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The All-Un-American Straight-Pull Bolt-Action Rifle

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The straight-pull bolt-action concept has been enthusiastically received by European riflemen … and ignored almost completely by U.S. gun manufacturers.

What Are Some Of The Notable Straight-Pull Bolt-Action Rifles:

Since the appearance of the bolt-action rifle nearly 200 years ago, the operating mechanics have remained the same: handle up, back, forward, down. But what if someone were to tell you there were manually operated bolt-actions that could be cycled more than twice as fast as those of traditional design?

Well, such rifles do exist, and they’ve been available for quite some time. I’m talking about guns built on straight-pull bolt-actions—a concept that’s been enthusiastically received by European hunters but almost totally ignored by our American gun companies.

The Straight-Pull Idea

It’s a simple concept really. Instead of the four motions required to cycle a conventional bolt-action, a straight-pull requires only two. Not only does that reduce the required movements by half, it also reduces by more than half the time needed to do it. Lifting the bolt handle on a shouldered rifle employs muscles that are otherwise rarely used, making it awkward, even for those who are well practiced.

This picture, alone, is worth at least 500 words in explaining the mechanics of the Browning T-bolt.
This picture, alone, is worth at least 500 words in explaining the mechanics of the Browning T-bolt.

Should a fired case hug the chamber too tightly—a common occurrence with handloads—lifting the bolt handle on a shouldered rifle can range from difficult to impossible. It’s the reason so many hunters lower the gun to the port arms position to reload—it’s the only way they can get enough leverage to initiate primary extraction. Another advantage to the pull-push action is that it disturbs the gun less, allowing one to get back on target faster on a follow-up shot.


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The T-Bolts

The straight-pull bolt-action concept is hardly new: In the waning years of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th, we saw the Swiss Schmidt-Ruben Model 95, Austro-Hungarian Steyr-Mannlicher, Canadian Ross and our own Lee-Navy—all straight-pull military rifles. However, as for making the transition to the sporting rifle market, the straight-pull thing went limp for several decades, because no firearms manufacturer here or abroad showed interest.

The first glow of an ember appeared here, in the United States, in the form of the Browning T-bolt .22 LR, which was rolled out in 1965. Made for Browning in Belgium by FN, the first-generation T-bolt was the first production rifle I acquired after graduating college. The gun’s highly unorthodox action brought out the iconoclast in me (and there’s a lot of that!). The T-bolt was unlike anything I’d ever seen before. The way the action snicked open and closed with such a positive feel was so radically different from the bolt-, lever- and pump-action .22s I was familiar with.

When it’s broken down, this Blaser R8 looks very little like a “standard” bolt-action rifle Americans are accustomed to shooting.
When it’s broken down, this Blaser R8 looks very little like a “standard” bolt-action rifle Americans are accustomed to shooting.

Trying to describe how the T-bolt works (and this applies to the other straight-pulls we’ll be reviewing here) is challenging. The locking lugs, such as they are, consist of two circular plates the size of dimes on either side of the bolt body. These, when in battery, fit into corresponding holes at either side of the receiver. The bolt handle is an obtuse “L” shape that pivots horizontally on a vertical pin at its apex. The initial rearward movement of the bolt handle pivots the forward tip of the L outward, pulling the circular locking lugs out of their recesses.

The T-bolt was discontinued in 1986 and reintroduced in 2006 in a redesigned iteration now being made for Browning by Miroku of Japan. Originally chambered only in .22 LR, it’s now available in .22 WMR and .17 HMR in right- and left-hand models, along with a choice of sporter- or varmint-weight barrels in walnut or synthetic stocks.

Blaser R93: Unique Locking System

The next straight-pull bolt-action to come onto the scene was in 1993 with the German-made Blaser R93—the gun that truly ushered in the age of the straight-pull as a viable centerfire sporting rifle. With the R93 came a unique annular locking system that provided 360-degree contact between the locking “lugs” and their abutment surfaces. The head of the bolt is a steel tube, or collet, comprising 14 pliable splines (or fingers), each of which has a small bulge at the front edge. These “bulges” form an annular locking lug.

When it’s broken down, this Blaser R8 looks very little like a “standard” bolt-action rifle Americans are accustomed to shooting.
When it’s broken down, this Blaser R8 looks very little like a “standard” bolt-action rifle Americans are accustomed to shooting.

Inside the collet is a cone that, upon the closing movement of the bolt, wedges the splines outward to where they engage an annular groove in the barrel extension.

Because the bolt locks up directly with the barrel rather than the receiver, the latter is a non-stressed component, allowing it to be made of aluminum. As with most rifles coming out of Germany and Austria today, the R93’s modularity makes barrel/caliber switching easily done.

The Successful Blaser R8

In 2008, Blaser introduced the R8 (a gen 2, if you will, of the R93), and the foregoing general description of it applies to the current R8.

The R93 was an instant success with European hunters, as well as competitive shooters, especially for running boar events, where rapidity of fire is important. It was also adopted by the military or law enforcement agencies of 13 countries around the world.

On the SR30, the handle movement is along the horizontal plane, as on the Browning T-bolt. And, as on the other straight-pulls, the bolt glide is silky smooth. Lockup is achieved with six ball bearings wedged outward to engage an annular groove in the receiver ring, as shown here with the components comprising the Heym bolt’s ball bearing locking system.
On the SR30, the handle movement is along the horizontal plane, as on the Browning T-bolt. And, as on the other straight-pulls, the bolt glide is silky smooth. Lockup is achieved with six ball bearings wedged outward to engage an annular groove in the receiver ring, as shown here with the components comprising the Heym bolt’s ball bearing locking system.

The improved R8 continues to enjoy that same success … except here, in the States, where its starting price of around $3,000 kind of limits its popularity.

The Mauser 96

It was only three years after the warm reception given the Blaser that Mauser countered with its version of a straight-pull bolt-action rifle—the Model 96. Unlike the Blaser, the 96 employed a 16-lug rotary bolt. It was an ungainly looking thing, because not only was the bolt handle much farther forward than normal, it also angled forward, making it look really strange to anyone with a definite opinion about what a bolt-action rifle should look like.

It was probably a combination of the cosmetics and the position of the bolt handle that prevented the 96 from gaining popularity, even though it worked splendidly, was accurate and, in 1996, had an MSRP of $699, making it much more affordable than the Blaser. The 96 was only in production for a few years before being discontinued.

Heym SR-30

Another member of the straight-pull bolt-action family is the Heym SR-30. It was introduced in 1998. Unlike the Blaser and Mauser, whose bolt handles pivot rearward on a vertical plane before the bolt, itself, starts to move and then pivots again the same distance short of lockup, the SR-30 pivots on the horizontal plane like the Browning T-bolt. That, however, is where all similarity ends.

The Merkel RX Helix replaced the R93 in 2008, but the latter was produced, along with the RX, until 2018.
The Merkel RX Helix replaced the R93 in 2008, but the latter was produced, along with the RX, until 2018.

Instead of finding conventional locking lugs at the head of the bolt, there are six ball bearings oriented on 60-degree centers held captive is spherical recesses. The mechanics are conceptually similar to those of the Blaser, in that the final movement of the bolt handle forces a steel tube inside the bolt body forward to where it wedges the ball bearings outward, engaging an annular groove inside the receiver. It’s perhaps the most innovative of all the SPs and the closest to looking like a traditional bolt-action rifle.

Merkel RX Helix

My favorite among the straight-pull bolt-action rifles is Merkel’s superb RX Helix. As on the Blaser, the Helix’s bolt head locks up with the barrel, which allows an aluminum receiver and barrel interchangeability. But, unlike the Blaser, there is no rocking of the handle upon the action opening and closing. In fact, the handle does not pivot at all; it simply moves back and forth. In so doing, it rotates a multi-lug bolt head in and out of battery.

What’s really cool is that the bolt carrier and handle are connected by a rack-and-pinion arrangement whereby the handle moves only 2½ inches, but the bolt, itself, moves 4¼ inches. You can’t believe how fast this action can be cycled from the shoulder when all you have to do is pull back and push forward just 2½ inches!

The Heym SR30 is the most traditional-looking among the straight-pulls.
The Heym SR30 is the most traditional-looking among the straight-pulls.

A feature the RX shares with the Blaser is that it must be manually cocked before the first shot can be fired. The action is cocked by forcibly pushing a deeply serrated cocking lever up a steep incline at the back of the receiver; doing so compresses the mainspring. Depressing a small release button at the front of the thumbpiece allows it to be backed down, relaxing the spring.

Anschutz 1727

Next on our list of straight-pulls is another rimfire, the Anschutz 1727. It was originally designed as a biathlon rifle but is now offered in sporting iterations.

Like the Heym SR-30, this rifle employs ball bearings to serve as its locking lugs. The difference, however, is that this rimfire’s ball bearings are located at the rear of the bolt just ahead of the handle and engage an annular ring in the receiver bridge, rather than up front at the bolt head.

Browning’s T-bolt was originally introduced in 1965 and was the first straight-pull to be offered by a major American firearms manufacturer.
Browning’s T-bolt was originally introduced in 1965 and was the first straight-pull bolt-action to be offered by a major American firearms manufacturer.

