True, but some are more resistant to failure than others. Sheet happens, eventually.
Not all plastic is created equal.
But then again, you can say that about any stock material.
Is it warm to the touch if you can’t feel your fingers?
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Like others have said, the stocks more or less hold up in the cold if you’re not abusing them. But the cold will be unforgiving if there are pre-existing weaknesses and they’ll be revealed under stress.
It’s the glass optics that tend to fail or are rendered unusable due to fogging when it gets down to -30C or -40C. I learned that the hard way and now it’s simple irons for me in the extreme cold.
Like others have said, the stocks more or less hold up in the cold if you’re not abusing them. But the cold will be unforgiving if there are pre-existing weaknesses and they’ll be revealed under stress.
It’s the glass optics that tend to fail or are rendered unusable due to fogging when it gets down to -30C or -40C. I learned that the hard way and now it’s simple irons for me in the extreme cold.
I learned that the hard way too! Purse your lips and blow your breath out of the corner of your mouth.
The CAF went with a laminate stock on the new Tikka/SAKO C19 Ranger rifle for arctic operations. Specs required operating temperature from -51 to + 39C. Presumably the laminate was best suited to this temperature range.
http://www.sadefensejournal.com/wp/c-19-the-new-canadian-ranger-rifle/
Is it warm to the touch if you can’t feel your fingers?
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It's -43C here the last few days, and -50 where the bison are, two hours away.
Won't matter what you take, that stock's going to be cold.
Ted
It's -43C here the last few days, and -50 where the bison are, two hours away.
Won't matter what you take, that stock's going to be cold.
Ted
Carbon fibre is much colder than wood in cold weather, EJG, unless you have something new over you way.
Ted




























