Kings X
Gold $$ Contributor
WHY?
Why use a joy-stick bi-pod?
Simple – it is a mechanical device to position the crosshairs at a desired point on the target. Move away from the gun and watch for the preferred wind condition and trip the hair trigger with your finger tip. Score an “Xâ€. Repeat 20-40-60-etc times and win the match.
What you DID NOT DO:
1. Squeeze the rear bag .
2. Grip the stock.
3. Apply cheek pressure.
4. Apply shoulder pressure.
5. Apply breath control.
6. Squeeze the trigger.
The gun is shot “free recoilâ€. Get away from it and just lightly touch the trigger. Let your equipment do the rest.
Will it work? It does for Bench Rest shooters every day. They shoot 5 or 10 shoots in seconds. They never look at the target. Just unload, load, close the bolt, pull trigger, - repeat-repeat-repeat-repeat. Some F-Open shooters use this same technique.
Real F/TR World – it ani’t that easy to do.
Bench and F-Open guns don’t recoil like 308 F/TR guns. The stocks are even deigned different. The guns “slide†in the front rest. A bi-pod goes where the gun goes – backwards. It has to be re-positioned each shot.
A benchrest joy-stick front rest weighs 10-30 pounds. This mass weight does resist the movement of the handle. This is a good thing. The movement of the stick need to be smooth but also must “hold†the position when released. Holding the handle can cause fliers.
A bi-pod that weighs only 1 or even 3 pounds has the tendency to shift when the pressure is apply to it. That is a fact of mechanical nature = for every action – there is an opposite action. Getting the gun pointed where you want it AND getting it to stay there, is a learning process. Then after the shot – you get to start all over again.
The answer would be to start from scratch when designing a new F/TR gun. Pick components that allow for a heavy joy-stick bi-pod. Light action, light stock, light scope, light rings and base, light barrel – etc.
Final Point – Is this the “intent of the game�
Why use a joy-stick bi-pod?
Simple – it is a mechanical device to position the crosshairs at a desired point on the target. Move away from the gun and watch for the preferred wind condition and trip the hair trigger with your finger tip. Score an “Xâ€. Repeat 20-40-60-etc times and win the match.
What you DID NOT DO:
1. Squeeze the rear bag .
2. Grip the stock.
3. Apply cheek pressure.
4. Apply shoulder pressure.
5. Apply breath control.
6. Squeeze the trigger.
The gun is shot “free recoilâ€. Get away from it and just lightly touch the trigger. Let your equipment do the rest.
Will it work? It does for Bench Rest shooters every day. They shoot 5 or 10 shoots in seconds. They never look at the target. Just unload, load, close the bolt, pull trigger, - repeat-repeat-repeat-repeat. Some F-Open shooters use this same technique.
Real F/TR World – it ani’t that easy to do.
Bench and F-Open guns don’t recoil like 308 F/TR guns. The stocks are even deigned different. The guns “slide†in the front rest. A bi-pod goes where the gun goes – backwards. It has to be re-positioned each shot.
A benchrest joy-stick front rest weighs 10-30 pounds. This mass weight does resist the movement of the handle. This is a good thing. The movement of the stick need to be smooth but also must “hold†the position when released. Holding the handle can cause fliers.
A bi-pod that weighs only 1 or even 3 pounds has the tendency to shift when the pressure is apply to it. That is a fact of mechanical nature = for every action – there is an opposite action. Getting the gun pointed where you want it AND getting it to stay there, is a learning process. Then after the shot – you get to start all over again.
The answer would be to start from scratch when designing a new F/TR gun. Pick components that allow for a heavy joy-stick bi-pod. Light action, light stock, light scope, light rings and base, light barrel – etc.
Final Point – Is this the “intent of the game