With cycling speed being essential in biathlon competition, the Anschutz folks felt a straight-pull action would provide an edge, especially when the bolt travel needed in order to cycle a .22 LR cartridge is about 1½ inches. However, to further that advantage, they designed the bolt so that the action could be cycled with two fingers—the forefinger to open the action, the thumb to close it—all without disturbing one’s grip!

Roessler Titan 16 and Browning Maral

I’ve reviewed and/or hunted with more than one example of each of the aforementioned guns. Two I haven’t personally tested are the Austrian-made Roessler Titan 16 and the Browning Maral.

As its name suggests, the Titan is a rotary-bolt, 16-lug straight-pull very similar to the discontinued Mauser Model 96.

The Anschutz Model 1727 .22 LR is a sporting version of the company’s biathlon rifle. Like the Heym SR30, the Anschutz 1727 employs a ball-bearing locking system—but it locks up in the rear.
The Anschutz Model 1727 .22 LR is a sporting version of the company’s biathlon rifle. Like the Heym SR30, the Anschutz 1727 employs a ball-bearing locking system—but it locks up in the rear.

As for the Maral, it’s been around for several years but has been marketed only in Europe and Australia. It’s essentially a BAR without the gas system. The bolt is cycled manually—but only the opening stroke. The action closes automatically, just as on a semi-auto. This makes it the fastest of the straight-pulls. Its raison d’être is that some countries don’t allow hunting with a semi-auto, and the Maral is as close as you can get without it being a semi-auto.

Straight-Pull Drawbacks

If there’s a weakness in the straight-pull bolt-action concept it’s that it lacks the tremendous camming force that a traditional bolt-action can exert to chamber a dirty cartridge or extract a sticky case. In all honesty, though, extraction problems are usually due to handloads that are too hot or because a case has been resized too many times. Factory ammo or once-fired reloads properly resized are no problem.

Yes, straight-pulls are more complicated and expensive to make, but I still hope some American gun manufacturer takes up the challenge … soon!

The article originally appeared in the December 2019 issue of Gun Digest the Magazine.

Video: Versacarry Comfort Flex Deluxe

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Living up to its name, the Versacarry Comfort Flex Deluxe provides an efficient and wearable every-day carry holster.

When talking concealed carry, the proper handgun is what usually comes to mind. What should equally be at the top of mind, a solid concealed carry holster.

Versacarry has been at the cutting edge of creating efficient and forward-looking hangers for nearly every style of concealed carry. The company has stepped it up a notch this year introducing a holster that not only delivers on those points, but takes another important factor into account—comfort. As its name suggests, the Comfort Flex Deluxe dishes up an effective carry system, one that won’t wear on you no matter how long you have your pistol on your hip.

Versacarry accomplishes this by rethinking the hybrid-holster system almost entirely. Yes, the Comfort Flex Deluxe is a hybrid, though it looks miles away from the style of holster. This is because the company has internalized the Kydex scabbard inside a rugged and flexible water-buffalo hide superstructure. Nothing new for Versacarry, but they’ve extended its material know-how a step further by incorporating a closed-cell foam on the backside. More comfortable up against the body, the backing material also creates a barrier against sweat, protecting your gun.

Versacarry Lead

While not a prerequisite for a concealed carry holster, the Versacarry Comfort Flex Deluxe. A shame it has to go under wraps. And it’s available to fit a vast majority of the most popular concealed carry pistols.

With million-dollar looks, the holster comes in at a relatively competitive price. Presently, Versacarry lists the Comfort Flex Deluxe at $45.99, which makes it competitive with a majority of options on the market.

For more information on the Comfort Flex Deluxe, please visit versacarry.com/.


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American Made Giveaway: G-Code

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Made in the USA – GCODE Giveaway

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To this end, G-Code products have always been, and will always be, 100-percent American made using only U.S.-sourced raw materials and components. At G-Code, we count it our privilege to provide tactical carry solutions to the men and women who serve in our military, law enforcement, and the civilian concealed carry communities.

This is why when you buy G-Code, you buy American, you buy quality … because we simply will not sell anything else!

Contact Med Pouch
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RTI Optimal Drop Pistol Platform
RTI Optimal Drop Pistol Platform
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Soft Shell Scorpion Rifle Mag Carrier

For more information on G-Code, please visit tacticalholsters.com


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Browning Shotguns: The Top 10 Greatest Ever!

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Citori Privilege, left receiver detail. An example of a high-grade factory Browning shotgun. Courtesy Browning.
Citori Privilege, left receiver detail. An example of a high-grade factory Browning shotgun. Courtesy Browning.

From the earliest John M. Browning designs to today's state-of-the-art, here is Gun Digest's tip of the hat to the greatest Browning shotguns of all time!

Intro to Browning Shotguns

Early Browning shotguns ad.
Early Browning shotguns ad.

Young lads growing up in a shooting sports family who haven't dreamed of Browning shotguns are few and far between. And it's no wonder, for the scatterguns of John M. Browning–and those of late design from today's Browning company–are both works of art and functional field guns.

As one early print ad put it, “For three generations the underlying principle in the manufacture of Browning guns is not “how cheap nor how many” but “how good” can guns be made. Smooth, finely fitting parts minimize wear; function is positive, dependability assured.”

With words like that, thousands of shooters have taken to the fields and trap ranges armed with confidence bordering obsession, Browning shotguns in hand.

What are the Top 10 Greatest Browning Shotguns?

Browning Superposed

Grade I Belgian Superposed 12-ga. with straight grip stock. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
Grade I Belgian Superposed 12-ga. with straight grip stock. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

This series of Over/Under, double-barrel shotguns is chambered for 12, 20, and 28 gauges, as well as the .410 bore and is offered with vent rib barrels from 26.5″ to 32″ in length. It features various choke combinations.

This shotgun is built on a boxlock action and features either double or single-selective triggers and automatic ejectors. There were a number of versions offered that differ in the amount of ornamentation and the quality of the materials and workmanship utilized in manufacture.

The series was introduced in 1930 and is manufactured by Fabrique Nationale in Belgium.

Left receiver detail of one of the most popular Browning shotguns, a custom-engraved Midas Grade Superposed. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
Left receiver detail of one of the most popular Browning shotguns, a custom-engraved Midas Grade Superposed. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

For many Americans, especially those who are not familiar with other European manufacturers, the Browning Superposed Shotguns were the ultimate in shotguns being offered for sale on a regular basis in the United States.

These are the weapons that were purchased by the more wealthy and affluent Americans shotgun enthusiasts. There is no question that these weapons rate a Collectibility Factor of #1. These weapons are highly desirable and highly collectible, especially in the smaller gauges.

Citori Series: Working Class of Browning Shotguns

20-ga. Citori with adjustable comb. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
20-ga. Citori with adjustable comb. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

The Browning Citori is an Over/Under, double-barrel shotgun chambered for all gauges and offered with vent rib barrels of 26” through 30” in length. It has a boxlock action with a single-selective trigger and automatic ejectors.

Citori print ad.
Citori print ad.

The various grades differ in the amount of ornamentation and the quality of materials and workmanship utilized in construction. This Browning shotguns series is manufactured in Japan by B.C. Miroku and was introduced in 1973.

In my opinion, these are outstanding working guns. They shoot extremely well, and while they are a bit heavy, they seem to fit most people very well. I have a friend I hunt with who uses one of these on a daily basis when hunting, and I can tell you that he makes a formidable competitor.

Today, the more basic models offer a great value, and the price of these weapons, for the most part, seem to be coming down. If you are going to purchase one of these, I recommend that you only purchase those with adjustable chokes.

Browning Cynergy

When it comes to Browning shotguns, the Cynergy Field is still hard to beat. Courtesy Browning.
When it comes to Browning shotguns, the Cynergy Field is still hard to beat. Courtesy Browning.
Cynergy CAD schematic. Courtesy Browning.
Cynergy CAD schematic. Courtesy Browning.

This series of Browning shotguns was introduced in 2004. Browning calls it the third generation over-and-under gun.

The Cynergy has a number of new design features such as a monoblock hinge system for a lower profile, an inflex recoil pad, a new mechanical trigger system, an adjustable comb, back-bored barrels, and impact ejectors.

Models include the Cynergy Field, Classic Field, Field Small Gauge, Sporting, Classic Sporting, Sporting Adjustable Comb, Sporting Small Gauge, Classic Field Small Gauge, Classic Field Grade III and Cynergy Feather, among many others.

Browning BT-99

BT-99 Plus.
BT-99 Plus. Courtesy Browning.

This is a break-open, single-barrel trap gun chambered for 12 gauge only. It is offered with a 32″ or 34″, vent rib barrel with screw-in choke tubes.

It features a boxlock action with automatic ejectors. The finish is blued with a checkered walnut stock and beavertail forearm. It was introduced in 1968 by B.C. Miroku.

The BT-99 Golden Clays model was first introduced in 1994. In 2003 this model was offered with an adjustable comb. Weight is about 9 lbs. Available with either a 32″ or 34″ barrel.

