Precision Rifle Gear Bipods?

Matt ironwood

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Minuteman
Apr 17, 2019
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Whats everyone using for a doall bipod?

Obviously, lightweight and sturdy enough to shoot accurately?

Not sure it matters but will be using a arca mount, and rifles would be a seekins element, seekins slam, would use in mountains hunting, from a tree stand, and bench when shooting 100-300
 
I disagree. Much faster to grab a leg and pull rather than finding a button (especially when cold and gloves or low light).

Accu-Tac is not a best all-around bipod, They're made for shooting .22s or free (modified free) recoil where you do not load the bipod. The guy who owns Accu-Tac comes from air guns, which is why they're so tight with no play. For heavy recoiling rifles I prefer Atlas or EI though.

Unless I'm shooting up and need elevation (or transitioning up and down), I almost never shoot prone with the legs straight out. I almost always put it on the spigot mount (as far forward as possible), put the legs forward at a 45 to get the rifle as close to the ground as possible, and use a small squeeze bag as rear support rather than a game changer or other big bag. I see lots of guys extending legs and getting the rifle high with a big bag, but I wasn't taught that way, and it seems less stable to me. If I need the gun high (like to see over grass coyote hunting) I go to a tripod rather than a long leg bipod,

Accu-Tac kind of sucks on a heavy recoil gun, because they're hard to load, don't stay put, and will jump on a hard surface even if you are perfectly positioned and do everything right. On low/no recoil rifles though they're damn near perfect IMO.
 
Whats everyone using for a doall bipod?

Obviously, lightweight and sturdy enough to shoot accurately?

Not sure it matters but will be using a arca mount, and rifles would be a seekins element, seekins slam, would use in mountains hunting, from a tree stand, and bench when shooting 100-300
So, no competition? I’m not a competitor. And how many guns does this thing need to work on?

Preface so you can analyze my feedback: I use bipods only on a range bench or on a rotating pdog table. Never use them anywhere else (not prone, etc).

I own:
- Atlas CAL
- Atlas SCAL
- LRA F-Class Tactical Lite
- Elite Iron panning model (spigot and pic rail)
- an old Harris with smooth legs (infinite adjustment, slow, no cant adj, but works fine on sling swivels when on the bench)

If I had to just pick one bipod for ONE gun used for just carrying and hunting and the range bench…shit…hmmm…maybe an Elite Iron (panner or non-panner, if a panner get the rubber feet as the metals ones will pivot and scratch the barrel when folded up).

Why?
- folds up narrow on gun
- allows for natural NPA
- very stable
- panning is nice for shooting actual living things
- legs deploy by pulling away from bipod (no buttons)
- kinda long, however

However, it’s spendy and is hard to adapt across a variety of regular stocks, chassis, etc. It’s not as fast to deploy as a Harris, but it’s more stable.

If I had to just pick one bipod for MULTIPLE guns used for just carrying and hunting and the range bench…then probably a notched 6-9” swivel Harris with all the mods (RRS swivel adapter and a RRS knob/lever pic/arca clamp, plus KMW pod-loc).

Why?
- very light & small
- very narrow when folded up
- super fast to deploy and fold up
- there’s still a ton of PRS shooters that still use the thing, and they’re better shooters than me

The other bipods I own are too wide (LRA, SCAL) too heavy (SCAL), or too slow to deploy, for me, in a stressful situation (LRA & especially the SCAL and CAL).

The only other bipod that fits what I think you want is a bipod I’ve never used: a narrower “PRS” LRA bipod. You apparently still must unlock the legs via a button to swivel them down, but then you can extend the legs out by just pulling.

LRA bipods use comparatively awesome-to-touch-in-the-cold carbon fiber legs, btw.

Pulling is how the EI legs extend as well, and personally I sort of hate it as I’m always snagging the legs on something, accidentally extending the dang things. But maybe that style is your cup of tea.

Anyway, the longer I have used bipods for the range bench the more I have gained appreciation for that dang lowly & jangly POS, the Harris. I’m never irritated at it, which is something I cannot say about my other bipods.

For pdog work, however, I suggest a panner.

Honorable mention: the Warne Skyline bipod (not Pro or Lite, haven’t touched them). Touched it once and it seems well-made, can delete the pan if you want, kinda impressive. Seems like you can jack the fully-extended legs up one notch at a time in a controlled fashion. Seemed handy to use when stretching and cursing to adjust the height when behind the gun. I’m always over/under-shooting bipod height in that situation.

Good luck!
 
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I remember just a few years ago everyone was all about having the apex of the bipod above the barrel for best stability, etc. Supposedly that was the best way for precision. Now everyone is all about the ckye pods which are the opposite.

I use an atlas and it works good for me.
 
Accu-tac SR-5. Its sturdy as hell and doesnt jump or bounce, and fast to deploy in competition use. I still mess with a few Harris BRMs, just because I have a drawer full of them, most of them are modded now for arca use with either an Area 419 or a Leofoto pic/arca adapter.
 
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I sold off all my Atlas bipods and run AccuTac and CkyePod now.

