How do I go about controlling side pressure with the front rest? ThanksRemove as much as you can off YOU from the equation. You are probably not necessary at all in the area of forearm. Make sure return to battery is accomplished in some way to the SAME forward position, If you can control the side pressure on the forearm by a proper front rest, do it.Make sure the tracking is repetitive. Use as much time as necessary to nail this down. Once this is done, let it track freely and try not to interrupt the backward movement until the bullet is clear of the barrel. Spend all the time necessary to set up properly or you are wasting your time.
I have to squeeze forearm to front rest a bit or scope will bite me. Recoil from my .280 AI in the light Kimber can be a bit heavy. How much cheek weld normally do you use? Trigger control etc.practice,practice,,,,a light gun is a finiky thing,,,,I like two hands on the comb and sit as straight as possible behind the gun to minimize torque,,,and a sissy bag or shoulder pad if it is large cal,,,,Roger
IMO most people will obtain best accuracy from a shouldered rifle from a bipod, and rear bag or pod, with a full cheek weld and firm grip.
Such setups effectiveness to accuracy get proven by active military and police snipers, at competitions and actual field scenario's daily.
Remove as much as you can off YOU from the equation. You are probably not necessary at all in the area of forearm. Make sure return to battery is accomplished in some way to the SAME forward position, If you can control the side pressure on the forearm by a proper front rest, do it.Make sure the tracking is repetitive. Use as much time as necessary to nail this down. Once this is done, let it track freely and try not to interrupt the backward movement until the bullet is clear of the barrel. Spend all the time necessary to set up properly or you are wasting your time.
I here you on pods,I don't have them for all my rifles, need to get them set up to accept podsIMO most people will obtain best accuracy from a shouldered rifle from a bipod, and rear bag or pod, with a cheek weld and firm grip. Such setups effectiveness to accuracy get proven by active military and law enforcement snipers, at competitions and actual field scenario's daily.
We are real small potatoes next to you guys . Just trying to maybe learn some of the big boys techniques. We shoot paper and gongs for fun of it in a small way.I agree with what VaRandy has written. BUT the equipment muleman listed isn't the best available to get the best results out of his rifle. I shoot Benchrest which is the discipline I have been shooting for several years. And whatever "goal" you settle on for best accuracy, is ALSO dependent on the equipment and set-up in terms of the rest and bags you use. And I'm not knocking Caldwell because I started out using a Caldwell Rock Rest and Bags. And I still have them as back-up. But I spent money on a nice custom made rest (Greenlaw) and various sized Protektor Bags (with Super Slick material) that helped improve my score. SO the questions remains....what are you after? And if you want to follow VaRandy's advice (which is good), consider investing in better equipment to improve your score. Again, Caldwell works, but isn't in the category of what you'd want to use in a more serious competition atmosphere. Good Luck with whichever way you go.
Alex