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Franklin Armory Reformation: Not a Rifle, Not a Shotgun, But a ‘Firearm’

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A few weeks ago, Franklin Armory created a lot of buzz when it issued a short press release about something called the “Reformation.” In that presser, the Nevada-based company said the Reformation wouldn’t require an NFA tax stamp despite the fact that it features an 11.5-inch barrel and a conventional Magpul MOE SL stock. It’s not a rifle, and it’s not a shotgun. To back up its claim, the company said the gun had “received approval as a non-rifle” from the Chief of the Firearms Technology Division at the ATF. Confused? So were we. But we aren’t anymore.

Franklin Armory Reformation Debut

This week at SHOT Show, the Franklin Armory Reformation made its debut. So, how did this gun come to be classified as a non-NFA firearm? According to a new video released by the company which you can see below, this is due to the barrel. Here’s what the description of the video says:

The Reformation line of firearms features Franklin Armory’s NRS barrel technology. NRS stands for “Not a Rifle or Shotgun” and has straight cut lands and grooves while retaining a standard chamber. Since the barrel does not impart spin on the projectile, it does not meet the definition of “rifling.”

And what about that ATF approval? More again from the company:

On August 3rd of 2017, the Chief of the firearms Technology Division confirmed that a firearm equipped with a stock and a barrel featuring straight cut lands and grooves is defined as a ‘firearm,’ and is not a rifle or a shotgun. Since Reformation cannot be a rifle or a shotgun, it also cannot be a short barreled rifle of a short barreled shotgun.

How accurate is this thing? Again, more from the video description:

Franklin Armory has safely tested off the shelf ammunition in an NRS barrel and achieved 4 MOA results.

To get the most out of the the straight cut lands and grooves, the company says it has also “engineered fin and flare stabilized projectiles and ammunition for near MOA performance.”

The Franklin Armory Reformation will initially be available in .300 BLK, with 5.56 to follow shortly thereafter, and possibly .308 sometime after that. The Firearm Blog has the MSRP at $2,095 with Franklin Armory’s Binary BFSIII trigger, and $1,665 without it.

Watch the video below for more information, and visit franklinarmory.com.

The post Franklin Armory Reformation: Not a Rifle, Not a Shotgun, But a ‘Firearm’ appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.


T1x MTR: Tikka Releases First-Ever Rimfire Rifle for 2018

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Tikka, a brand owned by Finland-based Sako and distributed by Beretta in the United States, has unveiled its first-ever rimfire rifle at SHOT Show 2018. These guns are available in either .22 LR or .17 HMR, with 20-inch cold-hammer forged barrels with crossover profiles; stainless steel bolt; metallic bolt shroud; modular stock; enhanced grip; 10-round capacity and a MSRP of $499. The action has the same bedding surfaces and inlay footprint as the Tikka’s centerfire T3x rifles. See the press release below to learn more.

The new Tikka T1x MTR rifle is designed from the ground up to combine the capabilities needed for both range shooting and small game hunting in rough terrain. Tikka T1x is equipped to handle various shooting tasks in all weather conditions, and it’s based on the T3x centerfire platform to offer the shooter the best possible user experience. The market has high demand for a rimfire with an excellent price-quality ratio.

“Responding to the high demand and requests from the market, we’re now proudly presenting the first ever Tikka rimfire rifle. The brand new T1x meets Tikka’s high-quality standards for both usability and precision, which makes it a natural fit for the Tikka rifle family,” commented Mr. Raimo Karjalainen, General Manager at Sako Ltd.

Tikka T1x MTR is compatible with the majority of T3x accessories, which allows the shooter to adapt the rifle according to their personal preferences. Also, the action of this rimfire rifle shares the same bedding surfaces and inlay footprint with the T3x centerfire rifles for an optimal experience. The cross-over profile barrel was engineered so that the rifle would offer the benefits of a heavier barrel without much added weight. We’re truly proud of the Tikka T1x MTR. It’s a rimfire rifle that’s worthy of the revered Tikka name.

For additional information, head over to tikka.fi, and watch the video below.

The post T1x MTR: Tikka Releases First-Ever Rimfire Rifle for 2018 appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

VIDEO: Shooting 2 Quail with the 20 Gauge Beretta 687 Silver Pigeon

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At Athlon Outdoors, we don’t like to sit behind cozy desks and write about how great the gun world is. As the name indicates, we’re outdoorsmen. We get out there and get after it. VP and Group Publisher Nick Seifert recently demonstrated this mantra to a “T” on a recent quail hunt.

Beretta 687 Silver Pigeon

Using the 20 gauge Beretta 687 Silver Pigeon shotgun, Seifert hit not one, but two 100 percent wild quail with some ridiculously fast shooting.

As for ammo, Seifert used 7 1/2 shot Remington Game Loads.

The Silver Pigeon, an over-under hunting shotgun, features two conical locking lugs at mid-action, right between the barrels. This gives the shotgun great locking strength and durability while keeping the action’s profile considerably lower.

The advantage, Beretta says, “is that the eye of the shooter is a lot closer to the plane of his supporting hand, resulting in a considerably better swing and hand-eye coordination.”

For more on the 687 Beretta Silver Pigeon, please visit Beretta.com.

The post VIDEO: Shooting 2 Quail with the 20 Gauge Beretta 687 Silver Pigeon appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

New: Mossberg MVP Precision Rifle in 6.5 Creedmoor & 7.62 NATO

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Mossberg MVP Precision Rifle 7.62 right profile Mossberg MVP Precision Rifle 6.5 Creedmoor right profile

Mossberg rolled out a ton of new products at SHOT this year, including an addition to its MVP series: the MVP Precision Rifle chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor and 7.62mm NATO. These bolt-action rifles feature Mossberg aluminum chassis design; slim-profile handguard; LUTH-AR MBA-3 adjustable stock; and Magpul MOE+ grip. It also accepts both M1A/M14 and AR10/SR25-style magazines. MSRP: $1,407. See the press release below for details.

Mossberg went back to the drawing board to design its own modular aluminum chassis system. Similar to an AR-rifle “inline” design, the Mossberg chassis more efficiently handles recoil and lessens internal stress as energy is transferred in a straight line between the barrel and action to the buffer tube/stock; inherently increasing accuracy and the ability to maintain your sight picture.

Constructed of lightweight aluminum with a durable anodized finish, the Mossberg chassis provides a solid base for repeatable, precision-accuracy. Next Mossberg added a slim-profile, matte blue-finished aluminum hand guard which features Magpul’s M-LOK modular mounting-system for easy attachment of compatible accessories.

The medium bull barrel is free-floating for improved accuracy and threaded (5/8”- 24 threads per inch) for the convenience of attaching suppressors or muzzle brakes. Thread cap is included. The button-rifled barrel is constructed of 4140 carbon steel with 5R rifling (6.5mm Creedmoor only). The MVP Precision rifle features a 24-inch barrel length and 1:8 twist rate for the 6.5mm Creedmoor and 20-inch barrel length and 1:10 twist rate for the 7.62mm NATO (308 Win) chambering. Both barrel and receiver feature a matte blue finish as well.

Further enhancing the accuracy is Mossberg’s Lightning Bolt Action (LBA) Trigger System, delivering a crisp, creep-free trigger pull and is easily adjusted from 3 to 7 pounds by the user. Machined from aircraft-grade aluminum and hard-coat anodized to military spec, preventing corrosion and minimizing wear, the LBA trigger system delivers the utmost in reliability and durability for consistent shot-after-shot placement. Additional design features include an oversized tactical-style bolt handle; oversized trigger guard; 20MOA Picatinny top rail for maximizing long-range capabilities; and Magpul P-Mag 10-round magazine.

Completing the furniture package on the MVP Precision rifle are the Magpul MOE+ pistol grip and LUTH-AR MBA-3 adjustable stock. The MOE+ grip is constructed of reinforced polymer and features a wrap-around rubber overmolding for control in the most demanding conditions. The MOE+ grip accepts optional Storage Cores for gear stowage and includes a basic grip cap.

Adjustability and ergonomics are key to the LUTH-AR MBA-3 carbine buttstock with its fully-adjustable, 6-position design (12.5 – 16.5-inch LOP range). Features include additional cheek height adjustment up to 1 inch; 3-axis butt plate which provides for 1 1/16-inch length-of-pull adjustment as well as vertical and lateral adjustments to fit the curvature of the shooter’s shoulder and adjust for right or left cast. On the bottom rear of the stock body is a Picatinny rail to attach an array of accessories. A convenient index screw allows you to secure the stock in your favorite position. Completing this well-designed stock are a soft rubber recoil pad and the ability to easily remove the stock via a screw attachment for ease of transporting or storing the rifle in a compact case.

For more, go to mossberg.com.

The post New: Mossberg MVP Precision Rifle in 6.5 Creedmoor & 7.62 NATO appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

The Interesting History of Remington Revolvers From the 1850s-1870s

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It began with a patent, an unbreakable patent belonging to Samuel Colt since 1835 that kept E. Remington & Sons at arm’s length from the late 1840s until the day Colt’s seven-year patent extension expired in 1857.

As an American arms manufacturer, Remington was much older than Colt, founded in 1816 by Eliphalet Remington II. Originally, Remington only manufactured barrels but did so quite successfully. In 1828, the company moved from Litchfield to larger facilities in Ilion, New York, along the Erie Canal, a major trade route in the 19th century. While Samuel Colt was busy rebuilding his fortunes in 1847 with the .44-caliber Walker and Whitneyville Dragoons, Remington was busy purchasing the Ames Company of Chicopee, Massachusetts, in 1848. He used Ames tooling to manufacture his first complete gun, a breech-loading percussion carbine built under contract to the U.S.

Navy. It was followed by a contract for 5,000 U.S. Model 1841 percussion “Mississippi” rifles. As for manufacturing revolvers, Remington (and every other U.S. arms-maker) was effectively blocked by the Colt patent. Nearly a decade would pass before Remington introduced its first model, the Remington-Beals revolver.

It was designed by Fordyce Beals, who shared not only the name but the June 24, 1856, and May 26, 1857, patents. Introduced on the heels of Colt’s patent expiration in 1857, the relationship with E. Remington & Sons and Fordyce Beals would continue for years, leading to many of the company’s most successful models.

Roaring Big Guns

In 1858, Remington and Beals raised the bar for .44-caliber handgun designs with the introduction of the Remington-Beals Army model, an immediate and successful rival to the Colt Dragoons and their comparatively outdated (in Beals’ opinion) construction. The .44-caliber Remington Army was followed by a .36-caliber Navy Model.

Over the years, Samuel Colt had continued to rely upon his original patent designs using a separate frame and barrel, which were joined with the cylinder on the arbor and secured in place with a wedge passing through the barrel lug and arbor. This was the traditional open-top design that everyone in the U.S. was trying (unsuccessfully) to copy and produce. Colt brought swift litigation against all copies. Beals and Remington were not interested in copying Colt, but rather building a different type of revolver that would, by design, be stronger and use a one-piece frame with a topstrap. And it would be far easier to reload.

One had two options when reloading a Colt: Pour a measure of powder into each cylinder chamber, load a lead ball, turn the gun over and place a percussion cap on the nipple of each chamber. The second method was to disassemble the gun by removing the barrel and swapping out the empty cylinder for a loaded one. This was faster so long as you didn’t lose the barrel wedge.

With the Remington and Beals revolver design, traditional loading was the same as the Colt, but a cylinder change took only seconds and required virtually no disassembly. One placed the hammer at half-cock, lowered the loading lever and pulled the cylinder pin forward, rolled the empty cylinder out of the frame, put in a loaded one, pushed the cylinder pin back into place and then raised the loading lever. (You may recall seeing Clint Eastwood do this in the middle of a gunfight in Pale Rider and Anson Mount in the AMC television series Hell on Wheels.) It really was a better idea.

