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An interesting query. I think that a rifle is a tool, and that, particularly where tools are concerned, form follows function. In general the beauty and grace of a well designed tool flow from this relationship between form and function, and a tool designed on aesthetics alone will almost certainly function poorly. Now clearly this is oversimplification. The skill and artistry of the craftsman or designer play an enormous role, but form and function provide the gridwork on which this talent hangs. On the other hand any multi function tool is going to endure compromise. If you consider just two functions of a rifle, firing standing and firing prone, it's pretty clear to anyone who's done both that the geometry between sight line, stock and butt, conducive to doing either well is is different. Throw into the mix the question of whether you want to be able to fire rapidly with reasonable precision, or slowly with maximum precision, and you have compromises to form galore. Take for example the tens of millions of bolt action military rifles made between 1900 and 1945. This is a huge statistical sample with the same basic design goal. A rugged rifle conducive to rapid fire with reasonable marksmanship from any position. Not surprisingly, whether you're looking at a mauser, mosin or enfield, the bacic geometry between sightline and the shape of buttstock and buttplate is pretty much the same, about 2 1/2" of drop from the sights to the heel, and a relatively smooth buttplate with a rounded heel, allowing the butt to move around the shoulder for any firing position. My long winded point is that I don't think that there could possibly be anything random or purely aesthetic about the established stock shapes and geometry of the BPCR period. A period of firearm design in flux, pursued by too many brilliant designers and artisans for (military contracts notwithstanding) too many shooters for whom a rifle was a necessary daily life and death tool, and also too many extrememly demanding sport shooters and competitors. I think the first catagory, life and death is the driving force, and the second, sport and competition, produces refinements. MM
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