T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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414.1 | One man's opinion | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Wed Jul 12 1989 14:50 | 18 |
| The big marketing hype in regards to composite stocks is that
your point of impact won't change when the atmospheric conditions
change. Wood supposedly will expand and contract enough with
temperture and humidity changes to ultimately change your POI.
Another selling point is the weight factor of composite stocks.
Durability is a third point.
On the negative side is the fact that most composite stocks are
noisy. They sound like plastic when scraped against a tree. I
also think that they are not as aestetically pleasing as wood.
A third factor is that a stock that is too light is just as bad as
one that it too heavy, especially if your shooting a magnum or large
bore rifle.
Until someone shows me that I'm missing game because I have a
wooden stock, then I'll stick with what I have.
Jeff
Hey Brett how was the rest of your trip?
|
414.2 | noise and recoil | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Thu Jul 13 1989 17:35 | 7 |
| Hey, those are good points, Jeff.
I take it no one here owns a composite stock.
/brett
p.s. the rest of the trip was better!
|
414.3 | My experience with composites | CADAM::OAKMAN | | Mon Jul 24 1989 15:53 | 22 |
|
Brett,
I restocked one of my Rem mod 700s with a Ram Line synthetic stock
two years ago after a trip to Ungava Bay, Quebec. It seemed like
the right move, considering the drenching the rifle withstood in
Quebec, and the fact that I would be using it that year for elk
in Montana. I would echo the thoughts of .1 relative to weight/noise.
The stock did weigh less than the wood, but not a lot, and different
wood stocks will vary even within the same calibre family. I have
two **Identicle** mod 700s in 7mm Rem Mag and they differ in weight
by a half pound! I think the wood is much more dense on one than
the other. While hunting Elk, the synthetic stock WAS very noisy
when sneaking through thick cover ( where elk love to hang out )
and my guide pointed this out to me. An elk can tolerate a branch
snapping, they do it all the time, but that plastic screek of a
stock sliding along a branch will put one into high gear in a hurry!
IMHO, stick with the wood if that's where you're going to be hunting.
-jro
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414.4 | Go wood if noise is a concern | SKIVT::WENER | | Mon Jul 24 1989 17:28 | 10 |
|
Noisy for sure.. I was in the market for a rifle a couple of
years back and looked into a fiberguard Weatherby. Just tap it
with your fingernail and you'll run away too. Of course I hunt
in relatively thick cover in Vermont. I went wood - Few if any
shots beyond 100 yds so the accuracy wouldn't be quite as critical.
- Rob
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414.5 | 77/22 notwithstandi? | PH4VAX::POINDEXTER | SOUTHERN, LIVING | Mon Sep 11 1989 23:34 | 6 |
| I've always been the purist for a piece of walnut, but Ruger's new
77/22's got me curious. Are most synthetic stocks a fake wood grain
like one would expect, are they mostly multicolored laminates or
are there any others that look better than a nylon 66. I'm ordering
Ram-lines catalog tomorrow morning. I want a .270 to keep in the
truck, don't want a shiny stock.
|
414.6 | | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Tue Sep 12 1989 02:41 | 11 |
| Synthetis stocks come in many varieties from look-alike wood, to
leaf patterns, to camo patterns etc. etc. etc. Either Gun World
or Guns magazine did a report on synthetic stocks a couple of
months ago. If I can dig it up, I'll list the various manufactors
that were listed.
I've looked at the Ruger 77/22 and the imprinted RUGER logo on
the stock turns me off. To me it stands out like a bumper sticker.
Red_only_60_days_until_Vermont_Deer_opens
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414.7 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | It's a hardship post | Wed Sep 13 1989 08:37 | 8 |
| One company offers a synthetic that looks just like wood.
Many are black, some are camo. I think the laminates look
better than plastic, but they're usually heavier.
The Browning A-Bolt is available in the Stalker - black finish,
black synthetic stock, or the Stainless stalker, same stock,
all metal satin stainless steel. Really weatherproof gun,
and probably available in .270
|