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Physics being what they, you will NEVER repeal the laws of the conservation of energy, not matter now many padded cushions you use between the stock and shoulder.
As long as you are slinging a 150gr bullet out of one end at 3250 fps, that 8 pound gun is going to move, unless it is literally bolted down.
Is THAT ever going to happen in the real world?
Cor 'snot.
Your ambition of shooting a hundred rounds of .300 WM in a session proves nothing at all to me except that you have way too much money and are probably built like the late and much-missed Mr Bunyan.
Those of us who used that calibre professionally will advise you that a range session would usually involve not more than around thirty carefully aimed shots, and we weren't paying for them either. Remember, too, that we were wearing full combat gear as well, which served to lessen the recoil effect somewhat.
Any suggestions on budget (sub $100) stocks that will remedy the issues, I have to keep in mind that they're mostly $200 rifles and I have a good number of them to outfit.
As for buying a sub-hundred dollar stock - I'll be honest and say that such a thing is usually to be found on a $50 rifle.
What about modifying the tupperware stocks?
Based on expertise that you've already agreed that you don't have?
What about adding some weights to the rifle?
Where?
Any budget break ideas for non threaded sporter profile barrels?
Call Bartlein and ask them - be prepared to get roasted.
There's a good reason why a GOOD stock costs good money.
R&D, colossal amounts of it, by professional shooters and ergonomicists, and literally thousands of shot rounds by a variety people of all builds - all that costs money that you don't seem to want to pay.
This rifle looks no different to many others, but has been extensively for use by somebody who would be lying behind it for extended periods. The stock has been filled with lead rods - 3.5kg-worth of 'em. The result is a rifle that STILL moves under recoil - shooting 168gr .308 bullets at 2880 fps does that - but nowhere near as much as it would without all that dead-weight ballast.
Here's a couple of groups I shot back in 2022 - just after my 77th birthday -
My stock is the one that I'm convinced was used by those clever Norwegian furniture makers who brought GRS stocks to the shooting world - best to get to where you can actually get your hands on a GRS stock - laminated or composite - and get a feel for what THE definitive all-rounder stock looks and feel like.
As long as you are slinging a 150gr bullet out of one end at 3250 fps, that 8 pound gun is going to move, unless it is literally bolted down.
Is THAT ever going to happen in the real world?
Cor 'snot.
Your ambition of shooting a hundred rounds of .300 WM in a session proves nothing at all to me except that you have way too much money and are probably built like the late and much-missed Mr Bunyan.
Those of us who used that calibre professionally will advise you that a range session would usually involve not more than around thirty carefully aimed shots, and we weren't paying for them either. Remember, too, that we were wearing full combat gear as well, which served to lessen the recoil effect somewhat.
Any suggestions on budget (sub $100) stocks that will remedy the issues, I have to keep in mind that they're mostly $200 rifles and I have a good number of them to outfit.
As for buying a sub-hundred dollar stock - I'll be honest and say that such a thing is usually to be found on a $50 rifle.
What about modifying the tupperware stocks?
Based on expertise that you've already agreed that you don't have?
What about adding some weights to the rifle?
Where?
Any budget break ideas for non threaded sporter profile barrels?
Call Bartlein and ask them - be prepared to get roasted.
There's a good reason why a GOOD stock costs good money.
R&D, colossal amounts of it, by professional shooters and ergonomicists, and literally thousands of shot rounds by a variety people of all builds - all that costs money that you don't seem to want to pay.
This rifle looks no different to many others, but has been extensively for use by somebody who would be lying behind it for extended periods. The stock has been filled with lead rods - 3.5kg-worth of 'em. The result is a rifle that STILL moves under recoil - shooting 168gr .308 bullets at 2880 fps does that - but nowhere near as much as it would without all that dead-weight ballast.
Here's a couple of groups I shot back in 2022 - just after my 77th birthday -
My stock is the one that I'm convinced was used by those clever Norwegian furniture makers who brought GRS stocks to the shooting world - best to get to where you can actually get your hands on a GRS stock - laminated or composite - and get a feel for what THE definitive all-rounder stock looks and feel like.