A
andyd1179
Guest
Hya Guys,
I have a Anschutz’s 1913, Harrell tune and a JJ Papas Noodle.
I have been shooting ok with the gear I have but purchase a SEB coaxial rest and a set of Harrell weights and went out to play today. The first thing I wanted to try as I have not seen or herd any that has the noodle at any of the weights to so I thought I would add the 130z weight to the tuner the screw on the noodle. Before shooing anything I spent an hour fine tuning the SEB so that it moved slowly but also when it was set in the position it stayed there. With this type of rest I found that it worth having a spirit level to make sure the base is level at the front as well as the rear.
I put about 15 shots into a sighter and found that one full revolution of the tuner was enough to have it at its optimum. The wind condition was around 10MPH so not much to worry about. The first card I shot a 249 and 13 x’s , here in the UK you have to obliterate the x to score an ten x.
I than shot a match card which is the last one of the season and scored another 249 and 12x’’s. By adding the extra weight to the tuner and then putting the noodle brought the rifle to a new lever, its early days but the testing is very positive and able to hit more x’s than a standard card.
The Harrell weights only allow you to so much weight but it might be interesting if threads were added to the final weight to see if people were able to get better accuracy using the weights and the noodle.
I am also looking to add a counter weight to SEB to allow even greater smoothness to rest and sill allowing to stay were you put it.
AndyD
I have a Anschutz’s 1913, Harrell tune and a JJ Papas Noodle.
I have been shooting ok with the gear I have but purchase a SEB coaxial rest and a set of Harrell weights and went out to play today. The first thing I wanted to try as I have not seen or herd any that has the noodle at any of the weights to so I thought I would add the 130z weight to the tuner the screw on the noodle. Before shooing anything I spent an hour fine tuning the SEB so that it moved slowly but also when it was set in the position it stayed there. With this type of rest I found that it worth having a spirit level to make sure the base is level at the front as well as the rear.
I put about 15 shots into a sighter and found that one full revolution of the tuner was enough to have it at its optimum. The wind condition was around 10MPH so not much to worry about. The first card I shot a 249 and 13 x’s , here in the UK you have to obliterate the x to score an ten x.
I than shot a match card which is the last one of the season and scored another 249 and 12x’’s. By adding the extra weight to the tuner and then putting the noodle brought the rifle to a new lever, its early days but the testing is very positive and able to hit more x’s than a standard card.
The Harrell weights only allow you to so much weight but it might be interesting if threads were added to the final weight to see if people were able to get better accuracy using the weights and the noodle.
I am also looking to add a counter weight to SEB to allow even greater smoothness to rest and sill allowing to stay were you put it.
AndyD