Bob Kingsbury
New member
Given a small club, where different classes are often shot on the same
relay, no flags for some classes is a burden on a club. A modified
class is basically an improved factory gun. Modified in drag racing
is not a slightly detuned funny car. A 2 1/2 in forearm even slightly
convex as in NBRSA Hunter is not nearly as detrimental as some would think.
The limiting factor has always been the 6 power scope. Example:
a competitor takes a BR HV in 30 br, changes the stock down to
2 1/2 wide, puts his 36X back on and wins time after time in modified.
This sends lots of people home. I would certainly take a 2 1/2 inch
stock over a single shot action. A Remington or savage with
wide, but rounded stock needs way more control. Flat bottoms, 2 1/2
or 3 are a great advantage. Allowing 3 inch wide plates on forearms
is another way to level the playing field. The stock is all important.
relay, no flags for some classes is a burden on a club. A modified
class is basically an improved factory gun. Modified in drag racing
is not a slightly detuned funny car. A 2 1/2 in forearm even slightly
convex as in NBRSA Hunter is not nearly as detrimental as some would think.
The limiting factor has always been the 6 power scope. Example:
a competitor takes a BR HV in 30 br, changes the stock down to
2 1/2 wide, puts his 36X back on and wins time after time in modified.
This sends lots of people home. I would certainly take a 2 1/2 inch
stock over a single shot action. A Remington or savage with
wide, but rounded stock needs way more control. Flat bottoms, 2 1/2
or 3 are a great advantage. Allowing 3 inch wide plates on forearms
is another way to level the playing field. The stock is all important.