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I recently bought the Spartan Sentinel Tripod in addition to the several bipods of theirs I have. This thing is pretty slick and I mount my Swaro spotting scope on the tripod via one of their nifty attachments. Again, it's not cheap but a heck of a lot lighter than my tripod I usually carry and I can shoot off it and also use my spotter. I am loving it so far.Hey Guys! I'm a new member to this forum, and also work for one of the companies you guys mentioned (Spartan Precision Equipment). If you don't want to pack a bipod into the backcountry, Have you ever thought about shooting off your tripod?
We talked to enough hunters who wanted to pare down their gear as much as possible, and that's why we designed the Sentinel tripod to pull double duty as a glassing platform and shooting rest. Have any of you used this before?
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What's the chances of getting a picture of this setup. You have me intriguedThat's exactly what I bought it for, it's not the quickest to deploy but very stable. With a pack as a "rear bag" and the tripod up front you can get pretty darn steady. Sitting height bipods give up far too much in functionality and bulk IMO.
What setup is this? For some reason this concept is blowing my mindGo the tripod route. If you carry a spotter, the tripod can now serve another purpose and they’re super stable. A bipod will always have its place in certain applications but in my opinion, the tripod is superior for most hunting situations
Smacking a 12” diamond at 500 from the sitting position in a stiff wind was a piece of cake with this setup
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I don't have a picture with the pack set up in there but I just position it along the butt of the stock as needed for elevation. For sub 350 yds or so my right knee pulled up high to rest the stock butt on is very adequate. Beyond that, or given time, the pack is preferable. My rail is up front, unlike Fire9's which is set where the rifle balances. His would be more stable, mine uses the same rail attachment for the tripod or bipod.What's the chances of getting a picture of this setup. You have me intrigued
What setup is this? For some reason this concept is blowing my mind
Lightbulb, thanks for the explanation. Will look into this more thanks guys!With a pan head you can only adjust 2 of the 3 dimensions at once for the shot, if that makes sense; you can move it up and down for elevation and pan/swing left to right, but you can't tilt it side to side to account for an "uneven" tripod set up. We need an engineer to draw a picture here, ha.
I very much prefer a pan head for glassing as well.
I was looking at getting a VA-5 head I like a fluid head more for glassing especially for a bigger spotter. You think theres a little more restriction going that way vs. a ball head?
Seems like more and more people are using tripods to shoot off these days. Makes sense. If you're already carrying it to use with your spotter/binos, might as well make it serve double duty as a shooting rest.Kurt Racicot from Stone Glacier has a piccatinny rail attachement on both his rifle and spotter. He can remove spotter and attach the rifle to his tripod to shoot. I forget which brand it is but he covers it in this video.
Thanks for the shoutout!I recently bought the Spartan Sentinel Tripod in addition to the several bipods of theirs I have. This thing is pretty slick and I mount my Swaro spotting scope on the tripod via one of their nifty attachments. Again, it's not cheap but a heck of a lot lighter than my tripod I usually carry and I can shoot off it and also use my spotter. I am loving it so far.
How do you like the Spartan w/ their ball head attachment for glassing with spotter/binos? Would like to hear the pluses and minuses of it. I am in the market for a new setup, this one is fairly intriguing to me vs installing rails on each adapter.I recently bought the Spartan Sentinel Tripod in addition to the several bipods of theirs I have. This thing is pretty slick and I mount my Swaro spotting scope on the tripod via one of their nifty attachments. Again, it's not cheap but a heck of a lot lighter than my tripod I usually carry and I can shoot off it and also use my spotter. I am loving it so far.
No Roll adjustment.With a pan head you can only adjust 2 of the 3 dimensions at once for the shot, if that makes sense; you can move it up and down for elevation and pan/swing left to right, but you can't tilt it side to side to account for an "uneven" tripod set up. We need an engineer to draw a picture here, ha.
I very much prefer a pan head for glassing as well.