I have a Farley front rest with an Edgewood bag. More info below, in case anyone finds it relevant.
I've packed the Sinclair black sand into it the ears to get them to firm up and I'm now concerned that the area between is too hard.
I've read folks not liking the Sinclair sand due to it packing and getting hard. Some of these folks have suggested play sand. Some have suggested the pale Zircon sand (which I have a bit of, btw) doesn't "pack down" like the Sinclair black sand.
I wondering...
1. How hard is too hard? Is there a rule of thumb? Like what should happen when I press into it with the pad of my thumb? Should I be able to push down into it or should I be able to just barely get anything?
2. Would the play sand or Zircon be better or worse for having *just a tad* of dampening in the front.
3. Do you guys monitor it and "fluff" it or anything similar to keep it from getting hard?
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Of course, this is all about good tracking and preventing sneaky vertical.
My stock is a wood and carbon fiber that Cecil Tucker made for himself. It should have pretty good vibration control. It has vertical sides on the front of about 3/4". Just not as sharp as an Edge. The bottom of the butt has a 1/2" or so flat. It's pretty sharp on the edges. I'm setting this up by increasing the side tension till I feel some drag and then backing off just a tad and testing by pushing it to the side gently with my thumb and repeat till there is no drag, but no side-to-side.
My rear bag is a full Gator with 2 stitches between the tall ears. The base is packed with the Sinclair sand. As it settles, I'll put more in to prevent the "bubble" under the ears. The ears are about medium full.
Right now, I'm wanting to try a firm-but-not-hard front bag, a full, stable base and soft-but-not-mushy ears with the flat a bit up off the area between the ears.
I've had it out once in its new configuration ( 13.5# VFS). It seems to go back to the mothball when I gently push it back with my shoulder. So far, I have *not* seen it jump out of the rear ears when I shoot.