With the start of the Civil War, Remington did not rest on its laurels. The Army and Navy models were fast becoming the Union’s second most carried sidearms. During the course of the war, Remington continued to make improvements to its original .36- and .44-caliber models, introducing the improved Army in 1861 and New Model Army and Navy in 1863. By the end of the Civil War, Remington had produced the second largest quantity of handguns used by the Union, a total of nearly 130,000 revolvers, of which more than 115,000 were .44-caliber models. Remington was also the benefactor of Colt’s misfortune—the factory fire of February 4, 1864—which destroyed the original structures erected by Samuel Colt in 1855. The fire destroyed the buildings where revolvers were manufactured and finished. So, the 1864 fire certainly played a role in the Ordnance Department’s increased orders from Remington before the end of the Civil War.

While Remington touted its superior designs, the Army and Navy models were not perfect. Remington’s revolvers were more prone to jamming than Colts and required more meticulous care. But there was much to be said for the ease of reloading, especially in the midst of a battle.

The Second Blockade

Remington had the misfortune of weathering one unbreakable patent to end up facing another by the end of the Civil War. This time even Colt was being held at bay—both companies were prevented from manufacturing breech-loading cartridge revolvers by Smith  & Wesson and the Rollin White patent, which S&W had wisely purchased in 1855. With the White patent, Smith & Wesson had blocked any advances in American handgun design for a decade with the exclusive rights to manufacture breech-loading revolvers in the U.S. until 1869. And like Colt before them, S&W pursued litigation against all violations.

This had proven unfortunate during the war, as metallic cartridges and cartridge-loading handguns were becoming the most advanced form of personal armament. With self-contained metallic cartridges, it was possible to reload more quickly and shoot with greater reliability. Thus, Remington bit the bullet, so to speak, and in 1868 and 1869 paid a hefty $1 royalty to S&W for every cartridge conversion revolver they built. They also agreed to stamp the Rollin White patent dates on each cylinder. Colt would have none of it, and for the first time since 1857, Remington had the edge over its biggest competitor in the handgun market-place.

Remington signed the agreement with S&W in February of 1868 and a total of 4,574 Remington New Model Army percussion models were converted to fire .46-caliber rimfire metallic cartridges. The majority of the guns were actually sold by S&W to Benjamin Kittredge, a wholesale and retail firearms dealer in Cincinnati, Ohio, who had initiated the request for the cartridge conversion models through S&W a year earlier. During this period S&W was only building .22 and .32 caliber breech-loading pocket pistols, and would not introduce a large-caliber model until 1870.

The Remington conversions required the manufacture of a new cylinder since the .46-caliber rounds wound not fit within the diameter of the original six-shot .44 percussion cylinder, thereby ruling out the possibility of cutting off the back and boring the chambers through. The .46-caliber Remington conversions only chambered five rounds, but they were five big ones.

The back of the frame, where the cylinder butted up against the recoil shield, was dovetailed to accept a new recoil plate, which was fastened with a small screw. The right side of the recoil shield and frame were deeply channeled to allow the loading and extracting of cartridges; however, there was no loading gate, and the majority of early .46-caliber conversions were not fitted with cartridge ejectors.

The same basic design was used for later models chambered to the new .44-caliber Martin centerfire and Colt .45- caliber centerfire cartridges. These later designs, introduced in the summer of 1869, were six-shot revolvers and offered a manual cartridge ejector assembly mounted on the left side of the frame.

Remington’s New Model Navy was the next percussion revolver to get the conversion treatment beginning in 1873, chambered for either .38 rimfire or .38 centerfire cartridges. The Navy was also the first model to come standard with both a loading gate and cartridge ejector.

Just as Colt was doing in the early 1870s, Remington produced both new conversions to use up Civil-War-era percussion frames and barrels, as well as modifying older percussion models sent to the factory by the military or civilian owners. In 1875, the U.S. Navy contracted to have 1,000 Navy percussion revolvers used during the Civil War returned to Remington for conversion to .38 centerfire. The cost of converting the Navy models was $4.25 each, including new grips and refinishing.

Following the war, Remington also introduced several new percussion models, among them the New Police revolver and New Pocket revolver in .36 and .31 caliber, respectively. Along with the Remington Rider, all of the new pistols were available with factory cartridge conversions.

The New Police was chambered for the .38 rimfire while the New Pocket revolvers (designed by Fordyce Beals) was in .32 rimfire. Unlike the earlier Remington cartridge designs, both could easily be converted back to percussion pistols by changing cylinders, thus providing greater versatility than Colt models, which, once converted, could not be used with a percussion cylinder.

Two-Part Solution

Remington’s new approach to the conversion of its percussion revolvers was considerably more diverse than Colt, which had taken only one course of action with the C.B. Richards and William Mason designs. Remington’s new conversions utilized several different methods, one of which followed three influential British designs—the C. C. Tevis patent (1856), the J. Adams patent (1861) and the W. Tranter patent (1865)—all of which made use of a two-piece cylinder. This required cutting off the back portion of the cylinder below the percussion nipples, drilling the chambers completely through and counter-boring the back of the cylinder to accommodate the cartridge rims. A cylinder cap, with ratchets to engage the hand and openings to allow the hammer to strike the cartridge rim, completed the conversion.

Fortunately, the design of the Remington hammer required only slight modification in order to work with the two-piece cylinders, and it would still work with the percussion cylinder. By simply replacing the old cylinder, the gun could be used as a conventional cap-and-ball revolver, which proved fairly handy on the frontier where a box of cartridges couldn’t always be found.

Approximately 18,000 New Model Police Remington revolvers were built between 1865 and 1873, with many of them converted to metallic cartridges. Remington offered the Police model with a choice of four barrel lengths: 3½, 4½, 5½ and 6½ inches. Prices ranged from $10 to $11, and options included a nickel-plated frame for an extra $0.75 and a full nickel finish for $1.50. Ivory stocks were $5 extra; pearl, a whopping $9, and engraving added another $5. A fancy New Model Police with a 6½-inch barrel would have set its owner back a total of $26.50 in 1873. A box of 100 .38-caliber rimfire cartridges cost $1.70, and a case of 1,000 rounds was $17.

The same conversion principle used for the New Police applied to the smaller, five-shot New Pocket model, which become one of the most prolific of all cartridge conversions. The Pocket Remington revolvers had been manufactured as percussion revolvers from 1865 to 1873. Thus, there was nearly a decade of production before the conversion to .32 rimfire was introduced in 1873. The pistols were available with 3-, 3½-, 4-and 4½-inch barrels, though the latter two lengths were actually quite rare. More than 25,000 Pocket models were produced, with the majority either converted to or produced as .32-caliber cartridge pistols. The Remington revolvers were available with both cylinders, again making the Remington a more versatile model than a comparable Colt pocket pistol.

Among the rarest of Remington conversions are the Belt Model Remington revolvers, which were smaller than the New Model Army and Navy but larger than the .38-caliber New Police, and carried six rounds. It is estimated that no more than 3,000 Belt Models were produced and only a fraction of those were converted from .36-caliber percussion to .38-caliber rimfire. Even rarer is the Remington-Rider Double Action New Model Belt Revolver, which was identical in all respects to the single action except for the trigger mechanism. Both SA and DA models utilized six-shot, two-piece cylinders and 6½-inch octagonal barrels.

The .36-caliber Remington Navy was also an excellent candidate for conversion, having the same basic design as the .44-caliber Army. The earliest designs were based on the Remington-Beals Navy models, but the majority of conversions were performed on the New Model Navy revolvers circa 1863 to 1878. The Navy models were fitted with hinged and latched loading gates, and nearly all came with ejector assemblies. The factory conversions sold for $9 and were chambered for .38 rimfire cartridges. Later models (circa 1874) were available in .38-caliber centerfire.

End of Remington Revolvers

By 1875, Remington had converted or built thousands of cartridge revolvers in a variety of calibers and models. The New Model Army conversion went out of production in 1875 with the debut of Remington’s first all-new large-caliber cartridge model, the 1875 Single Action Army. The .38-caliber 1863 New Model Navy conversion, however, remained in production for another three years, and conversions of the New Model Police were done as late as 1888. The Belt Model was discontinued in 1873, as were the Remington-Rider Double Action versions. For E. Remington & Sons, the era of the cartridge conversion was nearing an end.

E. Remington & Sons, which was headed in later years by Eliphalet Remington’s eldest son, Philo, prospered well into the post-Civil War era and during America’s Western Expansion but suffered a severe reversal of fortune in the late 1880s and was forced into receivership in 1886. The company was reorganized two years later as the Remington Arms Company under the control of Marcellus Hartley and the New York sporting goods firm of Hartley & Graham (previously Schuyler, Hartley & Graham), which had played a significant role during the Civil War supplying the Union with arms and ammunition. Remington later merged with Hartley & Graham and the Union Metallic Cartridge Company (founded by Hartley after the Civil War), becoming Remington-UMC in 1912. Today, the Remington Arms Co. still operates out of Ilion, N.Y.

This article is from the winter 2018 issue of “Guns of the Old West.” To order a copy and subscribe to the magazine, visit outdoorgroupstore.com.

The post The Interesting History of Remington Revolvers From the 1850s-1870s appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

Gun Review: The Savage Model 10 GRS Rifle in 6.5 Creedmoor

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The sun was hot overhead in Abilene, Texas, but that didn’t stop a group of gun writers from spending three days under the Lone Star State’s open sky. A few of us came from around the country to try out several new products, including Savage Arms’ new lineup of rifles for 2017. Those products included several variations of the company’s new Modern Sporting Rifles (MSRs) and bolt-action models. One of the latter that I particularly liked: the new Model 10 GRS in 6.5 Creedmoor.

Because of the number of people trying out the various products at the standard ranges and from the tops of sandy cliffs where improvised shooting positions were explored, we didn’t get extensive time with the individual products. However, we did have enough experience with them to get an idea of what we liked, and I was fortunate enough to have Savage Arms send out the 10 GRS for a follow-up review.

Savage Specs

Located in the law enforcement portion of Savage’s website, the Model 10 GRS is essentially an FCP-SR with a significant twist. The main difference is the Berserk stock from GRS Riflestocks, which changes the profile and feel from a traditional stock to one fitted to the individual user. In fact, the stock is essentially the one thing that separates the Model 10 GRS from the standard FCP-SR model. But when you consider all that it offers, the change is bigger than it seems.

GRS Riflestocks originally had a similar stock made of laminate. But the company kept receiving requests from shooters asking for a more durable version, so GRS responded with the Berserk model. It is made of glass-reinforced Durathan, and it offers pillar bedding that’s 65-percent glass. Both the grip and forend have rubber texturing for a secure purchase on the rifle even during wet conditions.

The stock also offers flush-cup sling mounts with push-button, quick-detachable sling loops like those found on many tactical rifles today. An impressive feature on the GRS Berserk stock is the Speed Lock system at the butt, which allows users to easily adjust the length of pull and comb height. The user simply pushes in on the corresponding button and either pushes or pulls the part until the appropriate length is found. This is a fast and simple way to adjust the stock, even for beginning shooters. The length of pull is adjustable from 13 to 14.5 inches. Also, the buttpad is made of a soft synthetic material that goes a long way toward mitigating recoil. Additionally, there is another sling mount under the forend for the attachment of a bipod.

For me, the most distinguishing feature of the Model 10 GRS stock is the grip. It is quite simply the best- feeling grip I have ever used on a rifle. It is ergonomically designed for the hand to settle in comfortably, and is built with a slight offset to account for the angle of the wrist. You simply have to handle the Berserk stock to understand just how comfortable and ergonomic it is.