Browning BSS

The BSS side-by-side shotgun. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
The Browning BSS side-by-side shotgun. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

This is a side-by-side, double-barrel shotgun chambered for 12 or 20 gauge. It was offered with a 26˝, 28˝, or 30˝ barrel with various choke combinations. It features a boxlock action and automatic ejectors. Early guns had a nonselective single trigger; late production, a selective trigger. The finish is blued with a checkered walnut stock and beavertail forearm. It was manufactured between 1978 and 1987 by B.C. Miroku.

NOTE: These particular Browning weapons, when first introduced, had nonselective triggers, and were not particularly popular or well received. They were competing with several other side-by-sides, e.g., the SKB. But slowly they began to become more appreciated, and today they have reached some degree of decent acceptance. I give them a Collectibility Factor of #2.

Browning Auto-5

Belgian Auto-5 16-ga. round knob with “suicide safety” in ON position at front of trigger guard. This is not a Sweet Sixteen. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
Belgian Auto-5 16-ga. round knob with “suicide safety” in ON position at front of trigger guard. This is not a Sweet Sixteen. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

This series of recoil-operated, semi-automatic shotguns was designed by John M. Browning and was offered in 12 or 16 gauge. The barrel lengths were 26″, 28″, 30″, or 32″ with various chokes and ribs. It has a unique, square-back action that has become instantly recognizable.

John Browning with one of the greatest Browning shotguns of all time, his legendary Auto-5. Courtesy Browning.
John Browning with one of the greatest Browning shotguns of all time, his legendary Auto-5. Courtesy Browning.

The finish is blued with a checkered, walnut, round-knob stock. The various versions differ in the amount of ornamentation, type of rib, and quality of materials and workmanship utilized in construction.

This series was manufactured in Belgium by FN between 1903 and 1939. The first example appeared in the United States in 1923. Pre-WWII 16 gauge guns, introduced in 1936, had 2-9/16″ chambers; early models should be inspected by a qualified gunsmith before firing.

NOTE: These shotguns, while somewhat strange in appearance, were the rage, especially after their introduction.

Many older shotgunners tell stories of how well these gun shoot and operate. There is no reason why I would not accumulate a few of these at the right price, especially in the more rare configurations.

These weapons deserved a Collectibility Factor of #1. In addition, although, technically speaking, these guns are considered to be somewhat antiquated, it’s amazing how well they sell and how much demand there is for them.

In 1976 production of the Auto-5 shotgun was begun by B.C. Miroku in Japan. This move was accomplished after approximately 2,750,000 Auto-5 shotguns were manufactured by FN in Belgium between 1903 and 1976.

Auto-5 Final Tribute.
Auto-5 Final Tribute. Courtesy Browning.

The Japanese-manufactured guns, in the opinion of many knowledgeable people, show no less quality or functionality but are simply not as desirable from a collector’s standpoint. In 1999 Browning discontinued production of the Auto-5 shotgun.

In 2014, the Browning A5 was released, which resembles the Auto-5 aesthetically but is recoil-operated. The A5 remains in production today. 

Browning B-2000 Series Shotguns

Browning B-2000 with accessory slug barrel. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.
Browning B-2000 with accessory slug barrel. Courtesy Rock Island Auction.

This is a gas-operated, semi-automatic shotgun chambered for 12 or 20 gauge and offered with a 26″, 28″, or 30″, vent rib barrel with various chokes.

The finish is blued with a checkered walnut stock. This shotgun was assembled in Portugal from parts that were manufactured by FN in Belgium.

There were approximately 115,000 of these Browning shotguns imported between 1974 and 1981.

Browning Gold Shotguns

Model Gold 10. Courtesy Browning.
Model Gold 10. Courtesy Browning.

Introduced in 1993, The Browning Gold 10 was a gas-operated 5-shot semi-automatic shotgun chambered for the 10 gauge shell. Offered with 26″, 28″, or 30″ vent rib barrel.

The standard model has a walnut stock, blued receiver and barrel while the Stalker Model is fitted with a graphite composite stock with nonglare finish on receiver and barrel. Both models are fitted with choke tubes. Weighs about 10 lbs. 10 oz.

One of the more contemporary Browning shotguns is the updated Gold Evolve. Courtesy Browning.
One of the more contemporary Browning shotguns is the updated Gold Evolve. Courtesy Browning.

Introduced in 2004, the Gold Evolve model is an updated version of the original Gold gun.

It features newly designed receiver, magazine cap, ventilated rib design, checkering pattern and Hi-Viz sights. Offered in 12 gauge 3 with choice of 26″, 28″, or 30″ barrel with choke tubes. Weight is about 7 lbs. for the 28″ model.

The full line of Browning Gold shotguns includes field-grade models for waterfowl, upland game, turkey and trap and skeet. In addition, there are several slug gun variants available.

Browning Silver Series

Browning Silver in Mossy Oak camo. Courtesy Browning.
Browning Silver in Mossy Oak camo. Courtesy Browning.

The value-priced Silver series of gas-operated autoloaders was introduced in 2006.

These Browning shotguns feature a semi-humpback design and aluminum alloy receiver. Weights vary from 7.25 to 7.5 lbs. depending on barrel length and stock material. Three choke tubes provided with all models.

The Silver Hunter version features a satin finish walnut stock and forend. It is available with a 3″ chamber in 26″, 28″ and 30″ barrel lengths or with a 3.5″ chamber in 26″ or 28″ barrel length.

Similar to Silver Hunter, the Silver Stalker model has matte black composite stock and forend. Sling swivel studs. 3.5″ chamber only.

Browning BPS Pump Shotguns

The Browning BPS 20-Ga. Field Grade. Courtesy Browning.
The Browning BPS 20-Ga. Field Grade. Courtesy Browning.

The BPS is a slide-action shotgun chambered for 10, 12, or 20 gauge. It is offered with various length vent rib barrels with screw-in Invector chokes.

It features 3″ magnum chambers and a bottom-ejection system that effectively makes it ambidextrous. It has double slide bars and a 5-shot tubular magazine. It is constructed of all steel. It was introduced by B.C. Miroku in 1977.

The BPS remains a flagship among Browning shotguns and offered in a bewildering array of models and configurations.

This article is an excerpt from the Standard Catalog of Browning Firearms. Corey Graff contributed to this article.

Interested in Browning gun values? Check out Gun Values Online by Gun Digest.


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Springfield Hellcat: The Future Of Concealed Carry

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The 21st-Century concealed carry pistol has arrived. Shake hands with Springfield Armory Hellcat.

To steal a line from the TV show, Travelers, “Welcome to the 21st.”

How The Springfield Hellcat Advances The Compact 9mm:

  • Advanced grip texturing makes the pistol more manageable and quicker on which to get a purchase.
  • Reversible mag catch makes pistol lefty friendly.
  • Baseplate extender gives your pinky real estate.
  • Milled slide gives you the option of hassle-free red-dot addition.


It wasn’t that long ago that the latest breakthrough in EDC gear was 9mm pistols that were not much larger than .380s used to be. Oh, back in the old days (not much good about some of them), we all loved the size of .380 compact pistols while being just a tad anxious about carrying “only” a .380.

Then, within the lifetime of the newest EDC pistol-packers among us, 9mm pistols shrank down to the size the bigger .380s had been … and then shrank again … until the compact 9mm pistol was no larger than a compact .380 had been.

Read More Springfield Reviews

But, as with all things, there was a price: capacity. At six shots per, it hardly mattered if what you were carrying was a snub-nosed revolver, a .380 or a 9mm Parabellum.

Not that the pistol makers didn’t try. The smallest 9mm Glocks, for example, held 10 rounds in a magazine in the G26, but the grip was like trying to hold the stub of a 2×4. The S&W 6900 series pistols weren’t a lot better: They held 12 rounds but were only a bit more hand-friendly to shoot.

The Springfield Armory Hellcat is the newest of the new—a compact 9mm that can take a red-dot and holds a lot of ammo.
The Springfield Armory Hellcat is the newest of the new—a compact 9mm that can take a red-dot and holds a lot of ammo.

All that changed with the Sig 365, but that company was not the only one working on the problem. Sig just happened to be first. Just.

The Springfield Hellcat is what the G26 and the 6900 series could have been but weren’t: a hand-friendly, medium-capacity, 9mm compact pistol.

Getting A Grip On The Springfield Hellcat

The heart of the Springfield Hellcat is a polymer frame with an interesting nonslip texture Springfield calls an “adaptive grip texture.” It’s a mix of flat-topped pyramids, with sharper ones in between and lower than the flat tops. As a result, when your hand has to slide, it can slide over the flat tops. When you press down, your skin goes down between the flat tops to the sharper ones. Plus, your skin now has to slide over the edges of the flat pyramid tops.

Consequently, you get the best of both worlds: Slide when you need to, and stick when you must. This is the sort of thing a polymer molded product can do that a metal one can’t (well, you could, but the machining would be prohibitive, even in the modern CNC era).

The frame sides have recesses for the baseplate and also so that you can get a hold of the magazine, should you need to “encourage” its removal.
The frame sides have
recesses for the baseplate and also so that you can get a hold of the magazine, should you need to “encourage” its removal.

