Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

I use a Harris. I have a friend who uses the Sinclair. His is more stable than mine. But, I haven't seen a need to swap yet. I would say let your use drive your purchase. F-TR only rig... Sinclair. Tactical Match/F-TR... Harris.
 
Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

Never used the Sinclair, but just from handling, they are just too much muchiness. Alot of bulk and extra with relatively little gain.

Harris are too rigid. If you are on anything but a bench or nice flat firing line, they do not adapt well. (we used to call them "chow hall bipods" until the grip pod stole that title) They do not traverse, and are only up or down, removing the possibility of "leaning" the legs to get closer to the ground.

The Atlas are rugged and reliable (not to say the others arent) can traverse, roll, and allow you to push up to "ride" the bipods. The legs can close forward or backwards, and can stay open at 45 degrees.

The main theme is adaptability. The only negative on the atlas is the slow deployment/redeployment.
 
Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: oldfatguy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Those F class bipods sure are awkward.</div></div>That's because they are specifically for F Class competition.
 
Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

Thanks for the replys. W11B's Atlas description was particularly helpful.

Makes sense that the F class guys aren't likely to need to crawl through the bushes much so bulky doesn't matter much to them.

OFG
 
Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

Thanks for the heads up on the Sinclair tacticle bipod. Looks like a very interesting alternative to their F class.

Trade-offs to consider - panning, mount type, folding... Except for the mount type Atlas looks like the most versitil.

OFG
 
Re: Bipods, Harris vs Sinclair F class

got to shoot my sinclair bipod this weekend....i LOVE it!
I shot the gun from the bench "semi-free-recoil" some...basically a really light grip and letting the gun recoil bag as it wants (it's just on a .223 with a brake...so, not much movement) and it's smooth and stays relatively on POA. Took it off my varmint gun and put it on my buddies .260 LRP in a McCrees chassis...and it works ok, but the rifle wanted top hop some on him (mostly due to his rear bag and shooting style) I put it back on my .223 and shot some prone and it rides fantastic on the midway shooting mat.

I have 3 complaints, though:
1. Leg adjustment...I wish there were some detents to assist in getting the bipod to a specific height
2. I wish you could see the graduations easier (i'll fix this with a silver paint sharpie, though)
3. Packing the tripod....i'm so used to the harris in it's small footprint, that I havent figured out where to store my sinclair on range trips. I bring my guns in Plano Airglide cases...so there's no place to put it in there, and it's been going in my range bag. not really a big deal, just a detail i over looked.

So...my opinion:
Shooting stability - Sinclair
Adjustability - Sinclair
Quickness of deployment - Harris
Ease of travel - Harris
Use in known distance prone - Sinclair
Use from bench - Sinclair
Use in unknown distance prone - Harris

If I go out to shoot groundhogs...I'll bring a harris. If I'm going to shoot steel...Sinclair all the way. Doing some benchwork...it'll be the sinclair. If I'm doing groups from prone, It'll be the sinclair. If i wanna impress people I don't know on snipershide..i'll run the atlas, since that's it's best use.