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HELBER Tactical B2 Bipod with quick release

Original price was: R234500.Current price is: R219900.

SKU: bp2 Categories: , Tags: , Product ID: 4422

Description

HELBER Tactical B2 Bipod with quick-release

Tactical B2 Bipod is an attachment, usually to a weapon, that helps support and steady it. The bipod provides significant stability along two axes of motion (side-to-side, and up-and-down).

Bipod comes from the Latin and Greek roots bi and pod, meaning “two” and “foot, or feet” respectively.

History of the Tactical B2 Bipod
The first known use of bipods on firearms can be traced back to hand cannons of the 12th century which were cast iron barrels laid on top of short poles.

Bipods on rifles are first known to have been used in an improvised fashion during the mid-19th century, particularly by frontiers hunting buffalo and other wild animals. For example, the painting “The Long Shot” by Howard Terpning shows indigenous native American hunters shooting a rifle with an improvised bipod consisting of two crossed arrows.

During the 20th century, the use of dedicated bipods increased and was seen on different types of rifles during wars. For example, the Lewis gun (1914) was fitted with an adjustable bipod. The technology became more advanced, with hinged legs and even extendable or retractable legs.

One of the first companies to manufacture commercially successful bipods was Harris Engineering, Inc. founded in 1979 in Barlow, Kentucky by Gerald Harris, Margaret Harris, and Susan Wilkerson. Before starting the company, Gerald had applied for a patent on the bipod. In 2019, their successful Harris Bipods have been produced for nearly forty years and have remained relatively unchanged.

Recent advances in the manufacture of bipods include the use of lightweight materials such as aluminium, carbon fibre and titanium, the use of different quick attachment and detachment mechanisms (Picatinny, M-LOK, etc. or even magnets) and various types of feet materials such as rubber, metal, or a “basket” designed to stop the bipod from sinking into soft surfaces such as fine sand or deep snow (inspired by ski poles and snowshoes)

Mounting standards
There are several mounting standards for attaching a bipod to a rifle, of which some well-known are the swivel stud, Picatinny and Versa-Pod spigot mount.

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