Prone rifle stock

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Harrier1980

Prone rifle stock

#1 Post by Harrier1980 »

morning all,

I have been reading a few posts on here lately, and some have mentioned rifles having or not having a prone stock, I did not realise there was a difference?

I will be looking to buy soon, so what do I need to look for, as a prone target shooter?
Harrier1980

Re: Prone rifle stock

#2 Post by Harrier1980 »

58 views and no replies? do I assume that there is not a difference?

sorry if it a bit of a 'newbie' question.
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20series
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Re: Prone rifle stock

#3 Post by 20series »

Sorry mate I missed this one sign01

Prone stocks are designed so they can be fired using the standard prone position with the forend in the hand etc, other stock profiles for F-Class/Benchrest etc will have wide forend designed to go on rests

Normally any target rifle should always be in a prone stock

HTH
Alan
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ovenpaa
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Re: Prone rifle stock

#4 Post by ovenpaa »

Also the butt height will be different on a prone to off hand rifle.
/d

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Dougan

Re: Prone rifle stock

#5 Post by Dougan »

Missed this one too - don't log on every evening...

Like Alan said, the main diference is with the fore-end - generally longer, chunkier and heavier than on a sporting rifle. There is usually a rail on the underside for fitting a handstop...so designed for prone shooting with a sling.

If you look on the 'Fultons of Bisley' website there's some good pictures of various typical target rifles.
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Re: Prone rifle stock

#6 Post by IainWR »

I think the distinction arises from the world of smallbore. Anschutz used to sell the same action in three different stocks: Match 54 (prone) which had a long forened with the underside of the stock parallel to and as close as possible to the barrel; Standard Rifle (1417/18/19/), which had a sloped forend and was intended to be used in the Womens' UIT Match (3-positional but without any attachments - the poor little dears apparently lack the strngth to manage a proper 3-P rifle according to UIT / ISSF (spit)); and Supermatch which was a Match 54 with a heavy stock and barrel, adjustable this that and the other including extending palm rest and hooked buttplate that moved through the full range needed for PSK. Hence a "prone" rifle was one which more or less followed the model of the M54.

Iain
Dave 101

Re: Prone rifle stock

#7 Post by Dave 101 »

Hers some pics of my Anschutz 54 with the different stock options I have or had for it .

Prone stock
Image
Image

Position stock
note the deeper area around the trigger guard for the left hand support
Image
Image

My bench rest stock which I converted from the position stock .
and a BRNO Sporter stock
Image

Dave
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Re: Prone rifle stock

#8 Post by 20series »

Dave 101 wrote:Hers some pics of my Anschutz 54 with the different stock options I have or had for it .

Prone stock
Image
Image

Position stock
note the deeper area around the trigger guard for the left hand support
Image
Image

My bench rest stock which I converted from the position stock .
and a BRNO Sporter stock
Image

Dave

Excellent Post Dave, that illustrates perfectly :goodjob:

Alan
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools!!
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001 RIP
Harrier1980

Re: Prone rifle stock

#9 Post by Harrier1980 »

That is great, thanks everyone. It had not occurred to me that the difference would be the fore-end, I had thought that the butt would be different or something.

cheers all. :good:
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