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First of all, for someone who DOESN'T own one you sure seem to be a fucking expert on them. We have had what, 10 or so people relate their experience in this thread and 2 out of the 10 had some wear issue? Well that's 20%, hardly a couple of isolated issues.
Second, Those of us who have had problems with them (In our shooting parameters) and share our opinions are doing exactly that, sharing our opinions. If you don't like them, share your own, but don't question our statements as being BS. ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU DON'T OWN ONE!
I never said they should not be recommended for anything less that what Kasey recommends them for, I simply said IN MY OPINION they should not be recommended for use within a certain parameter where someone will subject them to extreme abuse. Other guys said they use them on bigger rifles with no issues, I have no problem with them, that is their opinion, you chime in not knowing SHIT about what I do with them, how I shoot, and what caused the wear I mentioned. I never said I destroyed them, I never said I trashed them, Kasey is the one who implied I TRASHED them. I said they were still functional. I said I damn near trashed them with excessive wear on the pan/tilt hinge. It has become too loose to use on a heavy gun. It is implied with that statement that the bipod no longer offers me the stability I expect and it effects the placement of my shots. That IS the point of a bipod isnt it? to offer the shooter stability?
In my situation it was the constant rocking back and forth from heavy recoil guns that caused the excessive pan/tilt wear in the Atlas. In order to avoid wearing out the Atlas I said it should not be used on heavy recoil guns if, and only if, you will be using it excessively.
Now seriously, is that really bad advice? If you shoot a heavy recoil gun excessively don't YOU think the LRA is a better choice? I do, it certainly solved my problems.
Lets put this into perspective, if I buy a product and it simply wears out from my particular use or fails from it, I should buy another one because other people have not had problems with them?
How ignorant is that?
Don't you think maybe most people would look for another product that perhaps may last longer or not fail that fits their particular shooting habits? In my case it was LRA bipods. I subject them to the same abuse as the Atlas and they are rock solid but according to you, I am full of shit, I shouldn't buy the LRA because everyone else does not have any problems with the Atlas under my parameters therefore neither should I.
If I buy a Nightforce and it does not live up to MY expectations and I end up buying a S&B and someone asks me which I think is the best and I tell them why suddenly I am wrong because YOU don't like the parameters of my reason? How about you explain to us why most match shooters don't use Nightforce scopes and primarily use S&B's so I can tell you why your parameters are Bullshit.
You got some really twisted wires in your head brother. You need to come down from your match God perch because the lack of air up there is obviously an issue for you.
And I just thought about the cerecoating you mentioned, is that on the newer V8 and if so, was it disassembled/re-assembled by us?
Will you be so kind as to share what your back-ground is and what is it you do for a living today?
Tone is just way too tough to interpret through text.
And I just thought about the cerecoating you mentioned, is that on the newer V8 and if so, was it disassembled/re-assembled by us?
RHunter- my bad, you said- "LRA's are definitely the best. They make an Atlas look like a cheap toy. Atlas's are great for AR's and smaller caliber bolt guns but the recoil of anything 30-06 or bigger destroys them over time. I have 2 Atlas's that are damn near trashed from recoil and at $275 a pop, it's a big letdown." and I boiled all that down to "trashed".
in my opinion rhunter doesnt need an atlas, he needs a lil rascal hoveround to hold his rifle and drive him to thhe range since i feel he is mildly retarded, just my opinion take no offense
The Atlas was not designed for big bore magnum rifles
First of all, for someone who DOESN'T own one you sure seem to be a fucking expert on them. We have had what, 10 or so people relate their experience in this thread and 2 out of the 10 had some wear issue? Well that's 20%, hardly a couple of isolated issues.
Second, Those of us who have had problems with them (In our shooting parameters) and share our opinions are doing exactly that, sharing our opinions. If you don't like them, share your own, but don't question our statements as being BS. ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU DON'T OWN ONE!
I never said they should not be recommended for anything less that what Kasey recommends them for, I simply said IN MY OPINION they should not be recommended for use within a certain parameter where someone will subject them to extreme abuse. Other guys said they use them on bigger rifles with no issues, I have no problem with them, that is their opinion, you chime in not knowing SHIT about what I do with them, how I shoot, and what caused the wear I mentioned. I never said I destroyed them, I never said I trashed them, Kasey is the one who implied I TRASHED them. I said they were still functional. I said I damn near trashed them with excessive wear on the pan/tilt hinge. It has become too loose to use on a heavy gun. It is implied with that statement that the bipod no longer offers me the stability I expect and it effects the placement of my shots. That IS the point of a bipod isnt it? to offer the shooter stability?
In my situation it was the constant rocking back and forth from heavy recoil guns that caused the excessive pan/tilt wear in the Atlas. In order to avoid wearing out the Atlas I said it should not be used on heavy recoil guns if, and only if, you will be using it excessively.
Now seriously, is that really bad advice? If you shoot a heavy recoil gun excessively don't YOU think the LRA is a better choice? I do, it certainly solved my problems.
Lets put this into perspective, if I buy a product and it simply wears out from my particular use or fails from it, I should buy another one because other people have not had problems with them?
How ignorant is that?
Don't you think maybe most people would look for another product that perhaps may last longer or not fail that fits their particular shooting habits? In my case it was LRA bipods. I subject them to the same abuse as the Atlas and they are rock solid but according to you, I am full of shit, I shouldn't buy the LRA because everyone else does not have any problems with the Atlas under my parameters therefore neither should I.
If I buy a Nightforce and it does not live up to MY expectations and I end up buying a S&B and someone asks me which I think is the best and I tell them why suddenly I am wrong because YOU don't like the parameters of my reason? How about you explain to us why most match shooters don't use Nightforce scopes and primarily use S&B's so I can tell you why your parameters are Bullshit.
