by Wapiti » 17 Aug 2025, 8:56 am
I suppose with people, once they've tried a few setups over many years, people soon learn what is best for them and what they do.
From an engineering perspective, a chassis rifle isn't necessarily more intrinsically accurate than say, a "traditional" B&C, Hogue or alloy-bedded HS Precision stock. These stocks can be and usually are, actually stiffer than a chassis rifle.
Before I cause a fit in someone or unintentionally hurt someone's feelings, see I said "can be, and usually are".
That's because that these conventionally shaped ergonomic stocks aren't just a bit of alloy machined out, they are also wrapped with stiff carbon or fibreglass/epoxy fibre, with forends designed to sit steady when used in impromptu holds or to also conform to your hand. This alone makes a huge difference to a fast, good pointing firearm and an inherently steady one.
Yes, a conventional plastic cheapie that's flexible and just pillar bedded cannot compare.
We have had some of these chassis stocks show terrible alignment. A firearm action needs to be bolted into a stock that is perfectly straight, one that doesn't induce any stresses into the firearm action.
Chassis stocks are inherently heavy because of quite a lot of reasons.
Attachment variations to fit buffer tube type stocks, different pistol grip fashion, cheek risers to suit the huge coke bottle sized scopes that are seemingly essential today, magazine options, rails for every other bolt on needed today.
To try and be relevant for something other than competition shooting, these stocks are lightened as much as possible. For people who just shoot on a range, or carry a rifle for a limited time, like PRS or whatever, this doesn't matter.
We've machined up perfectly straight barstock and used this to check the straightness of a few chassis stocks and have found they are not as straight as I would have expected, because of the lightening needed to make them in any way relevant to the user who has to carry the things around all day.
Each to his own. A stock that suits what I do isn't necessarily going to fit the needs of someone doing something else. It's hard to get a perspective across on this, only experience over time for the things one does personally.
Regards G,
AKA Dr. Doolittle