The AccuTacs are rock solid. Adjusting the leg angle by pulling the leg, does take a little getting used to. Pulling the leg for height is way easier for me, than having to pull the collar and then using my pinky to pull the leg like the atlas.

The CkyePods are fast. If you don't load the bipod, then they don't feel as solid. They are much more adjustable though.
 
I have a Warne Pro Lite bipods and it’s a pretty good bipod. Like 80% of the CkyePod for less money. That said it kind of depends on how high you need it as the CkyePod will go higher for the double and triple pulls. I use a CkyePod on my match bolt guns and the Warne on my AR. Take a look at both and see what works better for you.
 
If you do get the regular Warne Skyline, I just ran across a vid showing how you can remove the pan as well as making the legs deploy from the front like a Harris.



Also, @X-ring did a demo of the unit here:


I discovered that the legs pull out to deploy (boo!) but you jack them up one notch at a time, which is nice when behind the gun. Looks like they are a bit fiddly to fully retract, however.

Again, I haven’t used it, but the “jack up” feature had me interested.
 
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I’ve owned a decent amount of bipods. The two I use now are Atlas Cal and Ckye.

The cal is a great and well built prone bipod. I’ve had mine for a few years and use it a ton. Set up for picatinny mounting and hawk hill talon feet. It’s a go to for just about everything when load testing or shooting steel on the range.

If you want versatility though it goes to the Ckye. Super wide and low to high and narrow etc it does just about everything. I run a RRS SC-ARC mount on mine. I use the pan feature and never thought I would. You can lock it out if you don’t want to use it though

The Ckye is more of a “gamer bipod” in my opinion. I’ve had to take it apart and clean it due to dust seizing up the lock for deploying the legs. It’s a bit higher maintenance from my experience. I also took apart the head where it pans as dirt got in there and was grinding. Guys have broken the pins that adjust the leg width.

Overall I’m liking the Ckye more and more despite the atlas cal still winning in the tough/reliability category for me. The Cal is always in the bag as a backup though. The leg lock seizing up and the leg just flopping around with no ability to lock it knocked it down on my reliability scale to fully trust it for now.

The ckye is definitely more $$ than other options. I don’t shoot comps. Long range .22, LR steel centerfire and mostly deer on DNR crop damage tags in farm fields. The farm fields like proned out in low corn is where the dust/dirt factor separate the reliability between the Ckye and Cal
 
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What’s the advantage of this over a cyke?

8oz lighter, more stable, no pan, smoother cant, 1 button splay adjustment

really just wanted to make something that hits the 22-32" range, and is lighter than a triple pull.
- not all NRL hunter matches require the full 37" a triple pull goes out to

its really hard to make weight in open light with a triple pull, this kind of gives you a little bit more wiggle room
so you dont have to run a titanium action, or a super small/light muzzle brake to make weight
 
8oz lighter, more stable, no pan, smoother cant, 1 button splay adjustment

really just wanted to make something that hits the 22-32" range, and is lighter than a triple pull.
- not all NRL hunter matches require the full 37" a triple pull goes out to

its really hard to make weight in open light with a triple pull, this kind of gives you a little bit more wiggle room
so you dont have to run a titanium action, or a super small/light muzzle brake to make weight
Ok, that makes sense and I like no pan, does it have a positive cant lockout?
 
Ok, that makes sense and I like no pan, does it have a positive cant lockout?
thats actually what I spent the most time on

I'll say it's the closest I can get to a TBAC

honestly, its between a ckyepod and a TBAC in terms of smoothness and how tight you can get the cant
TBAC still owns the bipod cant space, not sure if anyone will make something better than that
 
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I may have to try a Warne soon after reading this thread.

I love the Accu-Tac for target work. I've certainly taken one "to the field" for hunting (in a pasture by the house), but they are awfully heavy.

My Atlas is a good field bipod, but I'm not a fan of it as much for dedicated target work...way too much play in it.

I love the cost, weight, and durability of a Harris...but that spring-loaded leg thing is a bitch when you go to pull your rifle to you in the field, collapse a leg, and dump your muzzle into the ground.

I've killed a few somethings with every one of my bipods, and my conclusion is that a "crossover" bipod is very much like a crossover rifle in that you are going to compromise somewhere.
 
thats actually what I spent the most time on

I'll say it's the closest I can get to a TBAC

honestly, its between a ckyepod and a TBAC in terms of smoothness and how tight you can get the cant
TBAC still owns the bipod cant space, not sure if anyone will make something better than that
I’m intrigued by your Dauntless bipod and based on your description it sounds like it would be well suited to NRL Hunter and some of the positions we find ourselves needing to take a shot from. I’m currently using a Double Pull but there have been times I wished I had a little more height.

I realize it hasn’t been released yet but do you have any videos that show all the features it offers?
 
I’m intrigued by your Dauntless bipod and based on your description it sounds like it would be well suited to NRL Hunter and some of the positions we find ourselves needing to take a shot from. I’m currently using a Double Pull but there have been times I wished I had a little more height.

I realize it hasn’t been released yet but do you have any videos that show all the features it offers?

working on it, just got my prototype back from a buddy who was testing it after the last NRL hunter match I shot