LRHWAL
Well-Known Member
I thought I'd start this and see what comes up as there is a wealth of experience here and I'm sure plenty of good ideas.
I'm hoping mainly to hear what guys are doing seated off a set of sticks to get good consistency.
I'll go first on my bipod experiences....
Okay, so I'm pretty new to the bipod and I searched here and elsewhere. Initially I really found almost nothing, but a few weeks ago I eventually found some ideas. I can't credit those who gave the tips as I don't even remeber where I first saw this. I'm grateful for the advice they gave nonetheless....
Good results with a light pre-load on the Harris Bipod (I'm not sure other designs really lend themselves to this). I first saw this in the Froggy article and it's elsewhere here too. I'm leaning into the rifle and preloading the legs just a bit.
Great tip from elsewhere - get straight behind the rifle. I always tended to lie with my body and legs at an angle (always did shooting .22 prone at school); old habits die hard. Getting straight behind the rifle with the centre line of your body close to in line with and at least parallel to the barrel of the rifle made a HUGE difference. The rifle now bounces straight back and hardly off target - compared to the huge bounce to the left I experienced before. I'm able to have more consistent recoil and therefore more consistent groups. And I can see what I've hit after the shot. Follow through is important and this makes it MUCH easier.
Shoulders at most 30 degrees from perpindicular to the plane of the barrel (i.e. not with the one shoulder way in front of the other.
I've found that fitting an adjustable cheekpiece has helped hugely in all my shooting. I've got a Karsten Hansen jobby - very happy with it. I'm sure a Defensive Edge or McM would work similarly. I used to discount the cheekweld idea as I figured if the crosshair was on the target when I broke the trigger the bullet was going "right there". Well it wasn't! The rifle fitting article by Shawn is great on this and confirms my findings. I'm trying to look down the scope tube the same each time.
What the cheekpiece also does is to allow you to rest your head "like on a pillow" (idea from elsewhere). You can relax the neck a little more and have the rifle support your head. With a rear bag (to make this possible) this firm yet relaxed cheekweld seems to help consistency and control recoil a little too.
I use a fairly firm hold, partly leaning into the rifle and also trying to pull the butt firmly (but not hard) against the shoulder with the off hand. I pull a little with the right hand, but only enough to firm up the right arm (i.e. stabilise the platform). If you pull too hard your chest and shoulder muscles will tense up and start to move the rifle at the recoilpad end and probably create inconsistent recoil movement.
This has helped hugely, but I'm still learnign and don't claim to have the answers, just sharing my findings so far and still getting the hang of my own technique.
I'd like to hear suggestions and ideas on this and for shooting off a Stoney Point tripod or similar too please if someone has any.
WAL
I'm hoping mainly to hear what guys are doing seated off a set of sticks to get good consistency.
I'll go first on my bipod experiences....
Okay, so I'm pretty new to the bipod and I searched here and elsewhere. Initially I really found almost nothing, but a few weeks ago I eventually found some ideas. I can't credit those who gave the tips as I don't even remeber where I first saw this. I'm grateful for the advice they gave nonetheless....
Good results with a light pre-load on the Harris Bipod (I'm not sure other designs really lend themselves to this). I first saw this in the Froggy article and it's elsewhere here too. I'm leaning into the rifle and preloading the legs just a bit.
Great tip from elsewhere - get straight behind the rifle. I always tended to lie with my body and legs at an angle (always did shooting .22 prone at school); old habits die hard. Getting straight behind the rifle with the centre line of your body close to in line with and at least parallel to the barrel of the rifle made a HUGE difference. The rifle now bounces straight back and hardly off target - compared to the huge bounce to the left I experienced before. I'm able to have more consistent recoil and therefore more consistent groups. And I can see what I've hit after the shot. Follow through is important and this makes it MUCH easier.
Shoulders at most 30 degrees from perpindicular to the plane of the barrel (i.e. not with the one shoulder way in front of the other.
I've found that fitting an adjustable cheekpiece has helped hugely in all my shooting. I've got a Karsten Hansen jobby - very happy with it. I'm sure a Defensive Edge or McM would work similarly. I used to discount the cheekweld idea as I figured if the crosshair was on the target when I broke the trigger the bullet was going "right there". Well it wasn't! The rifle fitting article by Shawn is great on this and confirms my findings. I'm trying to look down the scope tube the same each time.
What the cheekpiece also does is to allow you to rest your head "like on a pillow" (idea from elsewhere). You can relax the neck a little more and have the rifle support your head. With a rear bag (to make this possible) this firm yet relaxed cheekweld seems to help consistency and control recoil a little too.
I use a fairly firm hold, partly leaning into the rifle and also trying to pull the butt firmly (but not hard) against the shoulder with the off hand. I pull a little with the right hand, but only enough to firm up the right arm (i.e. stabilise the platform). If you pull too hard your chest and shoulder muscles will tense up and start to move the rifle at the recoilpad end and probably create inconsistent recoil movement.
This has helped hugely, but I'm still learnign and don't claim to have the answers, just sharing my findings so far and still getting the hang of my own technique.
I'd like to hear suggestions and ideas on this and for shooting off a Stoney Point tripod or similar too please if someone has any.
WAL