Anschütz wood VS aluminium stock
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963, David Levene, Spencer
Anschütz wood VS aluminium stock
Ok, I'm looking for some advices here. Regardless of price, if you had the choice between a wood stock (1913-U4/2) and an aluminium stock (2213) for a 1913 barreled action that will be used exclusively for prone shooting, which one would you choose and why ? Thanks for your comments !
Re: Anschütz wood VS aluminium stock
Aluminum because it's much easier to change the rifle's setup with regard to adjustments and so forth.
If you are only shooting prone I don't think it will matter that much.
There are plenty of adjustments on the wood stocks to get them to fit right.
For some I think the multitude of adjustments on the aluminum stocks become a distraction and they are constantly fiddling with minor adjustments instead of working on really shooting well.
Our club is about 2/3 wood stock and 1/3 aluminum. And to me it really seems to be the shooter more than the type of stock.
There are plenty of adjustments on the wood stocks to get them to fit right.
For some I think the multitude of adjustments on the aluminum stocks become a distraction and they are constantly fiddling with minor adjustments instead of working on really shooting well.
Our club is about 2/3 wood stock and 1/3 aluminum. And to me it really seems to be the shooter more than the type of stock.
For a begining shooter that is true.Michael wrote:Make it as sinple as possible. Someone told that the rule is called KISS - Keep It Simple & Stupid. The fewer adjustments - the better.
You need enough adjustments to get the gun to fit properly.
The 1913 wood stock has quite a few ajustments on it.
Just looking at the Aluminum stocked guns and I can tell that German engineers really love to tinker with their rifles. They have these little weights you can move around and make minute balance adjustments with.
I think at the very higest levels of shooting you can make use of those adjustments, but you still have to be careful not to get too tied up making adjustments and forgetting to actually practice.
Most of the prone shooters I know use wood stocks, they just don't need the extra adjustability of the aluminum stocks.
I don't know of any disadvantage of the aluminum stocks. There was a discussion here on Target Talk a while back where someone brought up the differences in expansion between steel and aluminum as a possible disadvantage. But wood can absorbe moisture and expand or contract.
Just wondering,
If cost is no issue, why are you staying with the round action 1913 in the Aluminum stock? why not go with the 200X action?
Wood
Simply put, my 1813 barreled action shoots more accurately out of my wood stock than it did out of the aluminum. Even tried a Grunig stock and gave it back...my wood just feels and shoots better. 4 600's in the last 3 years...after changing back to my wood. It really had nothing to do with the adjustments.
EU
EU
Wood is Good
It would appear from manufacturers brochures that air or smallbore rifles are about 400-600g lighter when equipped with wooden handles. John