it realistically possible to continuously control that pressure during the firing cycle as your brain transitions from building your position to focusing on your sight picture and dynamically correcting your wind hold while consciously engaging the fire control system in a controlled manner. Brains don't symmetrically multi-process well.
This is exactly the reason that I practice and teach minimum biological input. It's been pretty well analyzed already but even without anyone going out themself and doing controlled experiments it follows from simple logic and the fact stated above that human beings lack internal instrumentation of sufficient accuracy and symmetric multi-processing capabilities sufficient to deal with loading bipods both heavily and consistently.
Everyone is free to make up their own mind and do what they see fit to but if we're to make logical and fact based decisions then it's pretty easy to see that the difference between 1 and 2 lbs of loading force in the case of minimum load effort is a much smaller difference than the difference between 10lbs and 15lbs as in high loading pressure technique. Load enough to maintain positive control of the rifle including preventing bipod hop and no more (minimum biological input) is taught by huge numbers of instructors for a reason. I've never encountered one that said to load heavily and that admonishment has been explicitly extended by quite a number of other instructors that I've worked with to include boomers like .338Lap and .50BMG.
ETA: The one case where I do teach people to load much at all is with light weight and hard kicking guns like pencil barrel hunting rifles.
I think that you only set the legs at 45 degrees when you are shooting off a berm so you can load the bipod with your shoulder pressing into the stock. You may want to watch this video:Won an Accu-tec bipod. I shoot some off of a regular Harris and do know that things shoot better when you pre-load the bi-pod. With this new unit, with the legs forward at 45 degrees, do I still try and load the legs?
Thanks,
Tod
This will mostly be for shooting out of my shack where everything short of 900 yards is down hill. Need as low as I can get. Even with the short Harris i need to build a fairly high rear rest.I think that you only set the legs at 45 degrees when you are shooting off a berm so you can load the bipod with your shoulder pressing into the stock. You may want to watch this video:
Accu-tec bipod - Search Videos
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If your shooting out of a shack why are you shooting off any bipod? I sure do not. Sandbags of some type front and rear.This will mostly be for shooting out of my shack where everything short of 900 yards is down hill. Need as low as I can get. Even with the short Harris i need to build a fairly high rear rest.
Thanks,
Tod