I really dig the shorter sticks. I've built several all from 16.5" to 22 ish. I've seen alot of variance from them but love them all for what they are. So my goals for a rifle all start with what I want them to do. The shorter you go the less overbore you need (for the most part) I really dig the 16-18" barrels in 308 or 6.5 Creed. G2 has a 16.5" 22GT in our CS that is a hammer with the 90 gn A-Tips and still gets them out at 3K so its an amazing coyote rifle and gets supper short and very handy with a short can.
As far as barrel contour that is the biggest difference I've seen as you can still build heavy rifles short but you can get light as well. The carbon barrels have really changed things and I've liked some of the shorties built that way. The only issue is you can get too rear heavy FAST if you don't watch it. I used to build alot on our folders with adj cheek and if you go with a short light barrel they don't feel great and weird to shoot.
You can give up ballistics fast so I have to watch it if it needs to play double duty for comps. 22" is usually as short as I would want a .308 or 6.5 Creed but the 22GT is nice for really short barrels if you comps allow it (No go for NRL hunter and such) I shoot alot of long range but when I take my 16.5: 308 and looking at the numbers sometimes 500 yards seems to be as far as I would ever think of shooting one. (Wind drift gets wild pretty quick) and where I'm at that's a long shot, if I'm wanting to go long then I'll take other rifles.
My fav combos have been.
Day Hunting: Our LRH or EH-1 with shorter carbon barrels. Lets you get very light and handy yet still balances great and feels good in the hands. You can build rifles that weight sub 7 lbs pretty easy. Defiance AnTi action with Bartlein #7 carbon wrapped barrel makes the magic. (Bartlein 4B/13/GAP6 if you want steel) It also still lets you run a can with little shift. I really prefer the short light cans for these as you're usually not shooting them alot and makes it all a joy!
Night Hunting: I built alot of rifles to use the clip ons back in the day and after mounting your CO, illum, and LRF they get way too heavy very fast. So knowing I will add a little weight to the front and I need a EFR I spec em out a bit different. I like our folders such as the MCS-EHF1/F1A or CS2 with a EFR. Stick a Carbon or steel shorty barrel in it and arca tripod mount. The added rear weight helps it balance out pretty nice but still light enough that carry doesn't bother me. Since we're carrying calls, tripods, and other goodies the reduced length helps me stick in a pack or something pretty easy. Alot of times we move from set to set never taking the rifle off the tripod. My buddy has a 22 Creed in one like this and it's great for the yotes. He runs a dedicated thermal though so no EFR needed.
Target/tactical: This is when I start really leaning more on steel barrels. I don't mind some weight here but I really want to keep it balanced . The can will make a big part of my decision here. Steel I go 18" M-24 or MTU sized barrel for the folders and a M-24/GAP 6 for the CS. Lets me keep some weight on it for recoil but still a very short and handy rifle. I've used these back in the day for deer hunting but have since really liked taking weight off as we're tromping through the swamps with rubber boots alot and lighter is MUCH better!
I'm ready to start busting these out again!
As far as barrel contour that is the biggest difference I've seen as you can still build heavy rifles short but you can get light as well. The carbon barrels have really changed things and I've liked some of the shorties built that way. The only issue is you can get too rear heavy FAST if you don't watch it. I used to build alot on our folders with adj cheek and if you go with a short light barrel they don't feel great and weird to shoot.
You can give up ballistics fast so I have to watch it if it needs to play double duty for comps. 22" is usually as short as I would want a .308 or 6.5 Creed but the 22GT is nice for really short barrels if you comps allow it (No go for NRL hunter and such) I shoot alot of long range but when I take my 16.5: 308 and looking at the numbers sometimes 500 yards seems to be as far as I would ever think of shooting one. (Wind drift gets wild pretty quick) and where I'm at that's a long shot, if I'm wanting to go long then I'll take other rifles.
My fav combos have been.
Day Hunting: Our LRH or EH-1 with shorter carbon barrels. Lets you get very light and handy yet still balances great and feels good in the hands. You can build rifles that weight sub 7 lbs pretty easy. Defiance AnTi action with Bartlein #7 carbon wrapped barrel makes the magic. (Bartlein 4B/13/GAP6 if you want steel) It also still lets you run a can with little shift. I really prefer the short light cans for these as you're usually not shooting them alot and makes it all a joy!
Night Hunting: I built alot of rifles to use the clip ons back in the day and after mounting your CO, illum, and LRF they get way too heavy very fast. So knowing I will add a little weight to the front and I need a EFR I spec em out a bit different. I like our folders such as the MCS-EHF1/F1A or CS2 with a EFR. Stick a Carbon or steel shorty barrel in it and arca tripod mount. The added rear weight helps it balance out pretty nice but still light enough that carry doesn't bother me. Since we're carrying calls, tripods, and other goodies the reduced length helps me stick in a pack or something pretty easy. Alot of times we move from set to set never taking the rifle off the tripod. My buddy has a 22 Creed in one like this and it's great for the yotes. He runs a dedicated thermal though so no EFR needed.
Target/tactical: This is when I start really leaning more on steel barrels. I don't mind some weight here but I really want to keep it balanced . The can will make a big part of my decision here. Steel I go 18" M-24 or MTU sized barrel for the folders and a M-24/GAP 6 for the CS. Lets me keep some weight on it for recoil but still a very short and handy rifle. I've used these back in the day for deer hunting but have since really liked taking weight off as we're tromping through the swamps with rubber boots alot and lighter is MUCH better!
I'm ready to start busting these out again!