If its stupid and it works, its no longer stupid.
Question is, will it work?
Problem I am facing is 99% of the land in southern Utah to shoot on is loose sand/packed sand/sand with rocks in it. See a pattern here?
While this in itself isn't the end of the world, the problem is that after a few shots your bipod is an inch deep in the sand or has started digging itself a grave in the ground. Problem here isn't as much with the bipod height as it is with the repercussions of what happens with recoil management while your loaded bipod is working itself into the ground with each shot and it's only a matter of time depending on the type of sandy ground it is. Never a big issue for hunting or running drills as you are constantly shooting on new ground, but for practicing or shooting from a great practice spot where you have steel/targets set up on; its fucking obnoxious.
I've tried shooting mats and other various things but over time the sand underneath just starts giving way around the pressure points of the bipod feet.
So my high tech idea? Get some thicker plywood, make either a full length shooting mat size version or one thats only maybe 2 feet x 2 foot and attach a single 2x4 to one end on its side as kind of a lip to load the bipod feet against. I'm guessing the hard footprint of the plywood (or whatever board I'd use) would deter the bipod pressure points as well as being able to load the bipod against the 2x4.
Question here is, would loading the bipod feet properly into the stationary 2x4 thats laying on its side, attached to the board deter anything with recoil due to the bipod recoiling off a hard surface? I'm guessing I'd need the 2x4 up front unless I just somehow textured the board, so that I could have something that would 'grab' the bipod feet as they would otherwise just slide on the smooth wood board.
Anyone every tried anything like this? Holes in my plan?
Question is, will it work?
Problem I am facing is 99% of the land in southern Utah to shoot on is loose sand/packed sand/sand with rocks in it. See a pattern here?
While this in itself isn't the end of the world, the problem is that after a few shots your bipod is an inch deep in the sand or has started digging itself a grave in the ground. Problem here isn't as much with the bipod height as it is with the repercussions of what happens with recoil management while your loaded bipod is working itself into the ground with each shot and it's only a matter of time depending on the type of sandy ground it is. Never a big issue for hunting or running drills as you are constantly shooting on new ground, but for practicing or shooting from a great practice spot where you have steel/targets set up on; its fucking obnoxious.
I've tried shooting mats and other various things but over time the sand underneath just starts giving way around the pressure points of the bipod feet.
So my high tech idea? Get some thicker plywood, make either a full length shooting mat size version or one thats only maybe 2 feet x 2 foot and attach a single 2x4 to one end on its side as kind of a lip to load the bipod feet against. I'm guessing the hard footprint of the plywood (or whatever board I'd use) would deter the bipod pressure points as well as being able to load the bipod against the 2x4.
Question here is, would loading the bipod feet properly into the stationary 2x4 thats laying on its side, attached to the board deter anything with recoil due to the bipod recoiling off a hard surface? I'm guessing I'd need the 2x4 up front unless I just somehow textured the board, so that I could have something that would 'grab' the bipod feet as they would otherwise just slide on the smooth wood board.
Anyone every tried anything like this? Holes in my plan?