It has been a little time since I talked about Spartan Precision bipods and tripods. That is largely due to my preoccupation with precision shooting during the last year and a half or so.
I have two pieces of gear from Spartan: Ascent tripod https://alnk.to/28VEg3S and Javelin bipod https://alnk.to/gVPiEBd Both are very well made and rather quick to deploy, but they are not quite stable enough for the competition oriented endeavors I have been focusing on.
For competition, it has been predominantly large diameter inverted leg tripods, like Zeiss' Max Duty kit and Triple Pull Ckyepod. Inverted leg tripods are measurably faster to deploy and adjust when on the clock. Triple Pull Ckyepod gives me the flexibility to shoot prone, sitting or kneeling in a pinch.
For hunting, however, I have been using the Spartan gear I listed above because it is light, easy to pack, fast to deploy and exceedingly well made. It also really helps that the legs of the Ascent tripod come off for easier packing and for use as hiking sticks (that is highly useful when packing meat out and I like the idea of not needing to carry around separate walking sticks.
Most of my hunting rifles that I am not willing to attach a bipod to on a mostly permanent basis are set up for Spartan's Magnaswitch adapter. It is slick, unobtrusive and can be used to snap either a bipod or tripod in. It is not quite as stable at distance as a proper large diameter match tripod, but it is very fast to deploy and stable enough for my hunting purposes.
In the last few years, tripods have become an indespensible tool precision shooting when terrain is not conducive to shooting prone. We use tripods for observation and target ID with binoculars and then immediately switch to using them for shooting support. That is where things start to diverge a bit.
Some people clip the rifle into the Arca head of the tripod (that's what I have been doing lately).
Some keep a tripod table clipped in and do both glassing and shooting off of a bag sitting on top of the tripod table (that's what I started out with originally, but managing extra gear took too long. I am more efficient now, so it might be time to re-visit this).
Some of the top competitors use two tripods for front and rear support (that's more gear manipulation than I am comfortable with).
When there is a front support, whether a tall bipod or a prop of some sort or just a convenient terrain feature, tripods are routinely used as a rear support to stabilize the butstock of the rifle. That is what's commonly referred to as "tripod rear".
I have been trying to keep things simple and mostly just shot with the rifle clipped into the tripod. I got quite competent at it when shooting at the range, but it has been a bit of a struggle in the last two matches (I also had some health issue in parallel, but I suspect that it had more to do with me screwing things up under time pressure than health concerns).
Still, while I continue to practice shooting with the rifle clipped into the tripod, both standing and kneeling, it was time to expand my horizons and try to master various variants of "tripod rear" support.
That is when I stumbled onto Spartan's CP Brace that offers a completely different approach to using a tripod for two point rifle support.
It is a very clever idea. They are, essentially, creating a bridge betweeh two legs of the tripod that has a compact tripod head attached to it. That is the front support. The rear support is the tripod's third leg where, similarly to the conventional "tripod rear" setup, you use your support hand to anchor the buttstock of the rifle to the leg of the tripod.

Like everythign Spartan makes, CP Brace is not cheap, so I figured I should take one for the team, do some experimentation and let you know what I find.



