The McFadden tripod is the most stable tripod I’ve used. I think it has to do with the wide top apex and two points of support for the rifle. It’s rather ungainly to move around, but it really works. Bug them to produce more…they are on a sort of production pause right now.
My other tripod is a lightweight (but rigid) setup that costs way, way, way more. A
RRS TFC-34, Arca Swiss B1 ballhead, and if my rifle doesn’t have an Arca dovetail interface, then I add a RRS Vyce clamp. I also use long stainless spikes instead of the stock rubber pads on the legs. That last bit is critical! Push the tripod into the ground, fellas.
Excepting the McFadden, the most stable sort of tripod that you can still swivel around (i.e. not a surveyor’s tripod with a plywood top) is one with a WIDE apex and low mounting point.
For example, I’ve toyed with the idea of slightly improving my “wobble zone” by buying a
RRS TVC-34, which is the same tripod I have except with a wider apex. Then I’d add a
leveling base into its 75mm video bowl (it’s lower than a platform) and then add a panning clamp on top of that.
Reports I’ve read say that setup would cut my wobble zone by roughly half vs my current RRS gear. But it is a more bulky setup if I would choose to hike with it, and slightly heavier too.
You see, I like having a tighter tension for tilting, and a looser tension for panning. Helps me during high-volume colony shooting. Some people seem to get on fine with an RRS Anvil 30, which locks up super tight (pan and tilt) with one lever but I am not a big fan as it’s harder to adjust the tension, and as I said I like having separate tension controls.
Another (cheaper) way to accomplish this would be to buy a heavy German wood tripod by Berlebach that are often used for astronomy or large-format photography.
This one with an integrated leveling base or this
other one that sets even lower but doesn’t allow for as much tilt (and you must buy the
leveling base). Both have 100mm width bases so that’s pretty wide (not as wide as the McFadden, though, but wider than the 75mm bowl of the RRS TVC series).
If one likes a separate panning base,
this one looks interesting. Have to add an Arca clamp and if you don’t have an Arca plate on your gun, then add a rifle clamp like the RRS Vyce.
Heavy is good in the PD wind, and wood is still the best anti-vibration tripod material.
I too like a swiveling bench the best, but one can set up a tripod much, much faster, and set it up in spots unsuitable for a bench.
Edit: I should say the McFadden (for me) is good for 400yds, maaaybe 450yds. My current RRS setup is good out to 300yds. I shoot prairie dogs with 204 and 17 Hornet. Others have had hits (like
@snert) much longer than that off of the McFadden, but I think he’s using a longer-range cartridge than my wimpy 204.
I bet the wider-apex RRS and especially either of the Berlebach’s would almost match the McFadden.