• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Best F class feet?

So many designs out there, which ones are best? I usually shoot of softer grass mounds and usually use plumb bob/plummet weights on the bottom of my rest, but Im thinking F class feet might be a little more stable with the big wide footprint.
 
Get a couple nuts with the appropriate thread and a big fender washer... use the nuts in a jam/lock config on the legs to hold the washer in place. I've got the big heavy/ expensive Sinclair feet as well, and I think the nuts/washer setup works about as well.
 
I recently came across the same problem. Before going to Phoenix, I bought some 3" diameter short aluminum rod (1/2" long) from McMaster Carr. I center drilled those with a drillpress and sandwiched them between a plain nut and a spike nut (eHarley.com) of the correct thread. I can post pictures later if needed.

The spike nuts are 1 5/8" long and drive into the ground easily but stay solid even in the sandy stuff at Phoenix.
 
Might consider getting some of the massive solid brass Viper feet (for your SEB), see Viper website. They add enough weight to your rest to give you a good physical workout getting the rest to the firing line...especially during the Palma match course. Where you drop it, it will definitely stay. If you are a little physically run down, might consider carrying around a small fork lift (like the brick trucks) to get the rest out of the back of the vehicle up to the firing point. For night driving, with rest in the back, expect to get a lot of on-coming high beam flashes...because you will be driving on constant high beam! ;)

Dan
 
Armored Transport said:
www.viperbenchrest.com 8)

This. Bob Pastor makes great feet. You can make your own "legs" with a two-foot piece of threaded rod; cut it into three 8" lengths and hit the hardware store for the knobs to go on top, apply some Red Loctite and the knobs stay on tight.
I spin the feet off and put the pointed Farley legs back on for bench use, back to the big ones for F-class matches.
They really aren't heavy, they're made from aluminum.

P5110015web.jpg
 
BY1983 said:
So many designs out there, which ones are best? I usually shoot of softer grass mounds and usually use plumb bob/plummet weights on the bottom of my rest, but Im thinking F class feet might be a little more stable with the big wide footprint.

To answer your question simply about the "best", I would say without hesitation Bob Pastor's (Viper) feet. I use them myself.

For those that want a more economical solution, Bald Eagle has them as well:

http://www.bullets.com/products/Set-of-3-F-Class-Feet-Steel-for-BE1004-and-BE1005/BE1007

http://www.bullets.com/products/Set-of-3-Long-Screws-for-F-Class-for-BE1004-and-BE1005/BE1008

http://www.bullets.com/products/Set-of-3-F-Class-Feet-Stainless-for-BE1004-and-BE1005/BE1007SS (stainless version)
 
My Farley rest uses 1.5" spikes which are made from McMaster-Carr components. They are: [br]
3/8-16, grade 8, all-thread rod p/n 90322A100, 1 ea.
304 stainless steel disks Ø3" X 1/2" p/n 9208K51, 3 ea.
Cast iron knob p/n 3948T21, 3 ea.
3/8-16 hex nuts, 6 ea. [br]
Cut the threaded rod into 8" sections. Turn the threads from 1.5" at one end and make a blunt point. Face the disks on each side, drill the center and tap 3/8-16. Drill 1/4" hole on the disk edge for tightening. Assemble them as you see in the picture. To use, pound the spikes into the ground with a soft-faced mallet by beating on the knob until the disks are solidly grounded. The knobs are cast iron, it won't hurt them. Use a scope level on your rifle and level to that instead of the rest. That should end your rest stability problem. If your rest legs are not 3/8-16, adjust parts accordingly.
 

Attachments

  • Farley_spike_feet.jpg
    Farley_spike_feet.jpg
    48.2 KB · Views: 122
I made feet just like Steve did. However all stainless, disks, threaded rod, knobs and lock nuts. Then the original tightening wheels that came with my short Farley legs. It added a lot of weight to the rest. I just ran the rod through enough, to fit the lock nut. It holds good on a grass firing points, however it would move with heavy shoulder pressure at Ben Avery. I think that I'm going to extend the rod deeper, and grind a point on them.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,250
Messages
2,214,747
Members
79,488
Latest member
Andrew Martin
Back
Top