Wiser Precision Quick Stix

How about answering his question,thats what the fourm is for.
How about everyone stop and just use the search for everything,just about everything has been talked about,that would make for an interesting fourm.
Does it seriously bother you.

I carry mine a lot and they seem well made.
That and a backpack will get the job done.
No. He was saying review the other threads on this exact same topic which will also have great info for OP to absorb. He wasn’t saying “don’t post this and just search”.

Relax.
 
So I picked up the Quick Clip and so far I'm not 100% in on it. I need to use it a lot more, but for the time being, do any of you guys have experience with it? Any tips?
 
I've been experimenting with the Quick Clip after just using the quick sticks. Super stable, super awesome. Pull your pack in for a bear hug for a rear shooting bag and its sufficiently stable for 500 yard shots. With no rear bag, I'm comfortable out to 250-300.

I will say, you need to really spend some time with this system to have it dialed in. Its not just a matter of clipping to your poles, you need to know when and where to adjust your poles for various setups and what positions are favorable for you. There is a learning curve and admittingly, its a little frustrating, but once you get past that stage, its incredibly practical and as stable as you are going to get without being prone or having a shooting tripod.
 
I'm gonna jump in with everyone here and say they work great!. I will add that the type of trekking poles you have, and how they extend will effect how well they work.

I had some komperdell trailstick carbon c4 vario compact trekking poles, and with the way they went together and extended, they would not really work if you wanted to shoot in a prone position with the quick stix and the quick clip as a bipod. They couldn't be one piece and be very short.

But now I run the REI trailmade trekking poles, are always one solid piece when full shortened, and extend out. They work much better for those situations.
 
My problem with the quick clip is that it's another piece to fiddle about with and keep track of. It works well.. but wish I could keep it clipped to my picatinny rail so I wouldn't have to dig for it.. but the locking latch has caught brush multiple times and opened. I'm just lucky enough to have caught it before it fell off. Now I store it in Bino Harness.
 
My problem with the quick clip is that it's another piece to fiddle about with and keep track of. It works well.. but wish I could keep it clipped to my picatinny rail so I wouldn't have to dig for it.. but the locking latch has caught brush multiple times and opened. I'm just lucky enough to have caught it before it fell off. Now I store it in Bino Harness.
That's good to know. I bought the clip, and just haven't used it much. It is kinda big and bulky to carry anywhere else.
 
I like the clips a lot. I bought two sets and put one clip on a leg from my Bog Pod tripod. I carry the third leg in my pack side sleeve and can attach it in seconds. Very practical and much cheaper solution than the fancy clip for the rifle.
 

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Had a random come up next to me on a glassing knob last year and sit next to me. He had these and really enjoyed them. Big negative is the stability of those when glassing long distance... just not as stable as a real tripod... they loved them for the weight and took that negative all day. Great guy to run into out there.
 
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