With its 24-inch barrel, the Model 10 GRS comes in at 44 inches long overall. The barrel is fluted for increased stiffness and accuracy. It also has 5/8×24 threading to accept a sound suppressor or other muzzle devices. The rifle weighs 9.2 pounds before a scope or ammo is added, and thanks to the stock, the Model 10 GRS is definitely a capable rifle for precision shooting. Because of its weight, it seems more suited to firing from a prone position. For long-range hunting, such as for pronghorns or other critters, size and weight won’t be as much of a consideration for wide open spaces where maneuverability through brush or dense woods isn’t a factor.

The Long-Range 6.5

As mentioned, my test rifle came chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor, which has to be the breakthrough round for 2017. Almost every rifle manufacturer has introduced one style of rifle or another to fire this increasingly popular cartridge. Introduced in 2008, the 6.5 Creedmoor was designed as a long-distance target round to expand upon the consistency and performance of 6mm loads and to provide reliable information to reloaders that would make it easier to replicate the formula.

The performance of the relatively new round exceeds the range of the reliable .308 Winchester and improves upon its accuracy as well. It was conceived by Dennis Demille, a national High-Power champion and Dave Emary, a Hornady engineer, after discussing wildcat rounds being used at a competition. And though the 6.5 Creedmoor was initially designed as a target round, it started gaining traction as a hunting cartridge once it became more popular on the precision shooting circuit.

Because of its high sectional density for better penetration and its higher ballistic coefficient for excellent accuracy, it became a definite must-have for the hunting crowd. Despite having a diameter smaller than the .308 Winchester, the 6.5 Creedmoor has been used to successfully take down large game, including mountain goats and even elk. These characteristics, especially accuracy, also translate to an exceptional load than can be used by law enforcement during incidents where precision shooting is required.

In short, the 6.5 Creedmoor has surged in popularity over the past few years because of its versatility. As noted by many in the industry, it is a “do-it-all” round. It has effectively crossed over into different niches in the shooting world, proving effective in most types of shooting. And it doesn’t look like that demand is going to taper off anytime soon.

Going To Work

For accuracy testing, I used the Savage Model 10 GRS with a Bushnell 4.5-18x44mm LRTSi scope, which provided an excellent sight picture with great light transmission. And for those times when things start to get a bit dark, the new G3 illuminated reticle can step in and get you back on target.

The brightness setting for the illuminated reticle is integrated into the side-focus parallax knob on the left side. The higher the number, the brighter the setting. To power off, the knob can be turned to a dot between the numbers to stay close to the last setting. Additionally, the LRTSi’s ThrowHammer lever gives the user an assist in zooming quickly when needed. The turrets are adjustable in mils, with 10 mils of adjustment per revolution.

Federal Premium provided several loads for the range session, including 120-grain Trophy Copper, 130-grain Gold Medal Berger, 140-grain Fusion SP and 140-grain American Eagle OTM rounds. All of the accuracy testing was done at 100 yards from a bench using a bag for support.

From shot one, the first thing I noticed was the lack of recoil from the 10 GRS, especially in comparison to a couple of my own .308s, which I also had on hand. It almost felt like the recoil I experience while shooting 5.56mm ARs—almost. It was close but had just a hair more felt recoil.

Just like Savage’s other popular rifles, the Model 10 GRS came with the company’s excellent user-adjustable AccuTrigger. Out of the box, the trigger pull on the sample I received was just 2.3 pounds. I felt this was plenty light for what I was going to be shooting and did not engage in any tinkering with the trigger.

Considering the rifle was new and the barrel not thoroughly broken in—and with myself at the helm—I thought the accuracy was excellent. Surprisingly, the American Eagle 140-grain OTM rounds turned in one of the better groups at 0.75 inches. The best single group, however, came with Federal’s 130-grain Gold Medal Berger load, registering at just 0.5 inches. The Berger load also took the best average group size at 0.91 inches. I will confess that a better, more experienced rifleman could wring out even better accuracy if given time with the 10 GRS.

The rifle’s action was very smooth, as was the adjustable trigger. Describing the trigger break as light and crisp would be an understatement. There was little to no creep, and the trigger offered the “surprise” effect when it broke. In short, the trigger was superb by any account.

As mentioned, the stock and grip were extremely comfortable to shoot with. It’s hard to imagine a company designing a stock any more ergonomic than the Berserk model. The Speed Lock adjustment system for the comb height and length of pull was immensely helpful, allowing me to perfectly tailor the stock’s dimensions to my needs.

Lasting Legacy

Admittedly, I’ve shot more Savage rifles in the past few years than I have during the entirety of my life. I have quickly come to appreciate both the features and the value that Savage products offer. The outstanding AccuTrigger and inherent accuracy are both benefits that many have long known about, and with which I have become increasingly impressed.

Taking the FCP-SR rifle another step forward with the inclusion of the GRS Berserk stock only increases the comfort and utility of the package. Though the addition of the stock increases the price of the package to $1,449, it turns the rifle into a more versatile tool. This new iteration offers a platform for not only law enforcement use, but also for competition and long-range hunting as well. It’s essentially a go-to tool for just about every task.

For whatever reason, the blend of features on the 6.5 Creedmoor Savage 10 GRS made it one of the easiest rifles for me to shoot very well straight out of the box. Coupled with the Bushnell LRTSi scope, which provided excellent image quality and rock-solid performance, it is a fantastic value for those who expect the very best in a precision rifle. For anyone in the market but not wanting to bust the bank, the Savage 10 GRS will go a long way in exceeding your expectations.

Savage Model 10 GRS Specs

Caliber: 6.5 Creedmoor
Barrel: 24 inches
OA Length: 44 inches
Weight: 9.2 pounds (empty)
Stock: GRS Berserk
Sights: None
Action: Bolt
Finish: Matte black
Capacity: 10+1
MSRP: $1,449

Savage Model 10 GRS Performance

Load Velocity Accuracy
Federal 120 Trophy Copper 2,799 0.81
Federal 130 Gold Medal Berger 2,770 0.50
Federal 140 American Eagle OTM N/A 0.75
Federal 140 Fusion SP 2,761 1.12

*Bullet weight measured in grains, velocity in fps by chronograph and accuracy in inches for best five-shot groups at 100 yards.

For more information, visit savagearms.com.

This article is from the 2018 issue of “Gun Buyer’s Annual.” To order a copy, visit outdoorgroupstore.com.

The post Gun Review: The Savage Model 10 GRS Rifle in 6.5 Creedmoor appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

New for 2018: The Nosler M48 Long Range Carbon Rifle

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Nosler M48 Long Range Carbon rifle angle Nosler M48 Long Range Carbon rifle right profile

For 2018, Nosler has introduced its new M48 Long Range Carbon rifle, which combines the company’s M48 Long Range model with a 26-inch carbon fiber-wrapped, match-grade barrel from Proof Research.

According to the presser, the addition of the Proof carbon fiber-wrapped barrel helps reduce the rifle’s overall weight to seven pounds, down from 7.8 pounds in the standard M48 Long Range. The barrel also boosts shooting accuracy, as it’s touted as being stiffer and capable of dissipating heat at a faster rate than traditional stainless steel barrels. The barrel is mated to a M48 receiver and bedded in a MCS-T carbon fiber stock.

Available in 6.5 Creedmoor, 26 Nosler, 28 Nosler, 300 Winchester Magnum, 30 Nosler, 33 Nosler, the M48 Long Range Carbon is designed for mountain hunting, backcountry treks and long range competition. It’s overall length is 48 inches and it features a metal sniper grey Cerakote finish. The magazine capacity is four rounds in 6.5 Creedmoor and three rounds in all other options. MSRP: $2,995.

For more, visit nosler.com.

Nosler M48 Long Range Carbon Features

  • Nosler Model 48 Custom Action
  • Action and Bottom Metal Cerakoted Sniper Grey
  • Timney Trigger with 2 Position Safety
  • Manners MCS-T Elite Tac 100 percent Carbon Fiber Stock in Elite Midnight Camo
  • 26” Proof, Light Sendero Contour, Carbon Fiber-Wrapped Barrel
  • 5/8×24 Threaded Muzzle
  • Glass and Aluminum Pillar Bedding
  • Hinged Floorplate
  • Guaranteed M.O.A. Accuracy with Prescribed Nosler Ammunition

The post New for 2018: The Nosler M48 Long Range Carbon Rifle appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

American Tactical Road Agent: A Fast-Handling Scattergun

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American Tactical Road Agent shotgun right angle American Tactical Road Agent shotgun open barrels American Tactical Road Agent shotgun decocker American Tactical Road Agent shotgun rear sight notch American Tactical Road Agent shotgun buttstock American Tactical Road Agent shotgun forend American Tactical Road Agent shotgun choke tubes American Tactical Road Agent shotgun blued barrels American Tactical Road Agent shotgun sass match American Tactical Road Agent shotgun ammo American Tactical Road Agent shotgun target

One of the most useful and versatile guns in the Old West was the side-by-side double-barreled shotgun. It usually had a prominent place behind the front door of a pioneer’s cabin or “soddy,” putting meat on the table or keeping four- or two-legged predators at bay.

The double gun was also a favorite of stagecoach guards (riding shotgun) and express agents, plus peace officers of all kinds. Of course, outlaws took to it for the same reasons, and it helped in the robbery of many banks and stagecoaches or trains. Today, the side-by-side double gun is still popular with hunters and sees some defense use by homeowners, but it seems the biggest market for these guns is Cowboy Action Shooting (CAS).

I recently became aware of a side-by-side scattergun that appears to be tailor-made for CAS use: the American Tactical Road Agent. With that moniker and the image it projects, you can almost see a ghostly visage of Black Bart in the background pulling a holdup on a Wells Fargo stagecoach. Made in Turkey, this shotgun has a lot of features that modern-day “cowboys” will most likely appreciate.

Agent Details

The American Tactical Road Agent is an expansion of AT’s Cavalry shotgun line, and my test gun came in a segmented cardboard box containing the barrels, receiver/buttstock and forend. Also in the box was a plastic container with three choke tubes and a wrench, a safety padlock and two sample packets of Extreme Duty Gun Oil from Lucas Oil Products. Of course, there was also a detailed owner’s manual that included warranty and product registration information. Looking at the choke tubes, I wondered how to tell them apart until I saw some little “dash” cuts on the muzzle end. Per the owner’s manual, five dashes meant cylinder bore, four stood for improved cylinder (both of which were already installed), then you had modified, improved modified and full chokes. They screw in and out using the supplied wrench.

I gave all of the components a look-see, and everything appeared to be well made, with very good marks for fit and finish. The left barrel was laser-etched with the gauge and chamber size, and the two are held together with a solid rib that has a shallow U-shape. Rising upward from the breech, there is a small v-shaped notch for a rear sight where the rib meets the breechface of the receiver. The barrels are 18½ inches long and fitted with a brass bead front sight. The bluing has a non-reflective matte finish.

The American Tactical Road Agent has a regular extractor, with no ejectors per Single Action Shooting Society (SASS) requirements. At the breech, the chambers are chamfered for easy insertion of shotshells.

The receiver is a shade darker and is made of aluminum alloy, which helps keep the unloaded weight down to 5.3 pounds. It is a two-piece affair, with the larger portion having the barrel hinge, barrel locking mechanism and breech lever. I’ll refer to the smaller portion as the action/trigger assembly, and it is just that, plus the triggerguard. Laser-etched engraving is present on the sides and top of the receiver as well as the bottom of the triggerguard, which I could honestly do without.

Old Look, Modern Tech

The really unique components here are the exposed hammers and the “Auto-Cock” action. You get the flavor of a “mule-eared” double gun with a modern technological advantage. When you break the action open to load or unload the gun, the exposed hammers are automatically put into the full-cocked position. As double guns must be staged open at CAS matches, all that is required is to pick up the open gun, load two shells, close the barrels and shoot. You don’t have to cock the hammers manually, and there’s no automatic safety to remember to take off.