This texture is on the lower part of the frame, where you’d be grasping it, plus two spots—one on each side, forward of the trigger. That’s where your trigger finger can find a safe haven when it’s supposed to be outside the trigger guard.

Reversible Mag Catch: The New Normal

The magazine catch is reversible. Yes, yes, we all want an ambidextrous magazine catch—but really? Do we? I know that I don’t.

I’ve spent 50-plus years teaching myself that the mag button is on the left side. I don’t need an ambidextrous button, but if I’m dedicating a pistol as a backup—a secondary pistol for left-handed use—a right-side button might be nice. This way, I have a choice. New shooters who are left-handed get a choice as well. If you’re going to spend time with other pistols, you might want to leave it on the left side. If, however, you’re going to only go with pistols that can be swapped, then switch it over, get used to the new normal, and get on with your life.

There’s an accessory rail out on the front of the frame. Yes, it has only one cross slot, but how many do you really need? This is an EDC pistol, so you’re going to spend lots of time and effort keeping it concealed. A honkin’-big light or laser is not what you need. However, a very compact light to go with your very compact pistol might be just the ticket. So, Springfield gives you a choice. The accessory rail is also the location of the serial number—in a plate in a recess in the middle of the rail.

The Springfield Hellcat's Extension

The frame is recessed on the sides at the magazine well to accommodate the magazine baseplate. This also gives you a place to weasel onto the magazine, should it prove reluctant to fall out on demand. The standard magazine holds 11 rounds and has a flush baseplate.

All the glorious Hellcat details: front serrations, tritium sight, extractor and loaded chamber indicator. Yes, the serial number is on more than just the frame.
All the glorious Hellcat details: front serrations, tritium sight, extractor and loaded chamber indicator. Yes, the serial number is on more than just the frame.

You can also have a finger-groove extended baseplate—what Springfield calls the “pinky extension”—but it doesn’t add capacity. Then, there’s an extended magazine that holds 13 rounds, and the baseplate is molded to the contours of the frame. Basically, it looks like it’s a longer-framed Hellcat, and, if you have large hands, it makes it easier to hold onto.

The baseplates are all molded to fill the side gaps, and you can get a good grip on any of them, should the need arise.

The trigger is the now-standard one we see on striker-fired pistols: There’s a safety blade in the middle that keeps the trigger from moving until your finger has moved the blade. The trigger, itself, is flat, and the trigger is vertical at the point in its pivot where it releases the striker.

The trigger pull is nice and clean, with an obvious take-up and then pressure until the striker falls a small amount (mechanically unavoidable) after the striker falls. The internals are nickel-boron coated for a slick, low-friction surface, and it will be easy to clean once you get in there.

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The Springfield Hellcat's Upper Half

Things get even more interesting in the upper half.

Takedown is easy, and the parts are easy to clean.
Takedown is easy, and the parts are easy to clean.

First of all, the barrel is only 3 inches long, and the slide is machined to match that. As a result, you have a very compact pistol that’s good for concealed carry. The barrel locks up in the ejection port—as all pistols now do, except for the legacy designs that can’t.

There’s an opening at the rear of the hood that acts as a loaded chamber indicator. You simply look to see if there’s the rim of a cartridge or not—no extra parts, nothing to go awry. The barrel is hammer-forged, and the barrel and slide are given a Melonite treatment. This is a surface treatment that produces a very hard, very corrosion-resistant surface, which is then blackened. This, too, is the current state of the art and a common detail on all things Springfield.

The ejection port is matched with a robust extractor to make sure any and all cartridges, fired or not, are pulled out and tossed away when the slide cycles.

The slide, itself, is also interesting. First, there are cocking serrations fore and aft. The ones out front aren’t extensive, and they don’t appear to be designed as holster-shredding extras. If you work the slide by grasping it forward, they will help. On the rear, the cocking serrations on one model of the Hellcat are machined on both sides and continue over the top to match the other side. So, if you’re in the habit of wrapping your hand over the rear of the slide to work it, you get cocking serrations on three surfaces, not just two.

Here, the Hellcat is pictured on its storage pouch and holding the extended, 13-shot magazine.
Here, the Springfield Hellcat is pictured on its storage pouch and holding the extended, 13-shot magazine.

The other model has the top plate as a removable one for mounting a red-dot sight. That’s the one I received. The removable plate means it’s a no-gunsmithing operation to install or remove the red-dot sight (that’s good for you and bad for gunsmiths).

Hellcat Range Test

The rear of the slide has a cover plate, holding the striker parts in the slide. The sights are a tritium front with a U-shaped rear notch and ringed with a white outline.

The Springfield Hellcat comes with a spare, added-capacity magazine (the magazines are all-steel), lock and zippered case for storage. The Hellcat that was sent to me came with an RMSc red-dot sight already mounted and zeroed.

Observations

Shooting was the uneventful experience I expected it to be. The Springrield Hellcat ate all the ammo types I brought. It shot them to the sights. It never failed to fling the empties away, and it locked open every time I fired the last round.

Shown here are the accessory rail and the serial number plate inset in the middle of it.
Shown here are the accessory rail and the serial number plate inset in the middle of it.

Recoil was not mild—not that I’d have expected it to be from a 9mm pistol that weighs only 18 ounces. However, it was not objectionable; nor had I expected it to be. The ergonomic contours of the Hellcat grip evenly distribute recoil, and the overall effect is not sharp jabs or corners. Rather, it’s just an ultra-compact 9mm letting you know you’ve touched off a defensive round.

EDC 9mm

The current hot ticket for an EDC (everyday carry) setup is a compact 9mm pistol with a red-dot sight on it. For cutting-edge shooters, that means carry in an AIWB (appendix/inside the waistband) holster. Me? I’ll pass on the appendix position. I’m not comfortable carrying there, because even the short barrel and slide of the Hellcat cause binding; and, when I sit down, the Hellcat (or any pistol) wants to pop up out of the holster. For me, AIWB is a non-starter.

Instead, I’d be packing the Hellcat at the 4 o’clock or the FBI position. And there, it would be very comfortable, indeed.

The current accuracy standard is not that any pistol or revolver with a barrel fewer than 3½ inches doesn’t get fired at 25 yards. Fifteen yards is the standard for the compacts. I’m not necessarily in agreement, but “orders is orders,” so that’s what I do. And the Hellcat certainly did its part.

You can see the parts retention plate on the slide and the U-shaped notch of the rear sight, with its white outline.
You can see the parts retention plate on the slide and the U-shaped notch of the rear sight, with its white outline.

Part of that is the red-dot sight. Once you get over the apparent movement, you can shoot. The first time someone shoots with a red-dot sight, they mention the movement.

‘Geez; it’s shaking all over the place!’

Springfield Helcat Specs
Well, that happened before, but you couldn’t see it—and you shot well then. Now, you can see it … and you can shoot even better.

I’d never call something as compact as the Hellcat a “bull’s-eye gun,” but it shot a lot better than you’d expect an ultra-compact 9mm pistol to shoot.

And the best part of all this? The price. The Hellcat’s MSRP is $569, but we all know that gun shops will be stuffing them into their display counters (and quickly pulling them out for sale) at less than that.

Clearly, Springfield has a winner on its hands with the Hellcat.

The article originally appeared in the Janurary 2020 issue of Gun Digest the Magazine.

For more information on the Springfield Hellcat, please visit springfield-armory.com.


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Pointer Phenoma: Field Or Range It’s A Gas

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The Phenoma is available in a variety of styles, including laminate and camo stocks.
The Pointer Phenoma is available in a variety of styles, including laminate and camo stocks.

The little-known Turkish-made Pointer Phenoma autoloader delivers mainstream performance.

We marched like ants into the green jungle that marked the beginning of the wooded sporting clays course. Mosquitoes the size of small hummingbirds plowed bloody beaks into exposed skin.

“Pull!”

The autoloader cycled once, then twice, as the sporting clays machine launched bright clay into the wild, blue yonder. Orange discs sailed off into the far brush like frisbees. What a glide ratio!

As far as missing goes, well, it was … spectacular. We were shooting the “blue course,” which is supposed to be like the bunny slope. Regardless, things did get better as I warmed up and got a feel for the shotgun—a 12-gauge  Pointer Phenoma. It’s made by Armsan of Turkey and is imported by Legacy Sports International.

The author’s only complaints about the shotgun were a sticky safety switch, plastic trigger guard and fiber-optic front sight. Nevertheless, with a very appealing street price, he easily overlooked these nitpicks.
The author’s only complaints about the Pointer Phenoma were a sticky safety switch, plastic trigger guard and fiber-optic front sight. Nevertheless, with a very appealing street price, he easily overlooked these nitpicks.

When it was all said and done, the Pointer Phenoma would bring down clays and birds like nothing I’d ever shot.

Phenomena Details

The Pointer Phenoma is not unlike other gas-operated, semi-automatic shotguns. When you yank the trigger, a shell spews its load and a bunch of gas down the tube; some gas is detoured into two gas ports situated midway down the barrel. That gaseous “excrement” bores down through the gas cylinder and shoves the gas piston, jacking the spring-loaded action arm and bolt rearward, ejecting the shell. The spring that rides the magazine tube returns the bolt to battery—but not before it plucks another shell and drives it home.

