Benchrest rifle

Good is a relative term. For many years, I felt that a good air rifle was a 2 MOA rifle. I still do. Two MOA at 75 yards is 1.1/2 inches, and the 8 ring on the EBR target is 2 inches. If you shot all your shots into the 8 ring, you would have a good score.

Do I still shoot EBR with the Marauder I took to my first match? No, I shoot an FX, but it is a rifle I grew into.

Any benchrest match is a "gear heavy" sport. To let expense deny oneself the experience and the community of the competition is a bad call. At the basic level, benchrest with pellets is a marksman ship challenge. After my first EBR, I though, "This is the best no BS match I have ever been to". Air rifle benchrest is still that high on my list.

Ron
 
I've shot two 200s on the 30 yard challenge with inexpensive (under $500) SPA bullpups. Definitely not benchrest rifles in design but accurate enough to have fun with. Both are 22s. Probably not powerful enough for longer range but under 50 yards they will work. The Stoeger Scout and Ranger are similar in construction but are more conventional in design.
 
Bench rest competition is something I’ve wondered about but have no knowledge, don’t know where to start. Any in the southeast? What are the requirements in terms of caliber, sights, distances? I’d like to take something I already have to start but don’t want to look like a complete idiot first time out. I’m about to start the 10 meter matches at CMP next month and looking forward to it but benchrest sounds interesting. Putting in the work is no problem but I want to avoid throwing money at it until I get it right.

Rick H.
 
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When you say "bench rest rifle" around here, people will rightly presume that you are referring to competition level PCPs which will cost many thousands of dollars to setup.

As a non-competitive airgunner my definition of a "bench rest" rifle may be a bit skewed. 🙃

In simplest view, I bench shoot all of my rifles - at least for tuning and sighting it anyway. Plinking, pesting and hunting rifles aside, leaves the heavier PCPs with the more powerful scopes that I shoot from my bench. Specifically for bench shooting are my Impact, (6-24x50) Panthera (5-25x56), HM1000x (6-24x50) and
Leopard (6-24x50).

I prefer .22 and accept the limits and challenges of that caliber. I shoot my 30ish fpe PCPs out to 50-60 yards and my 45-55 fpe rifles out to 128 yards (my longest shooting lane). This works for me.

It would help if you mentioned if you were into casual shooting or serious competition.

Cheers!
 
Are there any good inexpensive benchrest rifles?
I needed something funny to read this morning.
If you want to shoot bench-rest... take anything you have that shoots... plop your butt down and shoot. Slingshots and BB guns too.
Seriously though.

I’ve shot BR with everyone of my plinking airguns - why not? I’m not winning anything anyway; to me BR is about extracting the best possible score/group from a airgun or taking an airgun to "it's" highest level of performance while a mastering all the other variables in the equation: your body, your mind and the unforgiving environment or wind.

I enjoy shooting BR with all my guns as that’s how I learn about their idiosyncrasies. It also teaches me about my limitations as compared to my Airguns limitations.

Maybe you will get lucky and find a low priced exceptionally well made and "accurate" unicorn for Bench Rest, but I think it’s important to realize what constitutes “good” and or accurate, in your mind may be completely subjective to the harsh reality of what actually shows up on a paper target 25/50/75/100 yards away when in a competitive environment.

It’s not just the gun either…. The rests and other support stuff can be pretty expensive as well.
That said = set a budget for us, and we’ll be of more assistance.

I only have one true BR rig; a RAW TM1000 with a cut barrel in .22. I also have a one piece PDQ rest and a couple of joystick type rests….
just locking your plinking machine into a one piece rest will teach you a lot about you V the gun.

Then there are:

wind flags
rear rests
a high quality SOLID bench - for home that doesn’t jitter
an adjustable stool - or throne
legit targets

you can spend a bundle or almost nothing on any of these above mentioned items.

add in some therapy expenses as well as I’ve witnessed a serious BR shooter is likely to become obsessed.

below pictures are a journey in picture form

the first picture is my TM1000 cut barrel in .22
the three targets represent three different types of BR guns.
A dedicated Bench Rest USFT Mac1 shot at my second official event just sitting on bags
a Redwolf HFT rig shot at my first ever event - just plopped down on top of my gun case and shot
A proof target shot from my Thomas HFT rig = shot by the builder @thomasair - congratulations on your worlds performance this week!
second to last picture is the type of Bench you will find at a lot of ranges... easy to build at home if you want.
last picture is my indoor shooting to outdoor set up - it jitters too much.
Shoot what ya have, shoot what you can afford... create the best scores possible while learning to control (ha) the person pulling the trigger who has to understand a gazillion nuances.

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Bench rest competition is something I’ve wondered about but have no knowledge, don’t know where to start. Any in the southeast? What are the requirements in terms of caliber, sights, distances? I’d like to take something I already have to start but don’t want to look like a complete idiot first time out. I’m about to start the 10 meter matches at CMP next month and looking forward to it but benchrest sounds interesting. Putting in the work is no problem but I want to avoid throwing money at it until I get it right.

Rick H.
This is the place to start ... https://www.national50.net/
It has all the rules, list of clubs and "Match Results" pages will show you scores from shooters from all across America ranked in order of the score results.