Adding to this, a decocker lever can be found on the left side of the receiver, just below the hammer. It has three positions, with a small pointer indicating what position it is in. This corresponds with three small letters etched into the receiver just ahead of the lever. The first is “S” for safety, and this locks the triggers with the hammers cocked. Next is “F” for fire, and is “D” for decock. When the lever moves to the latter position, both hammers safely drop without striking the firing pins. The double triggers themselves have a silver finish. The front trigger is for the right barrel, and the rear fires the left barrel.

Hand-finished and fitted Turkish walnut is used for the buttstock and forend. My test gun had pretty decent figuring and attractive little “bird’s eyes” in the wood. I’m going to guess that the checkering on the pistol grip of the buttstock and the forend is done by machine; it is very fine and intricate. There’s also a ventilated recoil pad that is textured at the rear so as not to slip on the shoulder. The length of pull from the front and rear triggers is 15½ and 14¾ inches, respectively. The drop at the heel is 2¼ inches while the drop at the comb is 1¾ inches.

A large takedown latch is located on the underside of the forend, expertly inletted into the wood with a round indentation to access the release lever. The wood-to-metal fit shows the wood just slightly oversized where it meets the receiver, but I won’t shave off many points for that.

When I first picked up the shipping box, I noted that it was a bit heavy. A second look revealed three boxes of 12-gauge shotshells from AT, also produced in Turkey. There were 25 rounds in each box—what we would term “low brass” with a three-dram equivalent powder charge and one ounce of #7½ shot. These are 2¾-inch shells with red plastic hulls and natural brass bases. They are nicely rounded on the sides of the crimp so as to make chambering a bit easier. As low-brass #7½  shotshells are perfect for CAS use, I decided to use these at the next SASS match I attended.

I thought it prudent to pattern the American Tactical Road Agent to see how it would do at the range or in the field before I actually went to a match. While holes in the pattern won’t matter much for CAS use, I did want to make sure the shot column matched up with where I put the bead front sight.

Even though I planned to use the AT-supplied shells at the CAS match, I was curious to see what some other brands of 2¾-inch shells would do. I selected a box of Spanish-made Suprema Game & Target shells from TulAmmo, a 3.25-dram load with 1 ounce of #7½ shot, low-brass and red plastic hulls. I also chose another load from Spain: Rio’s low-brass, 2.75-dram Target shells filled with 1.12 ounces of #7½ shot and contained in blue plastic hulls. For targets, I decided to use Shoot-N-C B-27 silhouette centers from Birchwood Casey. They are about the size of many of the falling steel shotgun targets at SASS matches and show patterns well.

I figured that 10 yards was about the average distance for shotgun targets at SASS matches, so I used that as my patterning range. I put two of the B-27 targets side by side on my target stand, with a red dot in the center for an aiming point. Shooting the AT shells first, I noted two things: This lightweight scattergun kicks a bit, and the shot was going just a tad higher than my point of aim. The right barrel went slightly right of center, and the left barrel went slightly left, and it pretty much stayed that way with the Rio and Suprema shells, too.

The AT shells had the tightest pattern for two shots. You have to remember that this gun has short 18½-inch barrels, plus the chokes were cylinder and improved cylinder, so open was the order of the day. The Rio loads patterned just a bit larger, and the Suprema shells opened up a bit coming out the left barrel. I really wasn’t concerned about the point of aim/point of impact, as it wasn’t enough to make a big difference on falling steel targets. The patterns were fairly uniform, with no gaping holes between the impacts on the targets.

Match Time

To really see how the American Tactical Road Agent would run, it took it to an SASS match. I used the AT #7½ shells, carrying them in a six-shell slide on my gun belt. I also decided to use two .45 Colt sixguns and a Model 1892 lever-action reproduction in .357 Magnum. We had fantastic weather for an early September day in Southern Indiana, which didn’t hurt anybody’s shooting one bit.

I signed up to shoot in the Senior category and, as usual, just shot against myself with the fervent hope for a clean match with no misses or errors. There were 26 shotgun targets spread across six main match stages, and I did not record a single miss. In SASS, if you miss a shotgun target, you shoot until it falls. One bobble I did have was with the decocker lever on the American Tactical Road Agent. It has to be fully in the “fire” notch if you want it to go off. I’d been showing the gun around to my compadres and neglected to check the lever—I was surprised when I pulled the front trigger and the right-side hammer didn’t fall.

Except for that single “Oh, Hades!” moment, the American Tactical Road Agent did just fine. It was fast to load with the hammers pre-cocked. When firing on four to six targets in a stage, the Auto-Cock feature seemed to make things even quicker and easier. Empty shells fell right out of the chambers without the little flip I normally give the shotgun once I’ve broken it open to help the spent hulls fly out. The front bead was fast to find. Even though it’s short, the shotgun swung smoothly from target to target. The recoil pad did a laudable job, and that fine checkering on the stock prevented any slippage during fast handling.

On the whole, the American Tactical Road Agent impressed and believe it is a solid value for the price. I’d like to see a matte silver or natural aluminum finish on the receiver in place of the engraving, but that’s all I’d change.

American Tactical Road Agent Specs

Gauge: 12; 3-inch chambers
Barrel: 18.5 inches
OA Length: 35.5 inches
Weight: 5.3 pounds (empty)
Stock: Turkish walnut
Sights: Bead front, notch rear
Action: Break
Finish: Blued, anodized
Capacity: 2
MSRP: $600

American Tactical Road Agent Performance

Shotshells Velocity Pattern
American Tactical 1-ounce #7½ 1,235 13.54
Rio 1.12-ounce #7½ Target 1,150 14.21
Suprema 1-ounce #7½ Game & Target 1,315 15.78

*Velocity in fps per MFG specifications and pattern in inches for two shots at 10 yards with cylinder and improved cylinder chokes. 

For more, visit americantactical.us or call 585-328-0945.

This article is from the winter 2018 issue of “Guns of the Old West.” To order a copy and subscribe to the magazine, visit outdoorgroupstore.com.

The post American Tactical Road Agent: A Fast-Handling Scattergun appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.


New: Sako 85 Finlight II, 85 Carbon Wolf & TRG 22/42 A1 Rifles

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Sako 85 Finlight II rifle right profile Sako 85 Carbon Wolf 85 finlight ii right profile

Finland-based gun maker Sako—which is distributed by Beretta here in the U.S.—rolled out three new rifles for hunters and shooters at SHOT Show this year: the Sako 85 Finlight II, Sako 85 Carbon Wolf and TRG 22/42 A1.

The Sako 85 Finlight II features a lightweight fiberglass and carbon fiber stock manufactured from aerospace grade RTM technology. It also sports a barrel treated with a weather resistant Cerakote coating, along with a fully adjustable cheek piece. The cheek piece and grip surfaces are made from elastomer. It’s available in 14 calibers, including .22-250 Rem, .243 Win, .308 Win, .25-06 Rem, .270 Win, .30-06 SPRG, .260 Rem, .300 Win Mag, .270 WSM, .300 WSM, 6.5×55 Swede, 7mm-08 Rem, 7mm Rem Mag and 6.5 Creedmoor. Barrel lengths range from 20 1/4″ to 24 2/5″. MSRP: $2,475.

Next, the Sako 85 Carbon Wolf features a lightweight synthetic, RTM carbon fiber stock; adjustable cheek piece which can be adjusted by pushing the buttons on the rear stock; and adjustable length of pull for better control and accuracy. Chambered in .308 Win, .30-06 SPRG, .300 Win Mag, 7mm Rem Mag and 6.5 Creedmoor with a 24-inch barrel, this model is priced at $3,600.

Last up is the TRG 22/42 A1. A close relative of Sako’s TRG M10, this rifle features a full-length M-LOK forend; 30 MOA canted picatinny rail; full aluminum chassis; and a folding stock with a sturdy two-point attachment. It’s offered in .308 Win, .260 Rem, 6.5 Creedmoor, .300 Win Mag and .338 LM. The barrel length is 26 inches for the first three calibers, and 27 inches for the last two. MSRP is $6,400 for this rifle in .308 Win, .260 Rem and .300 Win Mag. In .300 Win Mag and .338 LM, the price jumps up to $7,400.

“We demand perfection, so naturally there has been no room for compromise during the development and production of these new cutting-edge firearms,” Raimo Karjalainen, the General Manager at Sako Ltd., said in a press release.

For more information, visit sako.fi, and see the videos below.

The post New: Sako 85 Finlight II, 85 Carbon Wolf & TRG 22/42 A1 Rifles appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

SHOT Show 2018: 6 of the Most Interesting New Rifles to Keep an Eye On

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New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 F4 Defense F4-X New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 FN 15 Tactical Carbine FDE P-LOK New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 Savage MSR-15 Valkyrie New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 Seekins Precision NXP8 New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 Heckler & Koch HK433 New Rifles SHOT Show 2018 Lithgow Arms F90

SHOT Show is without question, the largest firearms trade show on Earth. From new rifles to new ammo, each year manufacturers travel from around the world to display their latest and greatest with hopes of securing orders and improving their bottom line.

With more than 2,000 vendors descending on Las Vegas, it can be difficult to swim through the sea of products, especially if you are looking for something specific. While many of the larger companies assemble house-sized displays, many gems can be found in the outer corners of the show as well.

New Rifles at SHOT 2018

One of my annual treks is to find some of the most interesting new rifles for the LEO and military world. These are guns that are tailored toward those who protect and serve on a daily basis. What I would consider “hard use” weapons built to withstand the upper extremes of use.

While there was no shortage of new blasters, a few stood out. Some in a good way and some in a, well, let’s just say “interesting” way. As a service to you, I walked the 13 acres of the show and present you some of the most interesting finds in this category.

F4 Defense F4-X Specifications

  • Caliber: .308 Winchester
  • Receivers: Precision CNC Machined from Aerospace Aluminum Billet 7075-T6
  • Barrel: Proof Research 16″ Carbon Fiber 1X8  or  Proof Research 18″ Stainless 1X10
  • Fire Control Group: Trigger Tech® Adaptable AR Primary Trigger
  • Handguard: ARS-Lite 15.8″
  • Gas System: Intermediate
  • Selector: BAD Short-throw Ambi Selector
  • Muzzle Device: APA Lil’ Bastard
  • Stock: MFT Minimalist Stock
  • Finish:  Cerakote
  • Weight: 6.4 pounds (Carbon Fiber) and 7.3pounds (Stainless Steel)
  • American Made with American Metal
  • MSRP: $2,595-$2,995
  • Website: F4Defense.com

FN 15 Tactical Carbine FDE P-LOK Specifications

  • Caliber: 5.56x45mm
  • Operation: Direct impingement
  • Weight: 7.2 pounds
  • Barrel Length: 16 inches
  • Overall Length: 34-37.2 inches
  • Handguards: P-LOK handguard with M-LOK technology
  • Receiver: Hard-anodized aluminum Flat-top receiver, M1913 MIL-SPEC rail
  • Barrel: 16-inch cold hammer-forged, chrome-lined with mid-length gas block,FN three-prong flash hider
  • Stock: B5 Systems buttstock
  • Trigger: FN Combat Trigger
  • MSRP: $1,499
  • Website: FNAmerica.com

Savage MSR-15 Valkyrie Specifications

  • Caliber: .224 Valkyrie
  • Series: MSR
  • Magazine: Detachable box
  • Stock Material: Aluminum
  • Barrel Material: Carbon Steel
  • Barrel Finish & Color: Matte Black
  • Build: Elite Series Cerakote Upper and Lower
  • Grip: Hogue Pistol Grip
  • Trigger: Two-Stage Trigger
  • MSRP: $1,499
  • Website: SavageArms.com