It’s a typical gas system. But two things made eyebrows shoot skyward. First, reliability was perfect, no hiccups or jams—and that was right out of the box with no cleaning. It ran as smoothly as any well-broken-in shotgun ever did. And second: Cleaning was a breeze. When I crack an autoloader open for cleaning, most of the time, I find it’s dirtier than an anti-gun politician, but the Phenoma ran clean as a whistle.

The Pointer Phenoma is available in 12- and 20-gauge configurations and is chambered to handle the big, 3-inch shells if you must take a turkey’s head clean off or need to down some high-flying mallards. Barrels are chrome-moly lined, proofed for steel shot and come in lengths that span the gamut from 22 to 28 inches. The youth 20-gauge model carries either a 22- or 28-inch barrel.

Gun Digest books publisher Jim Schlender found the Phenoma’s lightweight to be the ticket while turkey hunting. He took this Merriam’s gobbler on the swing.
Gun Digest books publisher Jim Schlender found the Pointer Phenoma’s lightweight to be the ticket while turkey hunting. He took this Merriam’s gobbler on the swing.

In addition to a hard case, there’s a nifty, little choke kit included with F (full), IM (improved modified), M (modified), IC (improved cylinder) and SKEET. For the record, the choke I missed with was the modified one, which proved a little tight for my skill level and the short ranges involved (which could explain the misses … or maybe it was just simple incompetence). A shim kit is also included with the shotgun, but the 14-inch length of pull was perfect for me, so I didn’t monkey with it.


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One note about shotshell specs: Pointer recommends 2¾-inch, 1-ounce and 3-inch, 1 7/8-ounce shells and includes two gas pistons. The stainless steel piston that comes installed on the gun is for 1- to 1½-ounce loads, while the red-colored piston, which is heavier and marked “Heavy Duty,” is for 1½-ounce loads. One ingenious thing Pointer has done is to place the extra gas piston inside the forearm. It sits snugly just under the magazine cap, so it’s always there if you need it.

The Pointer Phenoma’s payload is 5+1 standard 2¾-inch shells or 4+1 of the big 3-inchers. The camo versions of the Phenoma are chambered for 3.5-inch shells for those who just have to do things the hard way. There is an available 24-inch slug barrel with an attached, cantilever-style Weaver rail for optics attachment. The rifled 12-gauge slugger has a 1:33-inch twist, but it was not included with the test gun. There is also a 3/8-inch dovetail machined into the top of the receiver, so adding optics is easy if that’s your cup of tea.

The Pointer Phenoma has a magazine cutoff system. Clearly a nod to the Phenoma’s general-use design as a waterfowl and field gun, the cutoff switch is located on the lower left side of the receiver. Activating it keeps the shells in the magazine tube from cycling into the action after the shot. With such a contraption, you can keep your standard payload at bay while you slip a special application shell into play quickly if the need arises—say, for example, a heavy load to sort things out with a cranky incoming goose while you’re out on a morning duck mission. This feature is a neat one that harkens back to the good, ol’ days of waterfowling, when cutoffs were more commonly found on shotguns. It’s a swell detail and an added value for the shotgunner.

Fit and Finish Of The Ponter Phenoma

There can be no question about the Pointer Phenoma's excellent fit and finish. Aesthetically speaking, it sports Italian-looking lines—without the Italian price tag. It carries a swept-back trigger guard; an angled walnut forearm that transitions from a deep belly to a sleek, narrow section that wraps around the hexagonally machined magazine cap; an Art Deco-looking barrel rib; and a buttstock with a cut-chiseled appearance that looks to have been inspired by some futuristic German concept car you might see zipping around on the Autobahn.

The author tested the blued walnut model and found the quality of manufacture to be very high. Reliability was rock-solid, and the author shot the Phenoma better than any other shotgun he’d ever tested. He found it to be light-recoiling, and it pointed as a natural extension of his hand-eye coordination.
The author tested the blued walnut model and found the quality of manufacture to be very high. Reliability was rock-solid, and the author shot the smoothbore better than any other shotgun he’d ever tested. He found it to be light-recoiling, and it pointed as a natural extension of his hand-eye coordination.

The Pointer Phenoma is a looker for sure … and that bluing! The receiver, magazine cap and barrel feature a blued finish that’s truly head and shoulders above so many shotguns in this price range. It’s a superb finish that carries into the receiver’s inside surfaces, making cleaning the action’s interior when the bolt and trigger groups are removed a sweet dream. I also suspect that the smooth finish on the interior grooves of the receiver contribute to the shotgun’s silky cycling, which is noticeable each time you send a load downrange. The Phenoma is also available in laminated straight black and green synthetic, along with camo finishes that include RealTree Max-5, Bottomland and Obsession.

On the right side of the barrel, just in front of the receiver, is engraved, “Pointer 12ga 2¾ and 3” Legacy Sports Reno NV.” Opposite that (inspiring) inscription is, “Made in Turkey by Armsan.” On the right side of receiver is the Pointer brand name and logo—yep, you guessed it: a pointer dog’s head—etched in white. It’s simple but looks clean. The brand, “Pointer,” is also engraved into the buttstock just behind the grip.
Functionally, the bolt release button didn’t require big, Russian farmer hands to operate (which I appreciated), and the bolt handle and bolt were smooth, slamming home with authority when a shell was dropped into the action and the bolt release was depressed.

The only issue I encountered was, frankly, on me. If I failed to push shells far enough to catch the shell stop while loading the bottom tube mag, they’d slip back under the elevator. This never caused any jams, however, because I always noticed it and cleared it before shooting.

What’s Not to Like?

I didn’t throw any parties for the Pointer Phenoma’s plastic trigger guard—which seems out of place, given the quality of the finish and bluing on the rest of the gun. In addition, I found the manual safety, which is also a plastic part, to be quite stiff. I get that it should require intentional manipulation; it just seemed “sticky” at the firing line. Whether that’s due to binding of plastic on plastic or its large, triangle-shaped design, I can’t say.

Superb bluing, along with excellent fit and finish, characterizes the Phenoma.
Superb bluing, along with excellent fit and finish, characterizes the Phenoma.

You’ve really earned your curmudgeon card when you start bellyaching about fiber-optic sights on firearms. Maybe it’s just me, but I like a gold or white bead made of steel and screwed into place. However, if you have vision issues, you’ll appreciate this feature. I must admit that the little bugger really pops out there, illuminating like a Christmas tree light against all different types of sky, from whitish-gray overcast to bluebird days. Then, again, with an MSRP of $751 and a street price of around $500, these nitpicks seem kind of petty.

Armsan History

Turkish manufacturer Armsan (whose full name is Armsan Silah Sanayi ve Ticaret AŞ) is situated in Istanbul. This company focuses on shotguns, exporting models to more than 40 countries on six continents. And these are no off-name oddities, either—with well-known American firms such as Tristar (Viper G2), Mossberg (International SA-20) and Weatherby (SA-08 and PA-459 tactical, among other models) entrusting Armsan to manufacture autoloader lines in various gauges and styles.

Armsan was established in 2006; today, it cranks out more than 5,000 scatterguns monthly from its 22,000-plus-square-foot facility. One hundred and 50 craftsmen make metal chips and assemble parts at the plant, churning out shotguns that have gained almost a cult following wherever they are owned (especially in Europe … and the American South). And it’s no wonder, because they’re well-built shotguns at incredible price points.

Pointer Phenoma In the Field

The Pointer Phenoma is sized like a cannon. Redefining what it means to be a “slow learner,” it’s taken me nearly 30 years to figure out why old-timers prefer small, lightweight grouse guns. While the 12-gauge Phenoma can certainly be pressed into service for grouse and woodcock shooting, it might not be the best tool for those jobs. It is, after all, a full-sized autoloader.

A look at the shotgun's magazine tube after a full day of shooting. Autoloading shotguns don’t typically run this clean.
A look at the Phenoma’s magazine tube after a full day of shooting. Autoloading shotguns don’t typically run this clean.

I learned this lesson on a central Wisconsin grouse hunt, lugging it around for several hours, brush-busting like a deranged sasquatch. Just as I was beginning to tear off my shirt and mumble incoherently somewhere in the middle of a massive dead sea, things came to life when I spotted movement and thought (for a second) that the Phenoma would soon thunder.

Alas, it was not to be; it was only two ladies riding through on horses. (And it didn’t help matters that our geriatric canine, George, a 13-year-old yellow lab who isn’t happy unless he’s giving puppy hugs or unleashing thermonuclear farts, was at home, snoring on his cozy couch.)

The point is, if grouse hunting is your thing, get the 20-gauge Phenoma. The 20 is stocked in black synthetic, weighs just 6.6 pounds and tapes at 42.5 inches. The big 12 weighs in at 7.2 pounds and measures 48.5 inches. I’m sure the full-sized Phenoma is terrific in the duck blind when you need to put the horsepower to an incoming flock of greenheads … which, perhaps, explains the shotgun’s popularity in the South.

