Rokstok vs T1x: which will have a greater effect on shooting?

Which do you think will have a greater impact on hunting success

  • Rokstok

    Votes: 4 20.0%
  • T1x

    Votes: 16 80.0%

  • Total voters
    20
Joined
Mar 1, 2021
Messages
77
Cost for a Rokstok is in the neighborhood of a T1x. Which will have a greater impact on hit rates? A T1x and all the cost effective practice it comes with? Or a Rokstok and the improved shot spotting it represents? Obviously the two are not mutually exclusive and the best answer is, get a T3x, a T1x and Rokstoks for both. But if you had to pick…
 
OP
W
Joined
Mar 1, 2021
Messages
77
Tikka 243 1:8. I also have an AccuLongrange bag rider on the buttstock. Definitely not a Rokstok but it is helpful.
 
Joined
Oct 6, 2014
Messages
1,883
Location
Wasilla, Alaska
A .22 isn’t in the same league as a center fire trainer rifle.. but, if you live in an area that isn’t the most conducive for getting out and shooting that often in field conditions, but a suppressed .22 w/ sub sonic ammo does..

I considered building a .223 trainer like everyone does here, but when I’m out in the mountains, I’d rather just shoot my 6 CM. So, I have a CZ 457 .22 that I can build positions and shoot literally every single day at my house. It’s a 250 yard gun that will still hone your fundamentals and help you understand what wind can do to a small projectile. Plus, it’s the most fun you can have with a gun! Hollywood quiet.

If you can put the same scope as your hunting rifle on the .22, or just the same reticle, that’s even better.
 

NSI

WKR
Shoot2HuntU
Joined
May 19, 2021
Messages
901
Location
Western Wyoming
22lr is useful for positional shooting and short distance wind reading. The rest … it translates less than one would hope.

-J
 
Joined
Nov 10, 2020
Messages
446
Do you have an already have a .22? If not I’d get the T1x, a good .22 LR is great for practicing field positions and (depending on where you live) turns small game hunting into big game practice.
 

Shortschaf

WKR
Classified Approved
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
Messages
686
I attribute a lot of my natural point of aim, general comfort behind a gun, and even good trigger press to shooting bricks upon bricks of .22lr growing up.

I don't think you need to worry about adding the recoil management aspect for a 6mm personally... with muzzle brakes or suppressors added on light cartriges, I have never noticed accuracy fall off from free recoiling all the way to death-grip-bipod-overload

While there is no real substitute for trigger time on the exact gun you want to improve on, there is nothing about a .243 that makes it hard to shoot in a "non-rokstock"
 
Joined
Oct 6, 2014
Messages
359
Location
Western Montana
I can shoot my T1x all day. Eley subsonics run me about $8 for 50 and i could go cheaper and still ring steel at 100 if i wanted

cheap S&B 243 runs me $15 for 20 which isn't too bad, but do i really want to blow $30 working on my form?

and rokstocks aren't in stock are they? $650 for a T1x, $200 for a scope, $30 for a brick of 22LR, you're pulling triggers by the time your CC statement posts instead of waiting for a "your order has shipped!" email that's eight months out
 
Joined
Sep 10, 2014
Messages
2,731
Location
hawai'i
I dont think a 22 translates much to a center fire rifle. If you get a trainer, get a 223. If I had a 243 or 6cm I don't think a 223 is rly needed though unless you shoot a ton
 
Joined
Mar 24, 2022
Messages
29
I bought a T1x 16” and it got me shooting more in town, hiking into the mountains to shoot, and hunting more as well (ptarmigan and rabbits and squirrels all year instead of caribou for one week). Plus a couple ranges I’ve lived near have a separate rimfire area, which is almost always deserted, versus the centerfire side full of people. I would put a Rokstok on my T3x if one were available… and then still shoot the .22lr. Different scopes on the two rifles so I don’t approach one as training specifically for the other. Given how few sheep and caribou I saw last year (19 sheep, 4 caribou— not 4,000, just 4) at this point I would actually rather focus on improving my rimfire shooting. Everybody’s situation / location is different, but that’s my experience.
 
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