>>4390808It's not unsupported if it's in contact with your shoulder, with two arms pulling it tight. As for long and short guns, there's actually a time where you want a longer gun. Say you do trap shooting, where the clay targets are going at an angle mostly away from you. You want the mass to be forward to steady your barrel movement as the inertia prevents you from moving it unsteadily. This is different from skeet focused guns where you swing one direction to catch a target going perpendicular to your aim, and then have to move the other direction to catch the other target. Those guns tend to be shorter by a few inches. Now, I've never used a camera with a stock, but I imagine it would be pretty stable to point and shoot since your fingers have no real impact on your camera, since your hand and elbow joints are tensioned holding the stock to your shoulder. If someone has experience otherwise, I'm interested in it.