I was fireforming some brass today, and was showing a friend some tripod positions, and we shot this video.
If you intend to take standing shots with your tripod, I do not recommend a center column or weak legs. You really need a solid base and a very solid ball head.
For big game hunting, I think the standing shot is used infrequently, usually we have time and opportunity to go seated or kneeling. Standing, is solid for shots inside 400 yards, and further if you practice and have the right gear and practice. Most shots in the field can be done sitting, so that is what I practice. A smaller, lighter, and less sturdy tripod is acceptable for that. You may not want or need to get the gear and practice it.
In the video, I take a couple shots and walk through and show the position. I have another video explaining it a little more. Both are posted below.
I was out of practice, but was able to reduce my wobble consistently to about .3 mil to .4 mil, which is roughly about a fat 1 MOA or 3 to 4 inches at the distance I was shooting.
Next trip out I will get footage through the scope. This trip, I mounted a new scope on a new rifle, broke in the barrel with 50 shots, got my velocity, and fireformed some brass. I am pretty happy with it.
EDIT: here is another tripod standing video with the tripod flipped around. That is one of the only differences with what I do. It changes the feel of the recoil. I haven't practiced either enough to really pick. They have pros and cons.
If you intend to take standing shots with your tripod, I do not recommend a center column or weak legs. You really need a solid base and a very solid ball head.
For big game hunting, I think the standing shot is used infrequently, usually we have time and opportunity to go seated or kneeling. Standing, is solid for shots inside 400 yards, and further if you practice and have the right gear and practice. Most shots in the field can be done sitting, so that is what I practice. A smaller, lighter, and less sturdy tripod is acceptable for that. You may not want or need to get the gear and practice it.
In the video, I take a couple shots and walk through and show the position. I have another video explaining it a little more. Both are posted below.
I was out of practice, but was able to reduce my wobble consistently to about .3 mil to .4 mil, which is roughly about a fat 1 MOA or 3 to 4 inches at the distance I was shooting.
Next trip out I will get footage through the scope. This trip, I mounted a new scope on a new rifle, broke in the barrel with 50 shots, got my velocity, and fireformed some brass. I am pretty happy with it.
EDIT: here is another tripod standing video with the tripod flipped around. That is one of the only differences with what I do. It changes the feel of the recoil. I haven't practiced either enough to really pick. They have pros and cons.
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