As I noted in my earlier post, I ordered a set of the Blaser sticks when I saw
@Philip Glass 's post. While at DSC, I also picked up a set of the carbon 4Stablesticks that JJ Perodeau markets on his site.
https://jjperodeau.com/store/?model_number=New-Carbon-shooting-stick
I am a big fan of Teutonic engineering and the Blaser sticks demonstrate that capability in marvelous precision. They are indeed quite stable once they are set up, and the pistol grip will work fine with a light to medium recoil rifle. For sniping a springbuck or lechwe off the flats with a .300 it would be a meaningful improvement over a plain tripod or the early quad designs. However, they would be a fairly large device to take on an international trip.
The Blaser set, in the travel bag, is approx 46 inches long. The 4Stablesticks travel at 24 inches. Both are a carbon design. However, the 4Stablesticks weigh a negligible 20 oz, and I would estimate the Blaser sticks are 3 to 4X that weight. The Blaser system is still quite light, and they will represent more of a packing issue rather than weight challenge.
Both designs use the two point base, which is far more flexible on any terrain than a tripod design.
The 4Stablestick has a flat forend rest. It is enough to allow some useful left to right target tracking, but the Blaser design does offer quite a bit more. I personally don't think it is enough to be meaningful under actual field conditions, but that is purely my personal subjective opinion. It is obviously much easier to employ a traditional hold on a hard recoiling rifle with the simple 4Stablesticks design. Once assembled, they are like carrying nothing at all.
This is a photo of both sets ready to be packed.
For setting up in a hasty stand here in this part of the country, I would use the Blaser design. For international travel, however, it would be no contest. I would pack the 4Stablesticks.