Seekins Precision NXP8 Specifications

  • Caliber: .300 BLK
  • Barrel: 8-inch Match grade 5R stainless steel
  • Handguard: 7-inch NOXs
  • Receiver: 7075-T6 Billet aluminum
  • Controls: Ambidextrous controls
  • Stock: SB-Tactical PDW pistol stabilizing brace
  • Charging Handle:  DNA
  • Feed Ramp: M4
  • Lower: SP223 Billet Ambi Lower
  • Gas Block: Adjustable
  • Muzzle Device: Nest Flash Hider
  • MSRP: $1,879
  • Website: SeekinsPrecision.com

Heckler & Koch HK433 Specifications

  • Caliber: 5.56x45mm
  • Operation: Gas blowback
  • Modes of fire: Single fire/full auto
  • Rate of fire: Approximately 700 rpm
  • Length: 22.1 inches (collapsed)
  • Height: 7.6 inches
  • Barrel length: 11.02 inches
  • MSRP: N/A
  • Website: Heckler-Koch.com

Lithgow F90 Specifications

  • Caliber: 5.56x45mm
  • Weight: 6.94 pounds
  • Overall Length: 25.7 inches
  • Barrel Length: 14.17 inches
  • Barrel: Proprietary, military grade steel, cold hammer forged; six external flutes with threaded muzzle; chrome lined bore and chamber; phosphate treated and coated in Cerakote.
  • Rate of Fire: 740 rpm
  • Rifling: Six grooves, 1:7 right hand twist
  • Operation: Semi and fully automatic, short stroke gas piston operated
  • Receiver: Modular, light weight composite receiver
  • Stock: Ergonomic, ambidextrous stock made from high impact fiber reinforced polymer
  • Trigger: Two-position, sliding trigger with select fire function; Fitted with single shot lock out
  • Safety: Two- or three-position sliding, ambidextrous safety that blocks trigger displacement
  • Magazine: Removable, double-stack box magazine; polymer construction; 30 rounds
  • MSRP: N/A
  • Website: LithgowArms.com

The post SHOT Show 2018: 6 of the Most Interesting New Rifles to Keep an Eye On appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

DroneGun Tactical: The Drone Jammer You Want, But Can’t Have

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DroneGun Tactical left profile DroneGun Tactical jamming signals

Drones, quadcopters and UAVs may be gaining in popularity, but so are devices designed to take them down. Into this particular space steps DroneShield, a company headquartered in Sydney, Australia, which has just unveiled a new anti-drone device called the DroneGun Tactical.

A more compact version of the company’s DroneGun MKII released last year, the DroneGun Tactical sends out jamming frequencies that cause any unwelcome drone to either land on the spot or return back to its starting point. It has an effective range of up to 1km (1,094 yards). This model is capable of disrupting 433MHz, 915MHz, 2.4GHz, and 5.8GHz RF bands simultaneously. You can also create a GNSS disruption. When the drone is jammed up, it immediately ceases to transmit video back to the operator.

Meanwhile, the futuristic-looking DroneGun Tactical is touted in the press release as having an ergonomic body and controls. It’s completely self-contained, meaning there’s no need for a backpack. In addition, it tips the scales at 15 pounds. It also comes with a rechargeable lithium ion battery to keep it running for up to 30 minutes, and it’s capable of operating in weather ranging from -20 degrees Celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit) to 55 degrees Celsius (131 degrees Fahrenheit).

Want one? Well, you can’t have one. DroneShield says it’s only available to “the United States government and its agencies.” It’s illegal for civilians, as well as state or local government agencies. Until such time as the FCC authorizes it for use by civilians, we’ll have to dream. See the specs and features below.

For more, go to droneshield.com.

Benefits Of DroneGun Tactical Drone Jammer

  • Effective coverage: Allows for an up to 1km coverage, in a wide range of environmental conditions
  • Fully Integrated: Battery powered single rifle style solution, one person operation
  • Easy to use: no technical training for set up or use required, highly portable design
  • Immediate video cease: immediately ceases video transmission back to the drone operator
  • Enables investigation: drone remains intact and available for forensic investigation
  • Additional Frequency Bands: Option to disrupt multiple RF frequency bands simultaneously (433MHz, 915MHz, 2.4GHz & 5.8GHz)
  • GNSS Disruption: Optional GNSS disruption capability (GPS, GLONASS)
  • Protected: Unit supplied packed in custom carbon fibre carry case.

DroneGun Tactical Specifications

  • Voltage: 14.8VDC
  • Effective Range: Up to 1km (1,094 yards)
  • Rifle Weight: 6.8kg (15lbs) (including 2 x batteries)
  • User Feedback: Visual + Optional Audio
  • Colour: Black

Effective Jammer Frequencies

  • 433MHz (433.05 ~ 434.79 MHz)
  • 915MHz (Option 1 – 902 ~ 928MHz) (Option 2 – 915 ~ 928MHz)
  • (optional) GNSS L2 (1227 ~ 1251) & GNSS L1 (1575 ~ 1605)
  • 2.4GHz ISM (2400 ~ 2483.5GHz)
  • 5.8GHz ISM (5725 ~ 5850GHz)

Battery Specifications

  • Rechargeable Lithium-Ion Battery
  • NATO Military approved or commercial options available
  • Quick release and reload battery operation
  • Operating Time: 30min+

Environment

  • Operating temperature: -20 ºC to +55 °C (-4ºF to +131ºF)
  • Designed to IP54

Warranty

  • 12 months from date of shipment

Shipping

  • Ships in custom carbon fibre carry case (IP67)
  • Dimensions: 1422mm x 450mm x 203mm (56“ x 17 3/4“ x 8“)
  • Total Weight (including box packaging): 16.5kg (36.4 lbs)
  • HS Code: 8543.70.9090

The post DroneGun Tactical: The Drone Jammer You Want, But Can’t Have appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

Gun Review: The Nosler Varmageddon .22 AR Rifle

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Nosler Varmageddon rifle right profile Nosler Varmageddon rifle left profile Nosler Varmageddon rifle shooting Nosler Varmageddon rifle angle Nosler Varmageddon rifle barrel and rail Nosler Varmageddon rifle aiming Nosler Varmageddon rifle chronograph Nosler Varmageddon rifle ballistics Nosler Varmageddon rifle controls Nosler Varmageddon rifle ammo

I am not a .22-caliber shooter. Even though I have some AR-15 and AUG rifles, I prefer .308 and larger bolt actions. Coming from the military sniping world, my experience with Nosler was limited to some hunts with AccuBond and Ballistic Tip ammo.

Nonetheless, Nosler is slowly becoming one of the most innovative companies in the bullet and cartridge market. Since 2014, the company has come up with five new cartridges designed to push the envelope, from the smallest .22 to the largest .33. Curiously enough, these rounds weren’t what drew me to Nosler’s booth at SHOT Show last year. I wanted to check out the company’s new 300-grain Custom Competition .338 Lapua Magnum boxed ammo, but I got a great surprise when I arrived at the booth.

I saw a huge .22 Nosler sign that advertised speeds of 3,350 fps with the 55-grain bullets and nearly 3,000 with the 77-grain bullets. I have been using .223 and .222 Remington rifles for more than 30 years; I know that they struggle with 77-grain bullets. But I was attracted to that big sign like a bear to honey.

Ammo & AR Combo

Six months later, I was able to test the new .22 Nosler. This cartridge has proven to be superior to the .223 in every ballistic aspect. It has around 300- to 400-fps more speed and around 50- to 60-percent more energy, even at 1,000 yards. The .22 Nosler might be what I had been looking for: an AR-sized chambering that could use the same bullets as the rest of my .22 rifles with performance comparable to the 6.5 Grendel.

After testing the .22 Nosler in the company’s Varmageddon rifle, I can safely say that this rifle/ammo combo is as accurate or better than any other AR I’ve examined before. The velocities I measured on the range were superior to those advertised by Nosler, with the 55-grain rounds chronographing at an impressive 3,409 fps and the 77-grainers coming in at 2,955 fps, just above the advertised values.

The Varmageddon rifle in .22 Nosler is a real tack driver. In fact, it’s destined to become one of my pet semi-automatic rifles, not just a seldom-used varmint rifle. It’s a rifle that I can use for most everything. But I’m getting a little ahead of myself.

Noveske’s Help

Nosler is located in Bend, Oregon. About two hours away is Grants Pass, where Noveske Rifleworks make its mythical rifles. I am sure this proximity played no small part in the partnership created to make the ultimate varmint- hunting semi-auto.

Nosler currently offers the Noveske-made Varmageddon as an upper alone as well as a complete rifle. I got my hands on the latter. Coming from Noveske, I expected it to be top notch, and I wasn’t disappointed. The complete rifle package, with its Flat Dark Earth Cerakote finish, is configured with an 18-inch barrel featuring a 1-in-8-inch twist rate and a 1/2×28-threaded muzzle. The barrel also has extended feed ramps and is paired with a rifle-length gas system and a pinned low-profile gas block. This is a good setup for reliability.

The 15-inch-long NSR-15 handguard is equipped with a full-length top rail and KeyMod slots along the sides and bottom for accessories. It includes quick-detach (QD) sling swivels and is matched to the billet-machined 7075-T6 aluminum Gen III receiver, which houses a slick charging handle. The bolt carrier group on my test rifle was also beautifully machined. The bolt carrier had M16 cuts, and the gas key was perfectly staked. Coming from Noveske, I didn’t expect anything less.

The lower is also machined from a billet of 7075-T6 aluminum and includes a Geissele Super Dynamic Enhanced (SD-E) trigger, an STS ambidextrous safety and Magpul furniture consisting of the new PRS GEN3 Stock, an MOE grip and MBUS Pro sights.

The Geissele trigger was superb, a true standout feature. It’s one of the best triggers I’ve ever shot on a stock rifle. Once again, you get what you pay for. It is refined and had a two-stage pull. The first stage required 2.2 pounds of pressure while the second stage only required 1.2 pounds. All together, the trigger was crisp and a pleasure to use during slow fire as well as fast double-taps.

I understand that muzzle brakes are a controversial issue these days, with no consensus on what is best. I’m sure that is why Noveske went the safe route and did not include a muzzle brake, but I would have preferred to have something like a SilencerCo Saker Trifecta unit included.

However, the other accessories were very nice. The whole package came in a nice coyote tan soft case with a Varmageddon patch, a Precision Reflex 25-round magazine, QD sling swivels, a nine-slot KeyMod rail and an NSR Polymer Accessory Pack.

Trigger Time

I decided to test the Nosler Varmageddon with two different optical systems. Considering Leupold was also located in Oregon, I chose a 7-42x56mm VX-6 scope with a 34mm tube for long-range accuracy testing. Weighing in at only 26.5 ounces, the VX-6 features 1/8-MOA clicks to really dial it in. The second was an Aimpoint setup of my own design with adjustable elevation for the up close and moving target shots.

Adjustable elevation in a red-dot sight? Yes. This system allows you to shoot out to the maximum range of your weapon with the 2-MOA dot directly over the target without having to use Kentucky windage. I developed it using a Cold Shot MOAB 150-MOA adjustable base that I had used on my .50-caliber rifle for the “King of 2 Miles” shooting event. Just dial in the MOA elevation needed in quarter-clicks and you’re good to go. I used it with CompM4 and even a Micro T-2 and added an Aimpoint 6X magnifier to aid in identifying targets. This is a superb setup for moving targets and hunting.

And how did the gun perform? Well, Noveske’s reputation comes from top-notch reliability and accuracy, and this AR lived up to that legacy. Just check the accompanying table to see how well the Varmageddon handled the standard .22 Nosler bullets. The big surprise came with the 77-grain Custom Competition load, which shot an average group of 0.6 inches, with the smallest group coming in at an impressive 0.35 inches. Until now, I did not consider AR-15s for long-range varmint shooting, but with this kind of accuracy and speed, you can face those distant coyotes with ease.

