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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Let's talk Bipods
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<blockquote data-quote="dfanonymous" data-source="post: 1606086" data-attributes="member: 97050"><p>Harris swivel with notched legs or atlas are pretty good entry level or just general use. Yes you can get bipod bounce on hard surfaces with like concrete, but it's not the bipods fault. The rifle does not jump, it comes straight back until the recoil pad makes contact with you. If your shoulder is angled back to the right then the butt slides right and the POA goes left. Try to get some video, you may discover it's not as much bipod hopping left as the rifle butt/bag scootching right. </p><p></p><p>The same applies to handguns, recoil management is a form of technique, doesn't matter how old you are or how long you've been shooting, if you are managing recoil, you're sights will come back to where they were after every shot, at a close to cyclic rate of of sustained fire.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dfanonymous, post: 1606086, member: 97050"] Harris swivel with notched legs or atlas are pretty good entry level or just general use. Yes you can get bipod bounce on hard surfaces with like concrete, but it’s not the bipods fault. The rifle does not jump, it comes straight back until the recoil pad makes contact with you. If your shoulder is angled back to the right then the butt slides right and the POA goes left. Try to get some video, you may discover it's not as much bipod hopping left as the rifle butt/bag scootching right. The same applies to handguns, recoil management is a form of technique, doesn’t matter how old you are or how long you’ve been shooting, if you are managing recoil, you’re sights will come back to where they were after every shot, at a close to cyclic rate of of sustained fire. [/QUOTE]
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