Good Morning all.
The first thing that we need to understand is that when we adjust one or more of the leg points, we change the distance between them. If all three points have equal traction on the bench top, there is no sure way to tell how the rest will shift because of a new point to point distance. This shows up as a lack of linearity of the reticle's movement on target, when vertical adjustments are made using the rear leg point, and the rest squirms to find its new interface with the bench, because of the change in point to point distance.
The answer is to let the rear leg slip.
This all started (this time) because the time before last that I was at the range, my rest placement had the points in the pock marks left by one of a number hammering ins, and when I turned the rear leg adjustment knob on my Hart rest, the cross hair would initially move diagonally, before going up or down.This did not make for great confidence when making very small adjustments. I made a note to bring a set of point disks that my friend Ed Hellam had given me the next time that I came to the range, and something else that I vaguely remembered might be lurking in a tool chest drawer.
First, I should explain that the disks, unlike the ones that Dave Dohrmann sold, are made of single pieces of 1/8" thick aluminum, and are flat on their tops. I have modified the traction material removing the full undercoating of overly bouncy ( a guess), waffle style non skid shelf liner with three evenly spaced pieces of thinner harder rubber sheeting, each the size of a nickel. The traction is good and there is little evidence of potential bounce. In the center of each 3" diameter disc is a hole that is chamfered for a better fit with rest leg points. So far so good, but we still have a squirm issue.
The last, and key piece is a delrin disc, about the diameter of a silver dollar, that has a radiused raised rim that sticks up on its bottom, and a non piercing, tapered hole centered on its flat top. I don't remember where I got it. Perhaps someone reading this will know who the likely maker is. In any case, after adjusting my rest so that I was on target, I picked up one of the front disks (with leg point in place, momentarily tilting the rest) and set it back down, so that both front points would be more securely centered in their disks, and then I picked up the rear leg and placed the plastic disk under its adjustment point with the raised rim against the top of the disk, and the leg point in the tapered hole on its top. (I should mention that my targets had been placed on their frame with their tops leveled with a torpedo level that I keep in my range kit.)
After that, when I made a vertical adjustment, large or small, it was a perfectly straight movement, because the rear point would slide, and the front two were secure in the centers of their disks. This is a great product that anyone with a lathe should be able to make. I think that anyone that uses the rear leg on his rest to make aiming adjustments would benefit from having one.