Wapiti wrote:Fester wrote:More ideas and bits to buy, the easy carry sounds good, and I am finally using a Safari sling.
Something about sticks shooting that is not as steady as the hand on a tree, maybe it's just me and body movement transfers to rifle steadiness.
This is where the Manbilly type of sturdy tripod and vice setup may be better for keeping a steady crosshair.
Just need a light hold without extra pressure on the sticks or rifle, I imagine.
The trouble is the good tripod is a bit too heavy for carry.
Getting one and sending it back was good in a way as I garage tested it with the hunting rifle.
It seemed very steady, but no swivel ball rendered it useless.
They get you in with the add, as the photo is a swivel ball included unit but to buy all 3 items is not that cheap.
Yes I've wondered that, do have any experience with tripod use in the field?
I've watched those yanks on YouTube with the chassis bolt guns of every make showing longer range shooting through those "scope cams", and the hold looks bloody wobbly on those very chunky ball top carbonfibre tripods. They have to trip the trigger as the cross-hairs swing past the target.
Is this pretty much how they are?
If so, what's the fascination with these things? Just asking.
Seems like it'd be a right pain carrying one hunting. Marketing in action? Consume ya b@stards?
In Africa they swear by sticks because of long grasses making standing shots the only option..
Funny thing is none of this fancy crap, just 3 sticks tied together.
I actually tried a practice from the garage into the back yard and at short 20yd range this morning, the vise on the cheap FleBay tripod was OK and had enough slack to make vertical adjustments and can swing horizontal as far as you wish.
Then I swapped the vice with the simple plastic v and it still held on target with dry fires.
I need to do a range practise session to see what I can do at 100m.
Also, do you even get those 10 seconds to set the tripod in place.
With high pressured deer, it can be off-hand snap shot or nothing, as they are gone.
I have no faith in anything the Yanks do with their chassis things, and if they want to stretch the ranges much past 400, I think they need more than a Fagmoor and tripod.
6.5 cals have got to be marginal on anything of decent size and so have sticks at longer ranges.
I have carried the light weight tripod a few times, but only used it as a walking stick, and a sitting on my ass shot so far.
I have been caught out a few times, and it's off-hand or nothing, move to a tree and they are gone, freeze or drop, and a shot may present. This is why I started the practice and improved my off-hand shooting 100%
It took a long time though, and now the local ranges have gone full Fudd, so I can't practice as regularly.
Hence the home practice and I can do longer range out the garage door but too many walkers now, and they come from the suburbs, so not worth the risk.