The .22 Nosler Secret

I figured that the .22 Nosler would beat the .223 Remington, as it did. I also expected that the only real advantage of the .22 Nosler over the 6.5 Grendel would be bullet availability, as both needed specific cases and magazines. But these two rounds are actually close to each other ballistically.

I learned some interesting things about the .22 Nosler. First of all, the case capacity is basically the same between the 6.5 Grendel and .22 Nosler. And the .22 Nosler was superior in terms of drop to the 6.5. This rang true even using bullets with radically inferior ballistic coefficients (BCs), though it clearly lost the wind drift and the energy battle to the 6.5 Grendel. Speed is important for short-range drop, but BC has more impact on wind drift. The 6.5 Grendel was superior in this aspect, with a 10-mph crosswind drift of 7.5 MOA against the 9.8 MOA of the .22 Nosler.

It’s clear that 6.5 Grendel profits from the awesome flight characteristics of 6.5mm bullets, which had a BC of 0.561 with the 129-grain Nosler AccuBond. This is brutally superior to any .22 bullet, even those with high BCs such as the 77-grain Nosler Custom Competition.

The .22 Nosler did really well and fought hard with the 6.5 Grendel. In terms of accuracy, the Nosler rifle/ammo combo was impressive. At 600 yards, I could still create sub-MOA groups.

The Nosler Varmageddon does what no other out-of-the-box AR does: It shoots accurately out to 1,000 yards. It is sniper-accurate and reliable, and follows the Noveske ideology of being among the best of the best in the AR world. For those who think $2,000 or more is just too much, you can also buy the upper alone.

Nosler Varmageddon Specs

Caliber: .22 Nosler
Barrel: 18 inches
OA Length: 36.25 inches
Weight: 9.9 pounds (empty)
Stock: Magpul PRS GEN3
Sights: Magpul MBUS Pro
Action: Direct impingement semi-auto
Finish: Cerakote
Capacity: 25+1
MSRP: Starting at $2,870

Nosler Varmageddon Performance

Load Velocity Accuracy
Nosler 55 Trophy Grade BT 3,490 0.98 (Average), 0.51 (Best)
Nosler 62 Varmageddon FBHP 3,105 0.80 (Average), 0.55 (Best)
Nosler 77 Custom Competition BTHP 2,955 0.60 (Average), 0.35 (Best)

*Bullet weight measured in grains, velocity in fps by chronograph and accuracy in inches for three 5-shot groups at 100 yards.

For more, visit nosler.com.

This article is from the 2018 edition of “AR Rifleman” magazine. To order a copy, visit outdoorgroupstore.com.

The post Gun Review: The Nosler Varmageddon .22 AR Rifle appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

Battle Rifle Company Introduces the BR10 Rifle Platform

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Battle Rifle Company launched its new BR10 rifle platform at SHOT Show 2018.

Touted as being Battle Rifle Company’s second generation of precision 7.62×51/.308 caliber rifles, the BR10 platform sports an 18-inch, polygonal rifled 416 stainless steel barrel. It has a 1/9.73 twist rate and has been cryogenically treated, which the company says boosts both performance and accuracy. The barrel also includes a compact muzzle brake with a 5/8×24 thread.

In addition, the BR10 features an Odinworks T6 rail standard with KeyMod slots; Geissele SSA 2-stage trigger; ambidextrous selector switch; AXTS Raptor charging handle; updated spring and buffer; performance bolt carrier group with lower weight; QD single point sling Back-plate; and a Magpul ACS stock.

Touted in the presser as being a “combat grade rifle, worthy of consideration for the most demanding applications,” the BR10 weighs in at eight pounds, 11 ounces and has an overall length of 39.75 inches. Each model ships with one metal magazine and a tactical bag. The suggested retail price on the gun is $2,998.

 

For more information about Battle Rifle Company, head over to battleriflecompany.com.

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Tactical Training: Why We Need to Weed Out Weak Firearm Instructors

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Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach training Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach lead Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach course

I’m a millennial and have grown up under the societal umbrella of participation medals. Since I was a child, my generation was esteemed for ensuring that everyone was included in everything, regardless of ability. Don’t get me wrong. I believe in social acceptance and that you shouldn’t exercise prejudice because someone comes from a different cultural background. But I also believe in holding standards.

Many adult millennials have never had standards forced on them. Well, I mean, there were standardized tests in school—which only measured an ability to regurgitate, not learn—and then there were the forced social standards, which held that all opinions are equal, no matter how radical or hollow. I get it. You want children to feel confident putting themselves out there and trying. But even more important than encouraging confidence is teaching children how to deal with failure.

Learning to Lose

Too often with millennials, when adults don’t get what they want, they look outward instead of inward. We blame institutions for their rigidity or the flaws of the “sell-outs” in those organizations. We reframe arguments and cherry-pick information so “facts” conform to our view of the world, regardless of objectivity. That lets us protect the identity of our youth, in which we were told we could have anything, provided we tried. Well, it turns out you can’t have something just because you want it. In fact, the free markets of adulthood are far less forgiving. There are hierarchies of knowledge, and when you’re at the bottom, it’s best to just keep your mouth shut and learn.

Joining the military after 9/11 restructured my sense of achievement. I was allowed to try many things but was also allowed to fail. Failing in the military is particularly different than failing in the private sector. You’re not coddled by superiors who tiptoe around what they really want to say because of fear of a lawsuit. Instead, you get a seasoned non-commissioned officer in your face “constructively criticizing” your performance.

Adult millennials would benefit from the experience of an Army-style ass-chewing. Unable to talk your way out or redirect blame, these one-sided dialogues teach recruits to immediately own mistakes and focus on the next mission. This ultimately leads to character development that encourages decisiveness and discourages weaseling out of responsibility.

One of the most important ass-chewings I received in the military was at the Robin Sage exercise. During the final phase of tactical training in the “Q” Course, I experienced a case of senioritis that affected my performance. As the patrol leader for a routine ambush mission, I apathetically presented an operations order to my evaluating cadre. Because the ambush is the baseline for teaching military planning and tactics, Green Beret candidates are drilled to the point of exhaustion (and boredom) in the science of mission preparation and execution via ambushes. This familiarity led to a presentation in which I tried to demonstrate how confident I was by delivering a halfhearted mission briefing—classic “too-cool-for-school” behavior.

Critical to these briefings is the execution portion in which every element confirms its specific tasks with adjacent friendlies and the broader scheme of the operation. This requires precise detail so there’s no confusion, but it’s unavoidably dry and boring in delivery. I thought I could speed through this section by using phrases such as “situation-dependent” or “context will dictate.” The evaluating cadre let me get about halfway through the presentation before he cut me off.

Releasing a sigh, he looked me straight in the eyes and said, “Stop. Everything in life is situation-dependent. Stop speaking in generalities like some [expletive] chapter from Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. Everything about a combat operation is uncertain. That’s why we attempt to be as precise as possible during planning.” (This was an Army ass-chewing, so there were, of course, a lot more expletives.) I was kicked out of my own mission briefing. I was left to wonder if I had just failed the final phase of Special Forces training.

A few months later, I was on an Operational Detachment Alpha learning the Special Forces brand of close-quarters battle. During breaks, the other new guys and I would debate the validity of the various CQB techniques being taught. This was ridiculous. The entire time, we misused phrases like “situation-dependent” and “shooter’s preference.” We thought we were adding context to our arguments. Instead, we were failing to clarify our viewpoints.

In reality, we didn’t need to have opinions. We needed to keep our mouths shut and learn. Unlike my use of vagueness at Robin Sage to demonstrate confidence, in the shoothouse, we failed to clarify our statements because we couldn’t substantiate our opinions with any real evidence or experience. This type of behavior is best described as the contextual fallacy.

There is nothing wrong with adding context by declaring shooter’s preference and situation-dependent. For some instructors, it’s a passive habit developed through public speaking. However, there’s a difference between framing a concept through contextual statements versus hijacking these phrases so we can weasel out of critical thinking. Although shades of gray exist in every situation, it’s the job of instructors to clarify uncertainty. After all, you’re paying them in part to do so. When they use the contextual fallacy, instructors typically get a pass because their noncommittal stance is perceived as a Zen-like state of mind. This appeal to authority fools amateurs, inhibits the growth of the professionals and shifts the norms of the tactical community toward accepting mediocrity.

In fairness, it’s exhausting to approach all new information through a lens of robust analysis. But if that information is gathered for the purpose of being used in tactical engagements in which our lives or the lives of others will be put in danger, shouldn’t that signal a decrease in our willingness to dwell in uncertainty?

The contextual fallacy also fools us when it’s used to critique procedural rigidity and behavior that discourages adaptability. Yes, we must remain vulnerable to new concepts, but that shouldn’t come at the expense of declaring what we know to be more true than false. Allowing for vagueness by proclaiming context affords lukewarm arguments a safety net that deteriorates one of our most critical skills as tactical leaders: decisiveness.

Making Hard Calls

Decisiveness does not imply a willingness to reject new information. Instead, it establishes a foundation that lets us analyze new details. If we fail to take a stance, we can confuse good luck with good tactics and jump to haphazard conclusions with incomplete data. We must always ask: What is the evidence? How good is the evidence? Are there real-world examples that disprove the evidence?

Well-rounded leaders ask these questions and do their best to disprove unvetted concepts. This does not always need to be a lengthy task. However, it requires scholarship beyond browsing 15-second Instagram videos. Absent of this approach, we simply collect facts that can be contradictory, confusing and catastrophic when used in real tactical engagements.

During battle, leaders must immediately recognize patterns during ambiguous and exigent circumstances. Acting with too little information can be dangerous (such as getting baited into a larger attack), but delaying action when recognizable patterns have occurred is just as dangerous. Organizations that permit the contextual fallacy as an acceptable line of thinking will inevitably produce people incapable of assuming leadership during time-sensitive operations or crisis management.

In those situations, you will rarely possess the desired amount of information and resources. However, decisions still must be made and acted upon. That indicates the importance of promoting the development of decisiveness as a part of tactical learning. We do not create leaders capable of adapting to harsh environments by shortchanging them in training that discourages critical thinking.

But what kind of organization would willingly permit the contextual fallacy? Most typically don’t, and the contextual fallacy is an undiagnosed cancer that goes unobserved until an agency participates in large-scale training exercises, such as one involving an active shooter. This is best displayed when a team spends 15 minutes running through a scenario and then 50 minutes arguing about how they should have attacked the problem.

Although participants should engage in discourse, all opinions are not equal, and hierarchies of knowledge must be enforced. Ignoring these truths ultimately fails to develop new recruits into potential leaders. Worse, if left unchecked in an organization’s culture, few people will be capable of differentiating between ideas that sound good versus ideas that are actually actionable.

In commercial tactical training, the contextual fallacy is so seductive because it allows underqualified instructors to bargain way beyond their means and level of experience. Even better, the moment firm opposition arises, they can retreat back into obscurity without any real consequences.

This behavior is the antithesis of attaining knowledge because it doesn’t require any discipline. More importantly, it doesn’t allow for failure. A person simply observes what others are doing, stands on their shoulders to accomplish something and then, if he fails, doesn’t take any responsibility for it. We must recognize that context frames a situation. However, the contextual fallacy should not be used to bail out weak ideas and cherry-picked information.

For more, please visit GuerrillaApproach.com.

This article is from the summer 2017 issue of Ballistic Magazine. To subscribe, please visit OutdoorGroupStore.com.