You got some really twisted wires in your head brother. You need to come down from your match God perch because the lack of air up there is obviously an issue for you.
Well, the "best" is a subjective term and sometimes is determined only by a point of view as you have seen here. Interestingly, you might find that this subject is one of the most asked about on the site (along with MIL vs MOA, FFP vs SFP, etc.) Also, by the responses here you probably have surmised that for most that have the ATLAS it is considered to be the "best!" In fact, because of the performance of the bipod, the excellent customer service of the manufacturer, and the responsiveness, contributions, and integrity of the owner you see a pretty large group of loyal ATLAS customers...........almost cult like. Personally, my shooting is at it's highest when using the ATLAS and therefore consider it absolutely the "best." Occasionally you'll find someone that doesn't agree..............as always YMMV,Thinking. About getting one. Are they considered the best?
That is why I got so pissed at Rob1 because he claims to know so much but his statements show how little he really knows because this is something that should have been as obvious as day to a really proficient match shooter.
.
The Atlas was not designed for big bore magnum rifles
I'm glad we finally got that sorted out.
Actually going to edit this and again leave it alone. Lets see if it is returned in turn and we can go from there.
Not sure what your point is but if you want to have a discussion with me, how about you send me a PM and we can go from there.
Someone sent me a PM about that, and these are not airsoft.
I do get that people have these and are happy with them on larger rifles. What floors me is that it seems to be hard for people to accept the fact I had problems with them because of the amount of use mine have received and lack of stability they offer. Everything wears out. Why is that such a big deal to accept?
It's this "Mine are therefore yours are too" or "I am and you must be as well" mindset that I find really odd.
That kind of thinking is rampant in our society... Seems diversity of opinion or experience is not allowed or acceptable. Everyone is so polarized to their opinions we have become so closed minded to others experiences and opinions to a point of being hostile. The juvenile part I can deal with, adds a bit of humor, but the hostile part, and the fact I have to defend my opinions and experiences, is really bizarre.
I've had arguments with guys over VLD seating depth, coriolis effect, video authenticity..... On this forum and it is always the same, some people just refuse to accept any opinion that differs from their own.
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Now how much horizontal movement will the V10 control? Do you see why the V10 may not be an obligation and more of a requirement for your product line? Have I opened your eyes to something else you need to consider in your design or how you rate your product for a particular use? When you look at the design of the LRA, the barrel sits lower and the feet are spread wider. The rifle has a lower center of gravity relating to the bipod when resting in an LRA. That design greatly improves the control the bipod offers horizontally. There is no pan function on the LRA. One more thing that can cause a miss has been eliminated from that design. A shooter has more control over his body vertically than he does horizontally. My misses are almost NEVER vertical, they are, however, almost always due to horizontal movement or wind.
[MENTION=1217]Kasey[/MENTION]
I do apologize for the "cheap toy" comment, I know you are really proud of your invention and you should be, its a great product. I am sure you have seen an LRA and knowing what you know about machine work and design, you have to appreciate what the owner of LRA (Think his name is David) created and the quality standards he sets for his product really are second to none. If someone asks me which is the best... It's hard to ignore that quality and consider it substandard to anything.
If you are talking about F-Class or BR style shooting and expecting the Atlas to fill that role, then yes, it is certainly lacking.
The tone (that I normally try to ignore in text) of the quote above is down-right rude.
Officer in the Army?
If you talk to clients that way in your business, I'd be surprised to see them stay.
I would think that you'd be beyond pointing towards equipment for inducing errors that your form and technique should be the master of.
If you are talking about F-Class or BR style shooting and expecting the Atlas to fill that role, then yes, it is certainly lacking.
Because of you, give it a fucking rest.All the BS got started because some people
This was all you needed to say.I happen to like the LRA
I also learned about LRA bipods which cost fricking $450+ dollars and I sh*t my pants just a little bit, more of a "shart" than a complete dump out, but still. Maybe one day when I forget how to do math.
I'm sorry RHUNTER but it seems to me you have an agenda
My conclusion, there’s more to your story, a story I no longer care about due to your demonstrated dis-ingenuousness.
It'll work great for the .308 Win. Try Triad Tactical out. They have them in-stock ready to go.I am going to order a Atlas bipod and would the standard one work for my .308?
And do I get it straight from B&T or is there a dealer I can go to? Thanks for your help.
Heres a fact- we don't coat bipods for civilian sales. Yours is coated. Oh I know it was purchased sealed, then opened, then coated assembled or wait was it disassembled? No? Okay was there heat involved? No? so it was rattle canned and that is what you're worried about???
Improving materials, heat-treatments on and on, but none of that matters because your experience is NOT only yours but because it's your experience you want everyone to hold hands and sing along.
Problem is that what ever nugget of useful factual field data might be gleaned from your experience it is lost due to your lack of sincere credibility
I am down to working about 3-4 days a week, on the firing line the rest of the time.
The pan and tilt is a great function for tracking targets, it's another factor that can cause a miss when aiming at a stationary one. Since I am not in the Army shooting people anymore and hunting is limited to a couple kills a year, 99.9999% of my shooting is done at a stationary target where there is no rush to place a shot. The looser that pan and tilt knuckle becomes from wear, the less stability I have to make up for slight body movements the LRA helps control. Even when your product is factory new, it still moves left to right when a heavy rifle is on it.
99% equates to 200 rounds per year at the range.
99.9% equates to 2,000 rounds per year at the range.
99.99% equates to 20,000 rounds per year at the range.
99.999% equates to 200,000 rounds per year at the range.
99.9999% equates to 2,000,000 rounds per year at the range.
Only thing that jumped out at me was your statement that at 275 a pop, it was a letdown.
I didn’t even know LRA was out there.