- Location
- Western Manitoba
I use a Targetmaster rest and simply grip the wrist of the stock with finger on the trigger, don't hold forestock at all, just let the recoil happen.
But I believe you gotta tuck right down into the gun. Sitting too upright to me says you are 'recoil shy'.
For the record I shoot .300H&H, 9.3x62, .375H&H, .416RM, .458Lott. But the worst gun I've ever fired for recoil on the bench is a hot-rodded Marlin M1895 Guide Gun with the short 18.5" barrel. Way worse 'felt recoil' than the .458Lott due to the short barrel. That damn thing just bucked like a mule! It would cause my teeth to smash together.
An interesting thought - "recoil shy" - the "sit upright" technique was described, first that I read about it, in an article in Guns and Ammo magazine (late 1980's) by Elmer Keith - he was "bench resting" a 458 Win Mag - one of several of his articles / columns published (or, perhaps, re-published) after his death, in 1984. I suppose that you will have to take that up with him, if you two ever meet up.
A lot of "recoil", I think, is subjective - goes with stock fit and shooter technique - my son, when a skinny 14 year old - would off hand a magazine full with my Model 70 338 Win Mag, without issue. A fairly husky guy that I worked with at a mine claimed he would get the snot kicked out of him, when he shot his GrandPa's 30/30. Can read accounts of 1870's elephant hunters - 4 gauge black powder rifles - knocked them to the ground, knocked them off their horse, regularly.
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