However, the Pointer Phenoma is perfectly at home in the pheasant fields. We proved that when Gun Digest publisher Jim Schlender unleashed his heat-seeking gun dog, Birdie, on some farmland pheasant.

Disassembly and cleaning of the Pointer Phenoma was straightforward. The shotgun never failed to feed or run, even after a full day of busting clays.
Disassembly and cleaning of the Pointer Phenoma was straightforward. The shotgun never failed to feed or run, even after a full day of busting clays.

Shooting Winchester Rooster XR No. 6s and Federal Hi-Bird No. 5s, we unleashed a volley of anti-aircraft fire on the cackling characters and filled the game pot (almost as if we knew what we were doing). However, the last rooster got away after the shotgun’s sticky safety required a transition to thumb power to disengage. With that nano-second delay, the big rooster reached cruising altitude and sailed off into a faraway field.

Warming Up the Clay-Buster

Back on the sporting clays course, I’d installed the improved cylinder choke and had a little breeze to keep the squadrons of biting bugs grounded. I had a vest full of Kent’s new Elite Target shotshells, so the clays didn’t make it very far before the diamond-coated swarm of shot connected. I was shooting well. The Phenoma was on fire as clays turned to dust. It was the supremely gratifying hit-what-you’re-looking-at game—a game that a good shotgun makes possible.

After shooting my personal best, it was impossible not to be left impressed with Legacy’s Pointer Phenoma. For almost half the cost of comparable American-made brands, and with a quality on par with, or even better than, many of the most popular models, the Phenoma autoloader is a sleeper to put on your shotgun bucket list.

Pointer Phenoma Specs (tested):
Gauge: 12 gauge, 3 in.
Barrel: 28 in.
Length of Pull: 14 in.
Length: 48.5 in.
Weight: 7.2 lbs.
Color: Walnut/blued
MSRP: $751

For more information on the Pointer Phenoma, please visit LegacySports.com.

The article originally appeared in the December 2019 issue of Gun Digest the Magazine.

Video: Ready-To-Carry Dan Wesson DWX Compact

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True enough, polymer pistols rule the roost when it comes to carry guns, but Dan Wesson is breaking this mold with the DWX Compact.

There’s a rut when it comes to concealed carry handguns. They always have to be small, black and polymer. Think again.

Smashing the stereotype of the typical carry gun, the Dan Wesson DWX Compact swims against the popular current to the benefit of the armed citizen. What this means is cold-hard metal and plenty of it.

Some out there might roll their eyes, complaining the 9mm DWX Compact’s materials only add up to greater bulk on the hip. Yet, Dan Wesson does a masterful job of keeping the 15+1 capacity pistol fighter trim, turning to aluminum alloy for the pistol’s frame. It comes in at a very manageable 28 ounces, and boasting a 4-inch barreled gun comes in at a little less than 7.5 inches in overall length and a little over 5 inches in height. For most, that adds up to a piece that should prove more than concealable in most garb.


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A collaboration between CZ-USA and Dan Wesson, the DWX Compact isn’t your typical 1911. In addition to being a double stack pistol, it also has a healthy dose of CZ ergonomics that should bring to mind some of the Czech company’s race guns. That isn’t surprising, the DWX line was initially designed for competition. Easy to see not only in the gun’s lines, but also its flat K-style trigger.

Also taking a cue from match heaters, Wesson and CZ made the DWX Compact exceedingly simple to maintain. Much of this is thanks to a bushing-less barrel system that makes takedown a snap. But with features such as Henning Group Battlehook rear sight, tritium night front sight and the option for an accessory rail, it most certainly is a scrapper to the core.

Dan Wesson DWX Compact

Dan Wesson DWX Compact Specs
Caliber: 9mm
Magazine Capacity: 15
Frame Material: Forged Aluminum
Slide Finish: Duty Finish
Grips: Aluminum
Overall Length: 7.47 in
Barrel Length: 4
Height: 5.21 in
Width: 1.24 in
Weight: 28.5 oz
Trigger Mech: Single Action
Front Sight: Front Night Sight
Rear Sight: U Notch
Safety: Manual Thumb Safety
MSRP: $1,799

For more information on the Dan Wesson DWX Compact, please visit danwessonfirearms.com.

Rossler Titan 6: Practically Any Rifle You Want It To Be

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Rossler Titan 6 2

As any campfire debate will attest to, there’s no one rifle cartridge that can do it all. There might be one gun, however: Meet the Roessler Titan 6.

The Rößler, often called the Roessler Titan 6, is an ultra-modern, accurate, interchangeable, rotary bolt-action rifle that gives hunters access to enough gun for any adventure. Any of them. With authority.

From antelope to zebras—not to mention Cape buffalo, coyotes, mountain sheep, Kodiak brown bears and elk—the Titan 6 and its ability to be configured to more than 31 different “flavors” of proven cartridges ensures any hunter who is willing to invest in the Titan 6 system will always have plenty of gun for the occasion.

While the idea of interchangeable-barreled rifles isn’t new, the concept of one that offers a follow-up shot and is affordable is. The Titan 6 could be that gun. It just depends on what the word, “affordable,” means to you.

The Titan 6 is a rotary bolt-action rifle that enables shooters to change cartridges with nothing more than a hex wrench, new barrel, bolt and magazine. No special tools, lathes, wrenches or go/no-go gauges are needed.
The Roessler Titan 6 is a rotary bolt-action rifle that enables shooters to change cartridges with nothing more than a hex wrench, new barrel, bolt and magazine. No special tools, lathes, wrenches or go/no-go gauges are needed.

What is Roessler (Rowa)? It’s a small, family-owned and -operated firearms manufacturer in Kufstein, Austria, that started in 1996 by making custom and small-batch orders of single-shot rifles, shotgun rifles and bergstutzens. Due to high demand, Walter Rößler, the son of Erich Rößler, quickly joined the company. The Titan 6 was introduced in March 2002.

Roessler Titan 6 Flavors Tested

Austin Cole of TR Imports graciously lent me a Titan 6 with three different barrels in cartridges that ought to work for most game around Virginia. I got a .223 Remington and 6.5 Creedmoor and, for a bit more pep, a magnum-actioned 7mm Remington Magnum.


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Now, I know a few of you might get sidetracked here and erupt into a spirited debate about how a 6.5 Creedmoor makes a 7mm Remington Magnum unnecessary—or not. But you’d be missing the whole point of the Titan 6: You don’t have to carry around a battery of rifles any more to cater your cartridge palette to your game’s taste buds. All you need is a gun case that can hold a few extra barrels, different bolts, magazines, a 5mm Hex wrench and different ammo.

The beautiful wood leaps out at you, with the Bavarian-style stock placing curves at every angle.
The beautiful wood leaps out at you, with the Bavarian-style stock placing curves at every angle.

Thanks to the smart engineering idea of locking the bolt inside the barrel and not the receiver, you could change your cartridge in your hunting blind. Not only don’t you need a lathe, you also don’t need a barrel wrench, go/no-go gauges or lubrication. Sure, you’d need new ammo, the right dope for your optic and at least six to 10 minutes of quality time with your gun disassembled. Nevertheless, that’s a small price to pay for knowing you can have just about any cartridge you want faster than you can say, “instant gratification.”

By the way, there’s no need to debate why. It’s a personal choice, like what beer you drink, boots you wear or how you like your steak cooked. Who cares why? Care about the fact that you can! The critical thing to remember here is that the Titan 6 rifle is a real-world, do-it-all, bolt-action rifle platform that works—and it works well.

18 Stock Configurations

Let’s take a closer look at this wonder-gun.

The craftsmanship of the rifle is seen in the metal, the fit and the wood. The pistol-grip plate proudly tells owners they have a Titan rifle in their hands.
The craftsmanship of the Roessler Titan 6 is seen in the metal, the fit and the wood. The pistol-grip plate proudly tells owners they have a Titan rifle in their hands.

The Roessler Titan 6 is a more robust version of the Titan 3. What’s more robust? Well, three more lugs on the bolt head, giving the rifle the ability to handle medium- and large-bore cartridges such as the .308 Winchester and the all-world .375 Ruger. The latest version of the Titan 6 offers customers a rifle platform with 18 different stock configurations. Want a carbon stock? No problem. Wood? Yes. Want even fancier wood? Have at it. Bench rest? PSR? Absolutely. You get the idea.

The cockpit of the rifle action houses the tang safety, which can, and does, work easily and quietly with your thumb. The receiver is constructed of anodized aluminum and can be had in either black or silver. Roessler makes it for southpaws too. You already know you can get, at last count, 34 different barrel chambers (.222 Remington through .375 Ruger), and those barrels can be blued, stainless, fluted and even customized with special twist rates if you’re so inclined.

