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XLR For Hunting

You will notice temperature extremes with the chassis more. Cold to handle in the morning and can get hot if left in the sun.
Chassis have a bit more bulk which can make them slower to take out of a scabbard or bag, they can also catch on things easier.
Alot of upsides to them as well
 
I like the idea of a chassis with a folding butt-stock for when I have to lash the rifle to my pack, and it'll fit in a smaller case if I need to travel, but I really don't like the idea of hunting with a metal chassis. Too much time spent in the cold. The Carbon XLR might be fine in that regard.

No folding butt-stock, but I'm going to be trying out a KRG Bravo (polymer) and like the idea of the KRG Whiskey 3 (also polymer, folder optional).
 
I’ve used a element for hunting for years. It’s fine. I never had problems that others had. If it’s so cold that I can’t touch the rifle, I usually am going to have gloves on anyways because it’s cold right? There’s a lot of hours put in on glassing. I’ll have layers too. It’s going to be cold no matter what. If I’m out in the bush for a week it’s a marathon not a sprint, so I’m going to layer appropriately.

I’ve never got a rifle caught in anything, ever. With the exception of the barrel touching low hanging branches when crawling under shit. I have a folder on mine, and used a boot band to retain it, and packed it on the side of my pack using the straps the pack has for a rifle. Good enough for government work.

I don’t know why hunters always talk about heavy or light. It’s not light by some standards to have a long action (magnum) with a chassis (orginal chassis, not carbon fiber or magnesium) but weight is subjective.
If one isn’t a pussy, carry that 14-16lb gun up that mountain. So what? If you are a fat, or skinny fat don’t assume that the rest of us can’t hike 10 miles with our rifle because you struggle. If you know it’s going to be an issue, then consider the weight. No ones opinion will help figure out what anyone can carry for how far for their area with their style of hunting. What I can say is, my overall pack weight including rifle can totally suck and my legs and back kill by the time I get back days later depending on the terrain. Specifically packing out meat.
 
Thanks for the reply’s fellers. Sounds like I may need to just give it a try and see how it works. The manners I would run is just a hair over 3lbs itself, which I know I can get lighter, but like the features (adjustable cheek, mini chassis). So really just considering options that offer some of the same features with a little less weight.
 
I’ve hunted with an XLR plenty, with zero complaints. Adjustability and setting your rifle up for you counts no matter what you’re doing. By the time you add all that to a fiberglass stock, it’s not lighter than a chassis.

I had the Evo chassis because it looked the coolest and the rail was longer so I could get the bipod way out. In hindsight, the round rail wasn’t an advantage and I only use a bipod on the square range. The flat bottom of an Element or Envy would have been a better choice.
 
I’ve been hunting with the Element 3.0 magnesium since they were first released. It’s plenty light enough, and good luck getting a folder in a manners (or any CF) stock that weighs less. I’ve had no issues with cold or heat. I don’t notice that it gets hung up any more or less than a rifle with a “regular” stock. I truly appreciate that I can hunt with more or less the same setup as my match rifle.
 
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I’ve been hunting with the Element 3.0 magnesium since they were first released. It’s plenty light enough, and good luck getting a folder in a manners (or any CF) stock that weighs less. I’ve had no issues with cold or heat. I don’t notice that it gets hung up any more or less than a rifle with a “regular” stock. I truly appreciate that I can hunt with more or less the same setup as my match rifle.
Know anyone selling the element 3.0 magnesium in LA? Been looking for one and XLR is 4 months out, which would take me out of bear season.
 
The xlr or any chassis is a great hunting option. They do not get snagged or anything like that...what people have posted above. They rock. They do get pretty cold but use a decent camo cloth tape and you're good to go. Or just wear gloves
 
XLR w/buttstock, bottom metal & trigger guard. 42 ounces
Manners EH1 w/o bottom metal & trigger guard 28 ounces

So close you would not be able to tell by feel

A little more accurate numbers for the Element 3.0 Magnesium chassis with chassis block, carbon buttstock, and carbon grip is 28 ounces, which on the Manners website states the EH1 is 30 ounces. Add the folding stock adapter to the 3.0 Magnesium it'll weigh 33 ounces. Still super light and very hard to tell the difference.
 
Out of a blind but it wasn’t bad. The cold thing is true but the cheek pad foam makes that part not so bad.

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