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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Experience with Stocky's composite stocks
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<blockquote data-quote="Swiftkill" data-source="post: 1869281" data-attributes="member: 104167"><p>I have a Stockys Long Range Composite. It is like a mix of a Manners and Mcmillan in design on a .243 with a PTG action and Shilen Rem Sendero 26" bbl . The forearm is very cool with the barrel insert. I planned to shoot it from a bench or bipod. It is a good pound heavier than a fiberglass or Kevlar stock, but I wanted the weight to reduce recoil. It is super stiff. I cannot flex the forearm with any kind of reasonable weight. It does not flex whether on a pedestal rest or bipod. There is enough free float clearance that the forearm would never touch the barrel. What do you think you're going to do with your stock mounted to a barreled action anyway? and with a $1-3K scope on it! You'll probably be pretty careful. You can't lose for $200</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Swiftkill, post: 1869281, member: 104167"] I have a Stockys Long Range Composite. It is like a mix of a Manners and Mcmillan in design on a .243 with a PTG action and Shilen Rem Sendero 26" bbl . The forearm is very cool with the barrel insert. I planned to shoot it from a bench or bipod. It is a good pound heavier than a fiberglass or Kevlar stock, but I wanted the weight to reduce recoil. It is super stiff. I cannot flex the forearm with any kind of reasonable weight. It does not flex whether on a pedestal rest or bipod. There is enough free float clearance that the forearm would never touch the barrel. What do you think you're going to do with your stock mounted to a barreled action anyway? and with a $1-3K scope on it! You'll probably be pretty careful. You can't lose for $200 [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Experience with Stocky's composite stocks
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