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The CMP Has Received 8,000 Surplus 1911 Pistols From the US Army

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army surplus 1911 pistol right profile army surplus 1911 pistol with magazine army surplus 1911 pistol left profile surplus 1911 pistol slide surplus 1911 pistol slide left profile

If you’re eager to get your hands on one of those surplus 1911 pistols you’ve been reading about, we have good news for you: the Civilian Marksmanship Program (CMP) announced it has received 8,000 1911s from the United States Army. Read the full update from CMP COO Mark Johnson below:

The 1911s have been received by the CMP. A complete inventory will be conducted over the course of this week. The pistols will then be securely stored until the Army-approved 1911 building and armory infrastructure is completed. That completion is anticipated to be approximately 60 days from now. Once the 1911 armory is completed, inspection, grading, repair, and ultimately test firing of the pistols will begin. (Please be aware that the CMP was led to believe that we were ready to move forward, but three weeks ago facility requirements were changed, and we are now fulfilling those requirements.)

The CMP 1911 order packet will be posted 90 days prior to the order acceptance date and opening sales date.  No orders will be accepted prior to that date.  Please visit thecmp.org, click on the Sales icon then 1911 Information, for the latest. CMP customer service has been inundated with calls and emails concerning the 1911s and no further information is available at this time.

The CMP will keep everyone posted as we move through this process.

As previously reported, those interested in buying a surplus 1911 from the CMP will have to show proof of U.S. citizenship, proof of membership in a CMP-affiliated club and proof of participation in marksmanship activity. Purchasers will also have to successfully pass a NICS background check and provide a signed copy of your dealer’s FFL license where the gun will be transferred to. After that, you’ll have to fill out a 4473 in person and pass a second NICS check done by the FFL holder before the pistol is legally yours.

In case you need a refresher, here are the basic ground rules, as outlined by the CMP, for the sale of the surplus 1911 pistols.

  1. CMP will have an all-new 1911 order form, 1911 purchasing instructions, a 1911 page on our web site, a dedicated 1911 FFL fax number and email address for the FFL holder to send their FFL with customer’s name attached. The customer will have to send in a complete new order packet with all new qualifying criteria included. Everyone will be a new customer, everyone starts with no advantage or disadvantage. CMP 1911 is an FFL governed operation and is a separate entity from CMP and has to have its own record keeping operation with no ties to the old CMP records. 

  2. Decisions concerning the grade and pricing of the 1911s will not be made until inspection has occurred of a substantial quantity which will take an estimated 150 days post receipt.  CMP will price at fair market value in accordance with CMP’s enabling legislation.

  3. Potential purchasers will have to provide to CMP a new set of documents exhibiting:  1) proof of U.S. Citizenship, 2) proof of membership in a CMP affiliated club, 3) proof of participation in a marksmanship activity, 4) a new form 2A with notary, 5) a signed copy of the 01, or 02, or 07 Federal Firearms License in which the 1911 will be transferred to.

  4. A NICS background check will be performed by CMP on the customer to assure the customer is eligible to purchase prior to shipment to the FFL licensed dealer. The customer must receive a “proceed” from NICS prior to shipment of the pistol to the FFL licensed dealer.

  5. The CMP customer will be required to complete a form 4473 in person at the FFL dealers place of business, successfully passing a NICS check, in which the information is provided by the FFL holder to NICS, before the pistol can be transferred.  This is a second NICS check performed on the customer.

  6. Qualified CMP customer will only be allowed to purchase one 1911 per calendar year.

  7. No 1911s available in the CMP stores, or on line, only mail order sales.  All 1911 orders will come in via USPS, UPS, Fed EX, etc.

  8. CMP will set the date in which it will accept orders for the 1911s. The date will be posted to the world.

  9. Orders will only be accepted via mail order delivery, USPS, UPS, Fed Ex, etc.

  10. Orders will only be accepted post marked on the date or after, no early orders.

  11. Once CMP receives 10,000 orders, customer names will be loaded into the Random Number Generator.

  12. The Random Number Generator will provide a list of names in sequence order through a random picking process to CMP. 

  13. Customers will be contacted in the sequence provided by the Random Number Generator.

  14. When the customer is contacted a list of 1911 grades and pricing options that are available will be offered for selection of one 1911 type pistol.

  15. As CMP proceeds down the sequenced list less grades and pricing options will be available. 

For more information, visit thecmp.org.

The post The CMP Has Received 8,000 Surplus 1911 Pistols From the US Army appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.


Bushmaster’s XM-15 SquareDrop Pistol Comes with SB Tactical Brace

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Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop Pistol angle Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop 7-Inch pistol Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop 10-inch pistol Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop 9-inch pistol

Bushmaster is kicking off the new year by bringing its brand new XM-15 SquareDrop pistols to market.

The Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop features Advanced Armament Corporation’s SquareDrop modular free float attachment system for accessories, hence the name. It also comes equipped with an SB Tactical arm brace out of the box for the benefit of added stability and improved accuracy, the company says.

Offered in both 5.56mm NATO and .300 AAC Blackout in seven, nine  and 10-inch 4150 chrome-moly steel, FNC-treated barrel configurations, the XM-15 SD also includes a Mil-Std upper and lower receiver; AAC Blackout flash hider; improved trigger control with ALG defense fire control group; Hogue overmold grip and a 30-round magazine capacity.

“This compact MSR pistol is perfect for quick handling in tight quarters,” Bushmaster claims in the press release.

The Bushmaster XM-15 SquareDrop is available at a suggested retail price of $1,399.

XM-15 SquareDrop Features

  • 4150 chrome-moly steel barrel, FNC treated for maximum longevity
  • Mil-Std upper & lower
  • Square Drop rail for free-floating accuracy and accessory mounting ease
  • SB Tactical arm brace
  • Improved trigger control with ALG defense fire control group
  • AAC Blackout flash hider
  • Magazine capacity: 30
  • Available in 5.56 NATO & 300 AAC Blackout
  • MSRP $1,399

For more information, head on over to bushmaster.com.

 

The post Bushmaster’s XM-15 SquareDrop Pistol Comes with SB Tactical Brace appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

USSOCOM Orders Up Sig MCX PDW Conversion Kits for Testing

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Sig MCX Rattler rifle closeup Sig MCX Rattler test right profile Sig MCX Rattler rifle shooting Sig MCX Rattler rifle left profile Sig MCX Rattler rifle right profile

United States Special Operations Command (SOCOM) wants to convert its M4A1 carbines into Personal Defense Weapon (PDW) systems, and it’s ordering up commercially available Sig MCX PDW kits as a stepping stone toward accomplishing that goal.

According to a report in TheDrive’s War Zone blog, this all began in March of last year when USSOCOM issued a sources sought notice to industry for a PDW conversion kit. Here are the requirements that were listed on FedBizOpps:

PDW Kit specifics: The kit must be adaptable to the standard M4A1 lower receiver, any modification to the lower receiver must be reversible and nonpermanent. The kit must be in .300 Blackout (BLK) cartridge, total system weight, including the M4A1 lower in not to exceed 5.5lbs. Length with stock extended not to extend 26″ length with stock collapsed or folded shall be 17″ (T), 15″ (O) and a height not to exceed 7.5″. Weapon shall be fully functional when collapsed or folded. Kit should include a 5.56mm barrel that can be changed from .300 BLK to 5.56mm in less than 3 minutes. Accuracy shall be 3.0 MOA (T), 2.0 MOA (O) @100 yds. and 5.0 MOA (T), 3.0 MOA (O) @ 300 yds. both in .300 BLK supersonic. 

After sifting through responses, SOCOM announced on Feb. 1 via FedBizOpps that it was going with Sig Sauer. The reason? According to one of the accompanying documents, Sig was “the only company identified through market research that could provide the necessary MCX PDW parts and kits which met the Government’s requirements for a Commercial off the Shelf (COTS) conversion kit for the M4A1 to create a PDW that meets the specifications identified in the sources sought notice.”

A full and open competition for the contract was not conducted because SOCOM said it “would not have been feasible given the operational necessity and urgency of the program,” and that “Sample systems are needed quickly to be used in formal combat evaluations that will be used to refine and define future requirements.”

Thus, Sig has been awarded a sole source, firm fixed-price contract for 10 MCX PDW kits, which will contain the following:

1.1.1 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW 300BLK Upper Receiver Group
(5.5) (PN: WUAMCX-5B-300B-BLK-TAP-AUTO)

1.1.2 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW 5.56 Barrel (5.5)
(PN: WCALX-MX-5B-556-TAP)

1.1.3 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW Suppressor Handguard
(PN: SIG-SRD300-999)

1.1.4 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW 300BLK Suppressor (Short)
(PN: 2401525-R)

1.1.5 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer SRD 7.62 Suppressor (PN: SRD762)

1.1.6 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX Folding/Telescoping Stock
(PN: STOCK-X-FOLD-TELE-BLK)

1.1.7 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW Folding Skeleton Stock
(PN: STOCK-X-FOLD-THIN-BLK)

1.1.8 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer MCX PDW Stock Adapter Kit (PN: 2400557-R)

1.1.9 QTY: 20 Sig Sauer QD Sling Adapter (PN: SOCKET-1913-QD-LP)

1.1.10 QTY: 10 Polymer Rifle Case

1.1.11 QTY: 10 Wilcox BOSS 300BLK Optic (6-200) (PN: 64000G01)

1.1.12 QTY: 60 Sig Sauer Marked 300BLK Magazines (PN: 2400913-R)

1.1.13 QTY: 10 Sig Sauer Juliet 4x Magnifier (PN: SOJ41001)

Neither the FBO notice nor the accompanying documents mention it by name, but the War Zone notes that the caliber, 5.5-inch barrel length and folding skeleton stock are a match for the Sig MCX Rattler, which was announced last year and displayed at SHOT Show this year. In any event, the MCX PDW kits will be shipped to the U.S. Navy’s Naval Surface Warfare Center in Crane, Ind. for testing.

Sig MCX Rattler Specs

  • Caliber: 300 BLK
  • Frame Material: 7075 T6 aluminum
  • Frame Finish: Anodized
  • Barrel Material: Carbon steel
  • Barrel Finish: Nitride
  • Sights: Optics ready
  • Trigger: SIG Enhanced
  • Overall Height: 8 inches
  • Overall Width: 2.8 inches
  • Barrel Length: 5.5 inches
  • Barrel Twist: 1:5 inches
  • Overall Length: 19.3 inches
  • Weight with Magazine: 5.1 pounds
  • Trigger pull: 5.5-9 pounds
  • MSRP: $2,727 (SBR model)

The post USSOCOM Orders Up Sig MCX PDW Conversion Kits for Testing appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

CQB Machine: A Look at the Steyr AUG A3 M1 Bullpup

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Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle lead Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle backup sights Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle sling swivel Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle optics Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle bug out Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle barrel muzzle brake Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle right profile Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle action Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle trigger Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle optic Steyr AUG A3 M1 rifle swivel

Sometimes the most revolutionary ideas reside in the small familiar things. Looking at common things in uncommon ways has produced some of mankind’s most earth-shakingbreakthroughs. Bicycle components became the world’s first airplane, a military radar set birthed the microwave oven, and the handheld transistor radio went on to become the cell phone. A comparable epiphany helped small arms design evolve.

The Thorneycroft bolt-action rifle was patented in 1901. In this groundbreaking design, the action of the weapon was moved back into the buttstock to minimize the weapon’s geometric footprint. Developed by an English gunsmith who produced a bolt-action rifle that was 7 inches shorter and 10-percent lighter than the Lee-Enfield service rifle of the day, the Thorneycroft carbine remained nonetheless ungainly and exhibited fairly brutal recoil. If viewed from the top, the stock of the original Thorneycroft actually angled to the right about 10 degrees to accommodate the unnatural geometry of the gun.

In 1957, the term “bullpup” was used to describe a target pistol with a custom stock. Despite what feels like a lifetime of searching, I cannot find a reliable story as to the true origins of the term. Nowadays, the bullpup moniker describes any weapon wherein the action is located behind the trigger group. The first successful practical application of the concept came in a truly revolutionary combat rifle born in 1977.

