lightsout144
FNG
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2025
- Messages
- 11
I have one and love it so far. It can do a lot for its weight. The package comes with everything you need regardless of your setup. The only thing yet to be tested is the durability, time will tell.
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Dude I’m with you on the Hatch. I think a lot of guys are missing out by not trying a Hatch. Only 4oz heavier than the long leg Tricer, but no stupid twist locks to mess with. The Hatch is hands down faster. Plus very good customer service and fully American made.Spent some time behind it. The only benefit was the weight. But everything else felt a negative in comparison. The panning is a horrendous feature. Damn thing was twisted all over hell half the time. The backwards release on the legs was also a negative, but something you could definitely get used to with adequate usage. I’ll take the hatch and an extra 6oz 10/10 times personally.
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Absolutely. Couldn’t agree more. He’s just a smaller business that doesn’t do any advertising, so you almost have to know about it by word of mouth or a buddy using one. I’ve used/owned Atlas, modular evolution, Harris, gunwerks, Tier One, MDT, tricer and Hatch. Maybe some other ones lol. But the hatch is my favorite. It’s not the BEST for flat shooting groups. But it’s the best for killing shit on sight IMO.Dude I’m with you on the Hatch. I think a lot of guys are missing out by not trying a Hatch. Only 4oz heavier than the long leg Tricer, but no stupid twist locks to mess with. The Hatch is hands down faster. Plus very good customer service and fully American made.
I don’t have the experience you have, but I completely agree as it being the best for a “kill it right now” bipod. My core use for a bipod on a hunt is seated shots, which happen a fair amount where I hunt in Montana. If prone works and needs to happen fast, then my pack works. But if it’s gotta be seated, or prone allows the time, it’s gonna be a bipod.Absolutely. Couldn’t agree more. He’s just a smaller business that doesn’t do any advertising, so you almost have to know about it by word of mouth or a buddy using one. I’ve used/owned Atlas, modular evolution, Harris, gunwerks, Tier One, MDT, tricer and Hatch. Maybe some other ones lol. But the hatch is my favorite. It’s not the BEST for flat shooting groups. But it’s the best for killing shit on sight IMO.
I’m talking Gen 1, not sure which @huntnful hasAre we talking gen 1 or gen 2 Hatch?
I have the gen 1 and the Tricer. Curious on the gen 2 hatch comparatively
I actually gave a Gen 1 & a Gen 2 27” hatch. I would still take the Gen 1 hatch over the tricer. But the Gen 2 was a nice improvement. Push button leg deployment and increased cant were the most notable improvements.Are we talking gen 1 or gen 2 Hatch?
I have the gen 1 and the Tricer. Curious on the gen 2 hatch comparatively
Agreed. I leave my legs in the narrowest position while hunting, for fast seated shots. If needing to go prone for longer range stuff, I can splay them out and normally have more time.I don’t have the experience you have, but I completely agree as it being the best for a “kill it right now” bipod. My core use for a bipod on a hunt is seated shots, which happen a fair amount where I hunt in Montana. If prone works and needs to happen fast, then my pack works. But if it’s gotta be seated, or prone allows the time, it’s gonna be a bipod.
Dude I’m with you on the Hatch. I think a lot of guys are missing out by not trying a Hatch. Only 4oz heavier than the long leg Tricer, but no stupid twist locks to mess with. The Hatch is hands down faster. Plus very good customer service and fully American made.
I hear ya. But, Hatch has Gen 1 bipods on blowout for $300"Dude I’m with you on the Hatch. I think a lot of guys are missing out by not trying a Hatch. Only 4oz heavier than the long leg Tricer, but no stupid twist locks to mess with. The Hatch is hands down faster. Plus very good customer service and fully American made"
Don't forget significantly more expensive.
I really liked the Hatch when I compared them at the Expo in Feb, but ended up with the Tricer due to the weight, features and the price. Sounds like if it didn't pan most dudes would be very happy with the Tricer. It will be interesting to see if a re-designed "no pan" head comes down the pipe in future versions.
27”
27” for general hunting. But am going to get the 36” as well for NRL
It would be significantly better without pan."Dude I’m with you on the Hatch. I think a lot of guys are missing out by not trying a Hatch. Only 4oz heavier than the long leg Tricer, but no stupid twist locks to mess with. The Hatch is hands down faster. Plus very good customer service and fully American made"
Don't forget significantly more expensive.
I really liked the Hatch when I compared them at the Expo in Feb, but ended up with the Tricer due to the weight, features and the price. Sounds like if it didn't pan most dudes would be very happy with the Tricer. It will be interesting to see if a re-designed "no pan" head comes down the pipe in future versions.
I find myself needing that height all the time. If I’m shooting off of a steep hillside across a canyon, or blacktail hunting when things are really brushy. Short bipods are a complete no go for most places I hunt. And I don’t pack a tripod.Can anyone explain why they would need such a tall bipod, stability doesn’t seen to be there in my opinion. Everyone that packs a spotter has a tripod and if you need more elevation shooting off that seems better.
100% agree glassing steep slopes, but seems to me the tripod is better for shooting across canyon and you can glass off them as well. Ive had the tricer tripod since they did a preorder a few years ago and used it in Colorado to make a shot across a steep canyon on a bull.I find myself needing that height all the time. If I’m shooting off of a steep hillside across a canyon, or blacktail hunting when things are really brushy. Short bipods are a complete no go for most places I hunt. And I don’t pack a tripod.