In the Farley rest thread, I saw mention of a JJ Industries front rest. So I went and looked it up. Real nice. And about $900. The price probably accurately reflects the work.
But is this stuff we really need? I started with a Hart rest, cost about $100 something in the early 1990s. No windage top. Leather. Talcum powder.
Well, you say, look at how aggs are dropping.
Year or so ago, I shot next to Mike Jennings at Rockingham. Older Panda action. Older stock. Older scope (might have been frozen). Hart rest. Leather bags. Mike squeezes the rear bag to adjust shots.
Blast from the past, right? Except he won the four-gun, and I believe 2 or 3 of the Aggs.
* * *
The most stable front rest I ever used was a plate of steel. I tapped it, and installed two 3/4 "threaded rods with a wing-nut to clamp a pile of boards to the base. Adjust the height by adding/subtracting a board -- 3/4" boards, with a 1/2 1/4 and 1/8 for "fine" adjustment. The top board did have a windage top on it, for left-right.
Squeezed the rear bag for dialing in the rifle.
I believe I shot better with that rest than any of the much more expensive ones I went to. The downside to it was bench rotation -- it took longer to set it up (add a board). Maybe even a whole minute. The other downside was my hands began cramping as I aged & arthritis set in -- so bag-squeezing became tough.
From my perspective, the real solution to the rest problem is to find a cure for aging. (Be nice it it cost $1,000 or less).
But is this stuff we really need? I started with a Hart rest, cost about $100 something in the early 1990s. No windage top. Leather. Talcum powder.
Well, you say, look at how aggs are dropping.
Year or so ago, I shot next to Mike Jennings at Rockingham. Older Panda action. Older stock. Older scope (might have been frozen). Hart rest. Leather bags. Mike squeezes the rear bag to adjust shots.
Blast from the past, right? Except he won the four-gun, and I believe 2 or 3 of the Aggs.
* * *
The most stable front rest I ever used was a plate of steel. I tapped it, and installed two 3/4 "threaded rods with a wing-nut to clamp a pile of boards to the base. Adjust the height by adding/subtracting a board -- 3/4" boards, with a 1/2 1/4 and 1/8 for "fine" adjustment. The top board did have a windage top on it, for left-right.
Squeezed the rear bag for dialing in the rifle.
I believe I shot better with that rest than any of the much more expensive ones I went to. The downside to it was bench rotation -- it took longer to set it up (add a board). Maybe even a whole minute. The other downside was my hands began cramping as I aged & arthritis set in -- so bag-squeezing became tough.
From my perspective, the real solution to the rest problem is to find a cure for aging. (Be nice it it cost $1,000 or less).