Combat Tested

The 1970s were a legitimately revolutionary age. While 1969 saw the first man walking on the moon, such stuff seemed almost mundane by the mid-1970s. Spinoff technologies went on to give us things like personal computers, polyester, Kevlar and Velcro. At the same time, engineers at Steyr in Austria began applying cutting-edge polymer science to the art of gun building. When combined with a novel bullpup layout and the newest 5.56mm NATO cartridge, the resulting StG 77, or AUG, turned the gun world on its ear.

AUG stands for “Armee-Universal-Gewehr” or, literally translated, “Army Universal Gun,” and the weapon is used operationally by at least 12 countries. The AUG melded state-of-the-art polymer science with superb ergonomics into a platform that also included such revolutionary features as a fire selector built into the trigger and an integral optic. The resulting rifle, while incrementally heavier than the U.S. M4, has its weight more centrally located above the firing grip, which makes for a remarkably agile close-combat tool.

When I worked alongside the Australian Army back in the 1990s, they referred to the AUG as the “Austeyr” and built the rifle under license from Steyr locally in Australia as the F88. Aussie diggers bragged about the weapon for its compact footprint, innate controllability, soldier-driven ergonomics and integral optic. While our American field gear and incidentals eclipsed that of our Australian counterparts, the Aussies rightfully felt that they packed the most effective assault rifle on the planet. Now well into the 21st century, the Steyr AUG is an established design that has proven itself in the ongoing Global War on Terror.

Steyr AUG Platform

The basic Steyr AUG is rugged, ergonomic and surprisingly simple. The forward hand grip folds up and down as needed, and the barrel assembly is easy to replace without tools. Simply push in a button with your thumb, rotate the forward grip and slide the barrel out. Replacing it is even easier. The safety is a crossbolt design. Right is “safe” and left is “fire.”

The forward sling swivel is mounted along the centerline, and the rear swivel is reversible. The standard gun ejects out the right side, but swapping to left-handed ejection requires nothing more than exchanging bolts and moving the plastic ejection port cover from one side to the other.

The charging handle is mounted on the left side and is best actuated with the left hand from the bottom to avoid rapping your knuckles on the optics. This appendage locks to the rear should the guts of the rifle require inspection. A short Picatinny rail is mounted on the right side, in an offset position, for lights or lasers.

Modern Steyr AUG rifles come with a 16-inch, chrome-lined, cold-hammer-forged barrels, though 13.8-, 20- and 24-inch versions are in service as well. The rotating bolt sports seven locking lugs, and the bolt carrier group rides on a pair of sturdy guide rods.

The Achilles’ heel of most bullpup designs is the trigger, as this component has to transmit the movement of the operator’s finger a fairly long distance to trip the hammer. In the case of the AUG, the well-designed 9-pound trigger is remarkably smooth and utterly effective for combat use. The fire control system is entirely polymer, save the springs and pins, yet those I have studied showed no appreciable wear after years of hard use.

The piston-driven action of the Steyr AUG employs the most modern materials and design features available to produce a rifle that sets a world standard for reliability under harsh use. The gas system is readily adjustable without tools and easily disassembles for cleaning. The piston-driven design keeps the majority of the carbon fouling out of the action.

The AUG’s magazines are polymer, translucent and all but indestructible. They are available in 10-, 30- and 42-round capacities, and the 30-rounders fit just fine in unmodified M4 magazine pouches. AUG mags disassemble with a bullet tip for cleaning and maintenance, and are every bit the equal to their M4 counterparts in both reliability and ruggedness. Additionally, their translucent nature allows the operator to see any remaining rounds at a glance.

A3 M1 Details

The newest version of the Steyr AUG, the A3 M1, is built in Steyr’s new manufacturing facility in Bessemer, Alabama, and it primarily departs from earlier AUGs by offering a number of optics options. The AUG A3 M1 rifle is available with a short 11-slot Picatinny rail on top, a high 16-slot rail or a 1.5X or 3X optic built into the carry handle. The 1.5X and 3X optics also feature rails on the top and sides for mounting additional accessories. The rail on top of the optic incorporates a rudimentary set of backup iron sights.

By combining different barrels with different optics, the basic AUG chassis can serve as a close-range entry gun, a mid-range general-purpose combat weapon or a long-range designated marksman’s rifle that is effective out to the limits of the cartridge. Swapping barrels is easier to do than describe, and exchanging optics rails requires nothing more than an Allen wrench. The new AUG A3 M1 retains all of the revolutionary materials and ergonomic designing that made the AUG such a game-changer in the first place and infuses it with enough accessory real estate to accommodate the pickiest operator.

Weighing 7.7 pounds without optics or ammo, the short-railed AUG is indeed about a pound heavier than a comparable stripped M4. However, the bullpup design makes the gun fully 1.5 inches shorter than a mil-spec M4 with a 14.5-inch barrel, even with the stock collapsed. What this means practically is that the AUG offers extra barrel length with the commensurate improvement in velocity and terminal effectiveness in a markedly shorter platform. When maneuvering indoors or within a vehicle, this shorter overall length equates to faster handling and easier management in tight spaces.

The AUG’s recoil is virtually nonexistent. My AUG sports the 1.5X optic, and I have found it to be remarkably effective for close-range engagements. With both eyes open, the field of view remains uncluttered, and the reticle is fast and effective. As there is no imaginable circumstance in which a civilian shooter will ever need to take a defensive shot at more than 100 meters, the performance of the AUG A3 M1 is fairly optimized for defensive engagements.

There are those who might say that it takes longer to reload an AUG than an AR, but I just don’t see it that way. What trivial loss you might have in speed is more than compensated for by the compact platform. The bolt locks to the rear after the last round is fired, and the thumb of your weak hand will find the magazine release intuitively, even in a rush.

Earning Its Keep

I genuinely love my AUG and have never had a legitimate stoppage with the rifle. I have to bump the gas system up a notch to manage cheap steel-cased ammo, but that is why you have an adjustable gas system in the first place. If zombies ever come, I’ll reach for my AUG before anything else in my personal armory.

AUG stocks are available in white, black, OD green and MUD for those who like to color-coordinate their iron, and, on a certain level, it is kind of cool to be the only guy at the range with something other than an AR. While the AUG has logged more than its share of screen time in TV and movies, its use in the first Die Hard is hands-down the most memorable. The same rakish lines and advanced ergonomics that make the AUG such a superb combat tool out here in the real world make it eye-catching on the big screen as well.

The Steyr AUG, in its new A3 M1 guise, remains competitive with the most advanced combat rifle designs rolling off the lines today. Now that aluminum receivers are commonplace and polymer furniture is passé, the Steyr AUG retains its position at the top of the food chain among modern combat rifles.

Steyr AUG A3 M1 Specs

Caliber: 5.56mm NATO
Barrel: 16 inches
OA Length: 28.15 inches
Weight: 8.8 pounds (empty)
Stock: Synthetic
Sights: 1.5X optic
Action: Piston-operated semi-auto
Finish: OD green
Capacity: 30+1
MSRP: $2,499

Steyr AUG A3 M1 Performance

Load Velocity Accuracy
Gorilla 55 Sierra BlitzKing 2,739 2.50
Hornady 55 V-MAX 2,904 1.73
HPR 60 V-MAX 2,691 2.78
Remington UMC 55 FMJ 3,039 3.00
TulAmmo 55 FMJ 2,945 4.60
Winchester 55 Super Clean JSP 3,029 3.90

*Bullet weight measured in grains, velocity in fps by chronograph and accuracy in inches for best five-shot groups at 100 yards.

For more information, visit steyrarms.com.

This article was originally published in the 2017 issue of “Black Guns.” To order a copy, visit outdoorgroupstore.com.

The post CQB Machine: A Look at the Steyr AUG A3 M1 Bullpup appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

Gurkha Cigars, Grey Ghost Precision Team for Gurkha Grey Ghost Rifle

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Gurkha Grey Ghost rifles left profile Gurkha Grey Ghost rifles closeup Gurkha Grey Ghost rifles rails Gurkha Grey Ghost rifles angle

Cigars and rifles go together like bread and butter, so it’s only natural that Gurkha Cigars and Grey Ghost Precision would team up on a new limited edition rifle called—appropriately enough—the Gurkha Grey Ghost.

Details are pretty scant right now, but we do know that each Gurkha Grey Ghost will come with the Gurkha “Ghost” tribal logo and come in various Cerakote colors, including tactical black and tabaco bronze. According to the press release, the rifles will be available in the calibers below:

  • Grim in 6.5 Creedmoor
  • Heavy in .308 (7.62 x 51mm)
  • Light in .223 (5.56 x 45mm)
  • Dark in .300 Blackout

Only a thousand rifles will be made, and each one comes with individualized sequential alphanumeric numbering, 1-1000 (GGG-0000). Gurkha CEO Kaizad Hansotia has the first Gurkha Grey Ghost, numbered GGG-0001.

“Gurkha Cigars and Grey Ghost Precision have a symbiotic relationship,” Hansotia said in a statement. “Our companies share similar brand attributes and a common demographic, so it is only natural that we would partner to create the Gurkha Grey Ghost rifle.”

“Grey Ghost Precision decided to develop rifles due to a real-world need for elite military professionals to get the necessary system to complete their mission, as well as increase their team’s lethality and survivability,” the press release says. “They make every rifle to endure the most rugged of conditions that will be faced in the field. This does not mean that the rifle has to be ugly. The clean lines and attention to detail will be evident to the pickiest of collectors. The Gurkha graphics applied by the Master Cercoater make the package complete. This solid shooting platform looks great on the range, performs at a very high level, and will be the envy of those that see it.”

The Gurkha Grey Ghost rifles will be delivered eight weeks after purchase. For more information bout Gurkha Cigars, visit gurkhacigars.com. For more on Grey Ghost Precision, visit greyghostprecision.com.

 

 

The post Gurkha Cigars, Grey Ghost Precision Team for Gurkha Grey Ghost Rifle appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

Coyote Hunting: 2 Headshots Simultaneously Drop 2 Predators on Hunt

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The following is the first segment of Beast Master Hunting’s “Kill of the Month.” Each month, Nick Atkinson, founder of Beast Master Hunting, will provide the Ballistic audience with first-hand video of his hunts. Enjoy!

The Gear

On Dec. 10, 2017, around midnight, this video was recorded from my hunting partner’s and my points of view while coyote hunting. We were both using Trijicon MK III 60mm thermal optics mounted on Beast Master Hunting rifles.

What you see is simultaneously recorded footage through our optics, edited on a split screen. The predator call you hear in the background is a FOXPRO Shockwave.

Coyote Hunting

This particular ranch in Texas has a major issue with coyotes. The land owner contacted me to help remove as many coyotes from the property as we could. We hunted most of the night and shot more than a dozen coyotes, but this set was the highlight of the night.

After only about four minutes of calling, these two coyotes busted the brush looking hungry. Lucky for us, they came in on the same line and had no inclination that we were waiting.

We quickly coordinated who was shooting which coyote — my partner on the front coyote at about 65 yards, and me on the far coyote at about 165 yards.

The front coyote paused as if he knew something wasn’t right, but it was too late. The countdown began, 1, 2, BANG! A perfectly executed pair of headshots.

Enjoy the Beast Master Hunting “Kill of the Month” for January 2018. For more information, please visit BeastMasterHunting.com.

About the Author

A former police officer, professional competition shooter by day and professional varmint hunter by night — that sentence sums up Nick Atkinson’s career. Since 2012, Atkinson has traveled the country, competing at the pro level in national level 3-gun competitions. In 2016, Atkinson decided to take his hunting to the next level. Shortly after, Beast Master Hunting was founded.

The post Coyote Hunting: 2 Headshots Simultaneously Drop 2 Predators on Hunt appeared first on Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews.

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