Posted on 03/02/2017 6:52:38 AM PST by w1n1
With the introduction of two MSR-10 rifles for hunting and long-range shooting, Savage Arms gives shooters some excellent choices.
Savage Arms' new line of next-generation semiautos comes to the marketplace with an attitude the company has cleverly co-opted the MSR acronym for branding the guns, using the tagline "MSR now stands for Modern Savage Rifle" but the guns are poised to deliver in the field and on the range as well, with everything from expanded caliber choices and badass designs to a full suite of custom upgrades packaged as standard features.
Although the four-gun family includes two MSR-15 models in 5.56mm (the Recon and Blackhawk), our focus here will be on a dynamic duo of aptly named, hard-hitting MSR-10s, the Hunter and the Long Range. And while the company's slick new AR-15 rifles are already gaining a reputation as straight shooters, the chance to zero in on building a better AR-10 was a perfect fit for Savage offering opportunities to play to the brand's strengths, including long range accuracy and innovation. Read the rest of the story here.
Very neat. I hope this design works out.
I’ve still seen these boutique ARs come and go, and each of them is an exercise in futility.. but hey, I would like an AR10 at some point without thinking that Turnbull was my only option.
Of course, it’s not the only option - but it’s the easiest to find at least.
I became interested in the 22 WMR about five years back looking for a revolver for my wife. Enjoyed its characteristics more than I imagined I would.
Wanted to cowboy pair a long gun with it. Got the A22. That’s the new Savage Semi-Auto in 22 Mag. Scoped it 4x, added a sling and a folding long bi-pod and now have a nice little flat line out to about 175 Yds.
Proprietary upper and lower recievers...
Generally not a great move.
But they claim significant weight reduction.
A 16 inch .308 loses a lot of velocity over a 22 inch long barrel. Probably 200 fps. It drops a .308 into 30-30 territory.
Not with the same barrel lengths.
It also has more recoil. For a 30 caliber rifle I prefer at least a 20 inch barrel. And I do love a 30 caliber rifle.
Not with the same barrel lengths.
No, of course not. But you can get a handy lever action 30-30 that weighs the same with a 22 inch barrel.
To each as they prefer. In a .308, I like at least a 20 inch barrel. I had a H&K semi version of the G3. It has an 18 inch barrel. I was appalled at the lousy ballistics that I was getting out of that tube.
It also handled like a brick. Sounded great on paper. I got rid of it.
Price point has been a Savage strength. Lotsa bang for the buck. I didn’t see a price.
Nice thread.
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