I prefer to have a flat plate so the front bag side walls can grip and guide the plate on the edges. With C channel, I would think you could get some muzzle rise under recoil because theres no way for the front bag to grip the sides of the sled plate. And the 6061 AL plate I use comes out to around $4 each when the cost is broken down into 6" long pieces.@Ledd Slinger you ever try using aluminum C channel to make one? You can get 3" x 1.5" x 0.250" for about $50 for 4 feet. Could be a great option for round tube gun or AR platform forearms. Cut it at 5.875" long on a chop saw and you could get 8 of them out of a 4' stick, and $7/ea for base material cost is pretty dang cheap.
Yeah I've used Delrin to make a couple things before. It can be useful in areas, but I prefer the strength and rigidity of aluminum for this sort of application. Plastic sleds warping in the heat scares me more than the cold. HDPE can start melting at only 248 degrees which isn't a whole lot higher than boiling water. So it's probably starting to move and flex pretty good at half that temp. A black colored sled sitting in the sun on a hot summer day is going to be a lot hotter than the ambient air temp. An 80 degree sunny day might have a black plastic sled cooking at 110-120 degrees.The biggest issue between Al and Delrin is the significantly higher cte of Delrin. Plastic moves a lot more than metal. Fortunately for me I only have to worry about 40° at the coldest for winter shooting occasionally, so it doesn't move too much. I built this one to fit into an anschutz rail so it can be allowed to move with the seasons and not warp around fixed attachment points.
Good quality front rests have tension adjustment on the side walls for the front bag. Don't have to grip if you don't want to. Nice to have the option of testing with sidewall grip tensions to see differences in how the rifle shoots and tracks. Can't really think of a way you can do that with C channel unless you machined grooves into the sides of the channel.Gripping the sides of a front bag can add fake weight in some disciplines.
C channel is a good idea if you have some lying around to use yourself, but it's more material so it costs more and doesn't offer any advantages I can see for that added cost.
C channel also limits you to use on a tube gun or skinny sporter stock rifles. A flat plate will go on anything
It is all true, but if C channel works for you, great!All above is'nt true, but you have'nt seen my designs yet !! Yinz have
to stop thinking about mounting arca or pic rails. As for gripping the
sides ?? I like a tall side maintaining 1/2" of flat then tapering away
to let the bag make contact, but still let the rifle release on recoil with-
out interference......I need to find some free time to play on the mill.
I have channel in stock.
Show us your design and maybe you'll change my mind. Always open to new ideas if they work well
Yeah I've used Delrin to make a couple things before. It can be useful in areas, but I prefer the strength and rigidity of aluminum for this sort of application. Plastic sleds warping in the heat scares me more than the cold. HDPE can start melting at only 248 degrees which isn't a whole lot higher than boiling water. So it's probably starting to move and flex pretty good at half that temp. A black colored sled sitting in the sun on a hot summer day is going to be a lot hotter than the ambient air temp. An 80 degree sunny day might have a black plastic sled cooking at 110-120 degrees.
Of course aluminum can flex and move as well with extreme heat and cold, but its more of an expansion and contraction rather than becoming flexible, and the operating temperature range is going to be hundreds of degrees wider than any plastic.
The only advantage I see with Delrin/HDPE over aluminum is ease of machining.
The M-Lok is now available.I would look at the LJW Precission bag rider, they are very nice. You can mount a picattiny clamp or ARCA clamp on them and he is making one that mounts to M-LOCs that should be out anytime if it's not already. It's one of the best I have seen. They come anodized black or silver.
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Rifle bag rider — LJW Precision
Made from aircraft grade aluminum. 3 inches wide. Will fit in all standard front rifle rests. Smooth finish provides a consistent and repeatable movement. Compatible with Atlas and American Defense clamps. Not included . Standard 1.100” screw spacing. Please email if you are not sure about your cwww.ljwprecision.com
Checking it's price point, I get this......The M-Lok is now available.
Can you make a bag rider for a anshutz rail? MPR 64