The rotary bolt is described by Roessler as the “asymmetrically arranged six-lug bolt” that is locked directly in the barrel with only 60-degree bolt lift. The trigger choices aren’t limited either. You can get a shotgun trigger or a single-set adjustable trigger. The six-lug bolt (The Titan 3 is a three-lugged bolt-action rifle) offers a swift, 60-degree short throw, along with being faster than bolts with longer throws. It also helps accommodate a lot of today’s larger rifle scopes that have to be mounted higher on rifles with long bolt handle throws. The gun uses a removable magazine that holds three rounds for mini- and standard-length cartridges and two rounds for medium- and magnum-sized cartridges. The whole rifle, empty and without an optic, weighs in at about 6.4 pounds.

Shooting The Roessler Titan 6

So, how does this thing shoot? In two words: just fine.

Titan Spec

I set up the Titan 6 with a Leupold VXIIC 3-9x40mm I had just upgraded through the Leupold Custom Shop. My best groups were with the 6.5 Creedmoor, using Hornady 143-grain ELD-X bullets. These gave me a best-of three-shot group measuring .904 inch. (Please note: There was always a significant shift in point of impact between barrel changes. It’s to be expected, managed and accounted for as a shooter.)

The Roessler Titan 6 rifle is an excellent firearm—even if you never switch out the barrel. But, that’s like saying a convertible Porsche 911 is an excellent car, even if you never put its top down. The Titan 6 platform was made for changing cartridges; and the engineering marvel that is the Titan 6 being able to routinely do just that with more-than-acceptable accuracy across a wide range of cartridge choices and personalities makes its price reasonable.

It really isn’t that much more expensive than you’d expect to pay for most quality conventional bolt-action rifles. Titan 6 owners should expect to pay north of a $1,500 (starting price) and, depending on how the gun is configured, go much higher in cost accordingly.

Different bolts with different bolt heads make it easy to match the right cartridge barrel to the bolt.
Different bolts with different bolt heads make it easy to match the right cartridge barrel to the bolt.

There’s a lot of practical logic to a one-gun, multi-barreled system such as the Titan 6 rifle. Shooters can learn the same trigger, use the same optic, check height, length of pull, etc. It breeds familiarity for a shooter, because the only thing changing is the amount of “thump” the rifle will deliver. Sure, a new cartridge setup will cost you about as much as a new rifle, but the value of a one-gun system might just overcome that sticker shock.

Available Calibers: .243 Win., 6.5×55 Se, 6.5×57, 6.5×65 RWS, 7mm-08 Rem., 7×57, .308 Win., .358 Win., 8×57 IS, .25-06 Rem., .270 Win., 7×64, .30-06 Springfield, 6.5×47 Lapua, 6.5-284 Norma, 9.3×62, 8.5×63 Reb., 8x68S, 6.5×68, 7mm Rem. Mag., .300 Win. Mag., .375 Ruger, .270 WSM, .300 WSM, .338 Win. Mag.

For more information on the Rossler Titan 6, please visit titan6.com.

The article originally appeared in the September 2019 issue of Gun Digest the Magazine.

Crucial Concealment Covert OWB And Covert IWB Review

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Sans bells and whistles, Crucial Concealment Covert IWB and OWB holster simply offer performance.
Sans bells and whistles, Crucial Concealment Covert IWB and OWB holster simply offer performance.

Editor's Note: Gun Digest is supported by readers, and when you buy something we recommend, we may get an affiliate commission. However, this never affects the price you pay or the gear we pick.

Simple, effective and affordable, Crucial Concealment hits the right notes with its Covert OWB and IWB holsters.

It seems everybody and their second cousin is in the holster-making game. On the good side of the saturation, there’s been genuine innovation in this niche of the gun world, more than there’s been in a long time. On the bad, some of these advancements have led to hangers long on bells and whistles and short on what really counts. What really counts is a rig that’s consistent, comfortable and you’re willing to bet your life on.

It’s a pretty simple formula, but it’s amazing how many miss tallying up all those variables. Not the folks at Crucial Concealment, however.

A relatively new player in the Kydex holster game—an affiliate brand of BlackPoint Tactical—the company has whipped up a pair of hangers that hit the right notes. At the same time, they haven’t gone off the reservation with the Covert IWB (inside the waistband) and Covert OWB (outside the waistband) holsters. Both are elegantly simple, effective and have you covered for a majority of carry positions on the hip. Perhaps best of all, they don’t break the bank along the way.

Crucial Concealment System

Before we get into the specifics of the Covert IWB and Covert OWB holsters, it’s worth talking a bit about the ethos behind Crucial Concealment. Why does it exist? After all, BlackPoint Tactical already has a solid foothold in the holster market.

Made of study Kydex, the Crucial Concealment holsters are precision modeled to your particular make and model pistol, for an excellent fit.
Made of study Kydex, the Crucial Concealment holsters are precision modeled to your particular make and model pistol, for an excellent fit.

Economy, for the most part.

Yes, Crucial Concealment comes in at a much lower price than its sister brand, yet it’s not a corner-cutting venture. Instead, the brand has taken a new approach to provide something equal in value. Where that really shakes out in its streamlined design.

Rather than bolt on particular features, the company integrates them directly into the Kydex scabbard itself. This simplifies the manufacturing process, while keeping the holster as functional as ever. Additionally, this all-in-one design philosophy makes for a lighter and more minimalistic holster. That equals a system that’s as simple as kindergarten math to adjust your personal carry style. Micro tuning is a matter of tightening or loosening screws, which no one can complain about. I couldn’t wait to dive into the Covert IWB and Covert OWB holsters (fitted for the Glock 19) the company sent my way.

Covert IWB

Light as a pocketful of feathers and slim as a high-noon shadow, there isn’t a ton to the Covert IWB. That’s a good thing, given bulk is a killer in this style of holster. The rig is little more than a Kydex scabbard, three screws, three rubber washers and a high-impact plastic belt clip. However, there’s a lot happening here.

The key bit, at least for me, is a little bump over the trigger guard that hangs over like a bent finger. On inspection, you might not notice it, but it makes a huge difference in how the holster conceals. Essentially, its function is much like the “hook” found on appendix rigs, meant to push against the belt and cant the grip toward the body. Basically, it ensures your gun doesn’t print. It’s subtly executed, not going so far as to make the gun dig into your side.


For more information on concealed carry holsters check out:

Your midriff is also guarded with the holster, this time from the bite of your gun. On the Glock 19, all but the last couple of cocking serrations are covered, not only protecting you from your gun, but vice versa. Even on hot days, the bulk of your pistol is kept away from your body’s moisture—cutting down on how often you have to clean your heater.

A clever design, the finger on the IWB holster keep your gun close into your side and under cover. Note the holes above, it's ambidextrous, too.
A clever design, the finger on the IWB holster keep your gun close into your side and under cover. Note the holes above, it's ambidextrous, too.

The Covert IWB is cant and retention adjustable, though in the former case it doesn’t have a huge spectrum. Honestly, it moves just a few degrees off a neutral cant—adjusted via the clip’s attachment screws. That isn’t ideal if you’re used to an FBI cant (15- to 20-degree off neutral), but for those comfortable with a vertical draw, it's more than enough play to dial it in for comfort and concealment. As far as retention is concerned, a single screw below the trigger guard makes setting it a snap.

Finally, the holster is RDS (Red Dot Sight) cut, meaning if you run an optic the Covert IWB is ready for your pistol. This feature also mimics the characteristic of a speed cut, allowing you to clear the holster more quickly, thus get your gun in the fight more quickly.

Overall, carrying it in around the 4 o’clock position, I found the rig comfortable and concealable. A lite T-shirt was enough to keep a gun under wraps in all but the most extreme contortions. The holster kept my pistol in place, but at the same time didn’t interfere with my draw stroke or, for that matter, re-holstering. Best of all, it was light—definitely making it an option if you have your self-defense gun on you for long stints.

Covert OWB

Crucial Concealment didn’t lose focus moving outside the waistband. The Covert OWB is as minimal as its IWB hoster, making it a snap to keep undercover. Aiding the holster in this is the Covert’s well thought out curve, which holds the hanger close to your waist and cuts down on your pistol’s profile. It sits well at a traditional 3 o’clock position, but also rides tight further back, giving you some flexibility.

Granted, you don’t have a lot of wiggle room in cant, but there’s enough play to tune the rig for comfort and ease of draw. You can set the loops for a high ride if your upper garb runs a bit shorter.

The scabbard features an extended back, keeping your pistol’s slide from pressing into your side. In addition, it is also forward-looking in design, manufactured with an RDS cut to accommodate a red-dot sight, if you happen to run one.

A easy to adjust system, cant and rise is modified by how you place the off-set loops.
A easy to adjust system, cant and rise is modified by how you place the off-set loops.

This rig rode well for me, sticking close to my side and proving an excellent option with a coat on. Like most OWB options, I believe it’d be a tricky system to run in summer gear—shorts and T-shirt. But for cold weather months, it was more than comfortable and effective. The RDS cut was especially nice, keeping the barrel of my pistol unimpeded and draw stroke a tad shorter. And the rig spits up the G19 like it left a bad taste in its mouth. All in all, it’s nice.

Points Of Contention

There weren’t many bones to pick with what Crucial Concealment puts on the table. The perfect system, right? Not quite.

