7
777funk
Guest
Curious what makes the most consistent surface. I know the idea is that we want recoil to do the same exact thing each and every time. I've thought about this for a while now but what's the consensus on the surface hardness for a front rest top. And...
What would happen if you had something like hard maple for a surface just below the forearm. Sorry if this is a stupid question... but I'm curious.
A while back in my backyard range (air rifle) I had pop can targets setup in the woods. I could hit one at 75 yards EVERY time if I set the rifle on stacked blocks of wood on the bench. I'd get it set up with the crosshairs about 6" high and then the ONLY thing I'd touch is the trigger (wouldn't even look through the scope once everything was set). I could hit the can standing up with my back turned and only my finger and thumb touching the rifle.
But when I held the rifle I could only hit it about 20-30% of the time. This led me to believe wood is a good surface to touch the rifle but... am I wrong here? Rules aside of course...
The rifle was a Gamo spring piston .177. For those of you not into air rifles, springers recoil forward, backward, and torqued making accuracy difficult to learn to obtain. So in many ways it's like shooting a hard recoiling rifle (recoil and hold sensitivity really come into play). I think they're great practice.
What would happen if you had something like hard maple for a surface just below the forearm. Sorry if this is a stupid question... but I'm curious.
A while back in my backyard range (air rifle) I had pop can targets setup in the woods. I could hit one at 75 yards EVERY time if I set the rifle on stacked blocks of wood on the bench. I'd get it set up with the crosshairs about 6" high and then the ONLY thing I'd touch is the trigger (wouldn't even look through the scope once everything was set). I could hit the can standing up with my back turned and only my finger and thumb touching the rifle.
But when I held the rifle I could only hit it about 20-30% of the time. This led me to believe wood is a good surface to touch the rifle but... am I wrong here? Rules aside of course...
The rifle was a Gamo spring piston .177. For those of you not into air rifles, springers recoil forward, backward, and torqued making accuracy difficult to learn to obtain. So in many ways it's like shooting a hard recoiling rifle (recoil and hold sensitivity really come into play). I think they're great practice.