Phoenix ultralite




















Yes it will, you can order the bighorn TL3 inlet in the "action inlet" selection when ordering. We may be able to install a rear stud on the bottom of the buttstock and then i know you can get MLOK attachement studs on Amazon for the forend.

Email sales grayboe. How long is the flat length under the indentation on both sides to the front of the stock. We haven't seen one of these actions in shop yet but according to BAT it will drop into a Rem inlet Phoenix stock so yes it will work! Will this fit a Remington with a remage barrel nut? Does the action need to be bedded?

Our stocks do not require glass bedding. We recommend once you receive the stock you just bolt the rifle on and go shoot. Then if you think you can squeeze more accuracy out of it, then you can decide to glass bed it. Should I should TL3, or Rem ? Side note, customers have told us that 2 thin washers are needed at the rear screw on the bottom metal for the magazines to feed correctly. Currently it will not. However, we are a month or so away from being able to have this DBM fit the Phoenix stock.

We will add it to the bottom metal selection menu when it comes available. Yes we plan on having the Phoenix ready to accept the T3 in about a month. Will this stock clear the trigger hanger on Kelbly and Impact actions?

I'm not aware of the trigger hanger on an Impact action but yes we do modify the stock for the Kelbly Atlas one. We could do the same cut for the Impact if need be.

When selecting the inlet, should I choose the Mausingfield or standard R inlet? You can order one now if you want, email sales grayboe. This is the first time I've upgraded a rifle stock, so my experience is limited. But I am beyond happy with the phoenix. Fits my needs perfectly for a long range lighter hunting rifle.

I called before I ordered to make sure I was getting the right thing for my gun, and all of my questions were answered and I ordered with confidence. My biggest concern was if it would actually get here in 8 weeks before hunting season, and it was spot on.

Install was easy, and I shot the best groups I've ever shot with that gun. Very impressed. Love the feel and weight of the stock. Use to using chassis on my long guns. The weight will make this a great stock for backpacking. Also bought the grayboe bottom Metal. Great stock for a great price. Fit and finish was excellent. Will be buying another in the future. Unbelievable stock!! Light and tight!! Recommend it for all back country hunters that are going light.

Inlet for action and bottom metal is good and tight with no slop, barrel channel is straight, grip is comfortable for both freehand and prone shooting, painted camo is done well. It's an awesome gunstock.

The inlet was a little off on the first one I was sent, but the replacement couldn't fit better and Grayboe made it right. My shooting buddy is already eyeballing a phoenix for himself and I a trekker. Our Vision Warranty Contact Us. Home Products Phoenix. Finish Google Inc. Need a different color finish2 than you see listed? Add to Cart. You can now change out barrels with a barrel nut and not have to modify the stocks barrel channel in any way 1" Limbsaver Airtech recoil pad Embedded bubble level to ensure rifle is level to the ground Fits all aftermarket Remington clone actions No glass bedding required Arrives to you drop in ready, bolt your rifle on and go shoot Ambidextrous.

Any updates on timing for a stock to fit a savage Ultralight La? Thank you Steve It is not contoured, its a straight channel on the Phoenix stock. Not sure at this time, if we do it won't be for a couple years.

Which inlet and action length would fit Bergara BR? You would want the Bergara B14 short action inlet. We will eventually but probably won't be until late next year sometime. Did you want a detachable magazine for the rifle or a floorplate? Unfortunately our stocks don't fit Browning rifles at this time.

Will a Is there a night vision bridge that works with this stock? Will the Phoenix stock fit a Tikka t3x 6. Yes it will! Does the cheekpiece come notched for the T3X cocking indicator? Similarly, the bottom metal is properly aligned and spaced such that even my. The aluminum Vudoo magazine is a little too large to fit in the Grayboe bottom metal so you will want to go with Vudoo bottom metal if you want to use those. Contrary to what most folks think, not all AI pattern magazines fit in all M5 type bottom metal.

As a consequence, not all magazines end up fitting all bottom metals or chassis correctly. The Phoenix is quite generous in what it will accept as far as actions go. The recoil lug area is large enough that I expect it will fit any semi-clone and the sides do not extend as high as the ejection port so no additional inletting is required to accommodate longer ejection ports. The official Grayboe stance on bedding is that they have not seen any noticeable difference in accuracy between bedding their stocks and using them unbedded.

I have now bedded both a Ridgeback and Phoenix and have likewise observed no noticeable change. I also only ran each stock one day before bedding and so could not have noticed zero shift between days, which some say can be bedding related.

Quite frankly, bedding is a generally tricky subject on which a lot of people often talk out their ass with little data to back it up. The gold standard, followed by benchrest guys and Accuracy International, is to permanently glue the stock to the action. Obviously, this limits your future options and makes servicing the rifle a bit trickier. Hence, benchrest action makers use trigger hangers.

