Am thinking of installing a mercury recoil reducer in the stock on my prone rifle. Simple install - just drill the proper diameter hole and fit the recoil reducer. Is there any drawback to using a mercury recoil reducer?
Was it a mercury or a Edwards the Edwards direction the recoil or mine did . LarryI installed a mercury reducer in the forearm of a Kimber 84M 325WSM. Made a significant reduction in felt recoil (but it still twisted like a corkscrew). Rifle came with a super-soft recoil pad so between the two the rifle was very manageable for me. Since you mentioned it, I now think one in my Palma Rifle would be a help!
Two guns that weigh the same with the same load one has a recoil reducer in it has the same amount of recoil in ft. pounds you can not change this ....jim
you are correct, a good pad and adding some weight do the trick. The other and best fix is in the case of a shotgun is to go to 1oz. and 7/8 oz. loads. In a rifle go to a 6mm or less, old eye can only stand so much till you damage them... Jim
You will get the same recoil reduction with the same weight in lead , been there with the shotgun thing. Jim
I feel that when you put shock absorbers on a car . Isn't that the same as mercury recoil reducer? The Edwards worked with a spring and a sliding weight . Mercury is more like a shock. Now I know I can replace my shocks with a straight bar only heaver and I won't feel the bumps . LarryI disagree that weight alone is the deciding factor in felt recoil reduction. The mercury units have a moving dynamic within them that does spread the energy out a bit. It was noticeable to me. Not a magic carpet but did have a positive effect.