Jacket for Prone
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963, David Levene, Spencer
Jacket for Prone
As a returnee to prone smallbore after 25 years I will need a new jacket.
Are there any significant advantages to the current breed of stiff canvas jackets in the prone position for some one who has no aspirations of high level at 60+ years. The ones I've tried I'm not comfortable in and think I'd prefer a soft one.
As I chucked out my old flexible leather jacket many years ago are there any soft jacket options even available now? If so where can I get them in the UK or Europe
Robin
Are there any significant advantages to the current breed of stiff canvas jackets in the prone position for some one who has no aspirations of high level at 60+ years. The ones I've tried I'm not comfortable in and think I'd prefer a soft one.
As I chucked out my old flexible leather jacket many years ago are there any soft jacket options even available now? If so where can I get them in the UK or Europe
Robin
If you have the chance to try the Mouche (model 'Germania'), it is a very good and comfortable jacket for prone. I can shoot 250 shots in a row without getting sore elbows :)
It also uses leather or suede where the canvas is not really needed. Compared to my earlier jackets (Monard and Thune) this one is the most comfortable I've ever had.
It also uses leather or suede where the canvas is not really needed. Compared to my earlier jackets (Monard and Thune) this one is the most comfortable I've ever had.
Re: Jacket for Prone
Depends what you mean by comfortable. They are not designed for comfort as such, but should not be uncomfortable in the prone position. I got a Thune jacket for about 250, but it still needed tailoring to fit my shorter stature (and I shoot ISSF comps, so it needs to pass equipment control). Most important really is that the jacket helps support and stabilise your position whatever its construction.RobinC wrote:As a returnee to prone smallbore after 25 years I will need a new jacket.
Are there any significant advantages to the current breed of stiff canvas jackets in the prone position for some one who has no aspirations of high level at 60+ years. The ones I've tried I'm not comfortable in and think I'd prefer a soft one.
As I chucked out my old flexible leather jacket many years ago are there any soft jacket options even available now? If so where can I get them in the UK or Europe
Robin
Ball
My wrist is made out of brass. And my head out of lead :)Anonymous wrote:If you can shoot 250 shots without a break, then your sling might be a little loose. Or your wrist is made out of steel. More than I could manage.
dl
I must say it hurts a little after 150 shots or so... :) But not in my elbows. When I used the Monard, the elbows really started to hurt after 100 shots or so.
150 shots is way too many to even consider shooting without a break. I generally break at 25 - 30. That said I guess if it goes numb after 40 you lose the sense of pain.... I really don't understand why anyone would want to shoot that many shots without a break, the point is ???guest_66 wrote:My wrist is made out of brass. And my head out of lead :)Anonymous wrote:If you can shoot 250 shots without a break, then your sling might be a little loose. Or your wrist is made out of steel. More than I could manage.
dl
I must say it hurts a little after 150 shots or so... :) But not in my elbows. When I used the Monard, the elbows really started to hurt after 100 shots or so.
What kind of shooting mat are you using? I went from an old roll-up mat to a new Monard and the difference was amazing. I can shoot a full 60-shot match now and my elbows don't hurt at all, whereas before they'd be complaining after the first 30 shots (including sighters).guest_66 wrote:Sorry for the confusion, I don't shoot 150+ shots without a break, of course I have to rest now and then. I mean I can lay down for 250 shots without problem. Earlier, with my old jackets, my elbows hurt bad after 100 shots or s, so I had to get up.
If anyone is wincing at the pain to come as you settle into position, consider getting a new mat before shelling out the big bucks for a new jacket.
Jason