Next on the list of reputable bedding techniques is glass pillar bedding such as I have done on this Grayboe stock. With this method, Aluminum pillars set the space between the action and bottom metal and a glass reinforced epoxy mix of one or another Voodoo concoctions is used to create a precise mold of the action in the stock.

On down the line of bedding variations, you have skim bedding, various epoxy glob variations where only parts of the action are bedded, full-length bedding, pressure bedding, and shim bedding.

Even within the dominant glass pillar bedding strain of thinking, exactly what parts are bedded is disputed; some bedding the barrel a few inches in front of the recoil lug and others only bedding behind it. In short, how exactly to prevent the stock from putting differing strain on the barreled action at different times and therefore changing its behavior is not totally agreed upon.

What I am saying is that the glass pillar way of looking at stock-to-action interface appeals most to my thinking, but I have shot V-block chassis and bare ass wood stocked guns that were hummers as well as beautifully glass pillar bedded duds.

More often than that, I have bedded rifles that must have been good enough and saw no noticeable change at all. The Phoenix is light. My example weighed in at only I believe this makes it the lightest adjustable composite hunting stock by about half a pound despite having a weight adding M-LOK rail system absent on most competitors. As such, one of my biggest curiosities was how it would feel under a decent amount of recoil.

The new lightweight recoil pad they are using feels good and composites generally recoil softer at a given weight than a chassis, but who really knows until you try it. Really, the recoil felt about like I expected. The soft pad distributed the pressure well, preventing the rifle from feeling like it dug into you when it lurched, but it is nevertheless a very light package and gives you a solid thump.

Also of interest to me was how the skeletonized buttstock would feel with rear bag in hand and how it would ride the bag. This is an area where I feel many chassis and even tactical style stocks leave me wanting. Often there is either little to interface with a bag or a geometry that makes it difficult to make small adjustments to the rifles angle by manipulating the rear bag, e.

Bipod leg adjustments are relatively course and slow and I like to be able to move my point of aim a good bit using just the rear bag.

I also like to have some meat to the rear of the stock to squish the bag against, giving it some stability. Having an angle to the underside of the buttstock as is traditional in hunting stocks, the Phoenix adjusts well via the rear bag. It is better than I expected and good enough.

The bottom line of the stock being thick instead of thin, as they could also have chosen to make it, is really the saving design decision. Another thing I noticed when shooting the Phoenix was that, like the Ridgeback, it feels like a painted composite stock and not at all like a plastic one.

I am not sure if this is a difference in the surface feel, stiffer flex, or how the weight balances, but composite stocks, whether hand lay-up or molded for a uniform non-directional material, feel substantially different than plastic ones.

It takes more force to lock down than a traditional pinch block and has no lateral adjust or cant, but it is solid, simple, inexpensive to manufacture, and also very light -an ideal solution for this lightweight model. It is also quick to remove, which is important as it starts high enough on the Phoenix to require removal for cleaning. The new level is not visible to me in many lighting conditions in which I never had problems with the old one.

With sides that do not extend past the ejection port, a roomy recoil lug area, and a huge barrel channel, these will fit almost any semi-clone out of the box, with the possible exception of a little grinding being necessary to fit an action with a trigger hanger. The Phoenix also currently only comes inletted for DBMs and not BDLs so you will have to enter this millennium and use a detachable magazine, at least for the moment.

For this review, I went with the Woodland Camo painted finish. This is one of the standard cost finishes on the Phoenix. I found the finished appearance of all visible parts of the stock to be excellent and the paint durable. On the non-visible portions of the stock, such as in the barrel channel and inletting, the appearance was less finished, with small voids in the molding visible as well as less even paint texture.

I have noticed this bothers some folks on the forums for some reason. Perhaps more relevantly, I found the action did not have even contact with the stock throughout the inletting for it. The section of the action in front of the magazine cut really just rests on the aluminum pillar with a little more even contact under the rear tang. Off-field landing and XC capability is not easy to find in ultralight trikes but this one was modified to address those demands.

Only one owner. Purchased new about 2. DTA is the only trike in the world that does not require a front limiter tube so no encumbrances to the view. This DTA is about 5 years old but only has hours total time. It has been professionally maintained. This is an older LaMouette Top I've flown a Top So, I know it's one of the few fast wings that can work with low-horsepower trikes.

This has been my personal trike for about 3 years. It's in pristine condition. I have sold aircraft based on how clean I keep my equipment, tools and my hangar - OCD for sure This a great trike and the price speaks for itself - obviously someone is going to get a great deal. Northwing is a solid utilitarian trike builder, but the owner has just ordered a new Air Creation Tanarg.

This aircraft NEG was originally a custom-build by the Aerotrike factory in South Africa for a client who competed in the world championships. He lost because the wing was so ugly - just kidding.

Nice trike. I put most of the hours on this aircraft myself. Click on the picture for additional pictures and full details. This trike would make a great float trike and we have a set of Cosmos composite high performance floats as well as some Full Lotus inflatables available if you're interested.



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