Cold range trip with the CZ 457. I'm really enjoying the gun. Had some bipod slipping which was quite frustrating. My lav mic was cutting in and out, hopefully it will be more cooperative the next time.
@@Womfat that's a bummer! I'm sure you can find plenty of aftermarket solutions. I prefer the spikes because they are more universal. I made mine to go under the rubber feet. So it was fast and easy to swap back and forth
👍 - Bring a very small & thin piece of wood with you and hammer a very thin nail in the table so that the bipod has a wall to press against, and it won't move and you won't cause damage to the bench.
Thanks for the tip, but as negligible as a small nail would be, I'd rather not be seen hammering anything down onto the range bench. I've seen some people bring a paracord loop and attach one side to the bench and loop it around the bipod legs. Pretty neat idea I might have to try.
Iam not surprised it's moving, you are slamming the bolt like it was a 50 cal. I see people do this, but cannot see why, this is a shooting instrument not a machine!
@Vorraboms shooting is shooting. Just because it s a 22 doesn t mean it s different from a centerfire or anything else. In fact it s pretty challenging to shoot 22lr at long range. Many people use them as trainer
I originally considered both, but in the end MDT is Canadian (I'm Canadian), and I liked the longer forend and buttstock design better. I don't think you could go wrong with either chassis option.
Slamming the bolt is forcing your rifle forward, unless the bolt is faulty it doesn't need that punch forward! You whinged from beginning to end, the bipod isn't to blame,it's a technique problem!
Bobby Thompson didn’t mean to come off as whining, just trying to explain the frustration on camera. Could very well be my technique, I’m new to rimfire in general. Lots of differing opinions of how the bolt should be run