In design, Crucial Concealment uses plastic belt loops and clips to secure the Covert IWB and Cover OWB to your person. They held tight in my time with each and kept the rigs light as all get out. Plus, the material was flexible enough that it should show resiliency over time. But, in my opinion, steel remains preferable material for these features. It’s there for the long haul.

The one bone to pick with Covert holsters are plastic belt clips and loops. Though, in testing they hung tough.
The one bone to pick with Covert holsters are plastic belt clips and loops. Though, in testing they hung tough.

The other area that needs consideration with Crucial Concealment is its selection. In all, the company makes options for five makes—Glock, Ruger, Smith & Wesson, Sig Sauer, Springfield and Taurus. From there it’s only a small number of models, generally the most popular from each company. Glock has the most, with Covert OWB holsters for the G17, G19, G43/43X and G48. You’ll have to do your research to see if the company’s wears are compatible with what you carry.

Parting Shot

Holsters are among the trickiest aspects to nail down in a concealed carry system. Even the best-designed ones won’t work for every person, quite simply because no two bodies are identical.
That said, Crucial Concealment has gone a long way in cooking up two systems that a good swath of armed citizens should find efficient, effective and comfortable.

There’s little secret about how the company pulled this off. Plain and simple, they kept the Covert IWB and Cover OWB simple and fundamentally sound. For the price Crucial Concealment is asking, both prove true values.

Limited time offer for Gun Digest readers, 10-percent off Crucial Concealment Covert IWB and OWB holsters with the coupon code “GUNDIGEST”. Get yours HERE!

Don’t Conceal Your Curiosity: Dive Into CCW Insights

6 Worst Flu Epidemics Preceding Coronavirus

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Illustration of a coronavirus.
Illustration of a coronavirus.

Coronavirus has the world panicked, but it isn't the first time humanity has stared down a pandemic.

CDC Tips To Avoid The Coronavirus:

  • Wash your hand often with soap for at least 20 seconds.
  • Avoid close contact with sick people.
  • Remain home if you are sick.
  • Cover your mouth and nose if you sneeze or cough.
  • Wear a facemask around other people if you are sick.
  • Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces daily.

Something strange is afoot at your local store. Not a lick of toilet paper is to be had, and one can of tuna is left on the shelves. If you’re remodeling your home, forget about getting a respirator—you’ll just have to endure that drywall dust and the risk of silicosis.

What the heck is going on?

If you’ve even a passing interest in the news you know the shortage of these and many more items has been caused by panic around the Coronavirus (COVID-1). First identified in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, the virus has spread globally relatively quickly. At present, Coronavirus has been detected in more than 107 countries, with China (80,900 cases), Italy (12,400) and Iran (9,000) among the worst hit, according to the New York Times. The United States hasn’t been spared, with 938 cases identified at the time of writing (March 11) and 29 deaths by the Centers For Disease Control And Prevention’s numbers. Certainly, there’s more on the horizon.

At a brief glance, the coronavirus is a strain of viruses that affect mammals and birds, and manifests itself as a respiratory tract infection. Generally mild, thought to be the cause of the common cold, rarer forms of the coronavirus prove lethal. Though tagged as Wuhan Flu, the illness is not a strain of influenza. COVID-19, known as a novel coronavirus—or new—is one such example. Making it especially tricky to contain and identify is its long incubation period of up to 14 days. Complicating matters, scientists have yet to devise a vaccine to combat the virus, giving doctors only basic options in treating and preventing its spread.

A serious disease, particularly among the elderly and those already suffering for other maladies—particularly respiratory—COVID-19 is far from the first world-wide outbreak of deadly sickness. Much of the 20th and 21st centuries have been defined by flu pandemics, some of them globally devastating. Our sister publication, OffGrid, has gathered up six of the worst flu pandemics of the past 110 years. While it doesn’t make the outbreak of the coronavirus any less intimidating, it certainly shows this isn’t the first time we as humans have stared down a global plague.

Read About The Worst Flu Pandemics


Be Prepared!:

Is There A Better Browning BLR Than The Lightweight ’81 Takedown?

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Browning BLR

A look back at the idiosyncratic and effective Browning BLR Lightweight ’81 Stainless Takedown.

What Makes The Browning BLR Standout Among Lever-Actions:

  • Locks up much like a bolt-action with a rotating bolt head.
  • Utilizes a rack-and-pinion system, which makes for very smooth operation.
  • Side ejecting, making it function flawlessly with a scope.
  • Capable of chambering long-action cartridges and magnums.
  • Feeds off a detachable box magazine, allowing it to safely shoot spitzer bullets.

I often wonder what John Moses Browning would have to say if he walked into a modern gun shop. Would he stare with disgust at anything that wasn’t properly blued and with a checkered walnut stock? Or would he look at a synthetic design with a Cerakote metal finish and nod in approval at the strength and resilience of the materials?

We’ll never know, but one thing is for certain: Firearms sure have gone through some changes since Mr. B. was at the drawing board. Some of his designs—quite obviously, timeless—are still perfectly viable and get used each season in the hunting fields … or on a daily basis, in the case of the 1911 pistol.

The company that bears his name remains innovative, and while Browning’s name is associated with some of the most iconic lever-action rifles ever designed (is there any question as to how popular the Model 1894, 1886, 1892 and 1895 rifles are or were?), the BLR is an inventive, modern twist that I’d wager John would appreciate.

Browning BLR: A Bolt Rifle Operated by a Lever

Introduced in 1969, the Browning Lever-Action Rifle (BLR) operates in a similar manner to the earlier Winchester Model 88: It uses a detachable box magazine in lieu of a tubular magazine and locks up by means of a rotating bolt head, much as a bolt-action rifle does. The Browning BLR uses a rack-and-pinion system, making for a very smooth lever throw with even the longest cartridges. Yes, the BLR is fully capable of using much more than the standard rimmed cartridges so often associated with lever-action rifles, including magnum cartridges such as the 7mm Remington Magnum and .300 Winchester Magnum. With true side-eject, mounting a scope on the top of the receiver poses no issue. To be honest, this lever-action gun performs more like a bolt-action rifle.

The rack-and-pinion action of the Browning BLR, which gives a fast, yet smooth, feel.
The rack-and-pinion action of the Browning BLR, which gives a fast, yet smooth, feel.

Because of its lack of a tubular magazine, the Browning BLR is not limited to round- or flat-nosed bullets. This is yet another reason this design is often referred to as a “bolt rifle operated by a lever,” and the BLR has nearly the same hunting potential as the bolt guns. Additionally, as if all these features of the standard BLR aren’t enough to hold your attention, the model I received offered even more.

You see, Browning has taken its lever gun and made it lighter, stronger, impervious to weather and even capable of breaking down into two pieces for easy packing. Yes, the Lightweight ’81 Stainless Takedown is probably the antithesis of what many younger shooters and hunters would consider to be a “proper” rifle.


Bone Up On Browning:


However, once you look at the design and spend a bit of time with it at the bench or in the field, this rifle grows on you. In theory, a takedown rifle with a thin barrel and a rack-and-pinion bolt maneuvering system shouldn’t print the tiny, little groups this rifle prints—there’s no pillar bedding or 10-ounce trigger here—but in defiance of all the rules of accuracy, this gun is a shooter.

Two for One

This rifle is, wonderfully, two rifles in one. It’s a fast iron-sighted rifle, well-balanced, light and compact enough to throw in a backpack for a mountain adventure for whitetail, black bear or even moose. With an adjustable rear sight and a TruGlo/Marbles bright-orange front sight, target acquisition is seriously fast. The laminate stock and Cerakote finish ensure you can forget about the weather (that’s an important thing in the mountains of the Northeast), and the balance of the rifle makes it a perfect choice for tracking whitetails in the snow, where a single shot opportunity might be all you have all season … and that buck is certainly not going to pose for a picture.

The detachable steel magazine of the BLR Takedown allows for the use of pointed spitzer bullets.
The detachable steel magazine of the BLR Takedown allows for the use of pointed spitzer bullets.

I mention balance, because that was one of the appealing attributes of the lever-action design: It’s wonderfully quick to the shoulder.

For the Lightweight ’81 Stainless Takedown’s receiver, Browning has used a good, strong aluminum alloy, which not only reduces weight but also balances the rifle very nicely. Yes, I said, “aluminum”—but not as in cheap, flimsy soda-can aluminum. It’s a rigid-but-light alloy that’s handled hundreds of rounds of .30-06 Springfield with no issues whatsoever; that includes some of my handloads, which run on the higher side of the pressure spectrum.

Adding a Scope To The Takedown Browning BLR

If iron sights aren’t your cup of tea, Browning has drilled and tapped the top of the barrel to allow for a scout-style scope that won’t shift zero as you’re breaking down the rifle. This is also a rifle that—providing you don’t need to break down the rifle often and lose zero—has the accuracy potential to rival most .30-06 bolt rifles I’ve ever spent a considerable amount of time with.

As I said earlier, this rifle probably shouldn’t shoot as well as it does, but it does, and that seems to be common for this model in many different calibers. Mount a good scope on top of that aluminum receiver, and you’ve got, at least in the case of my test gun, a rifle worthy of shots out to sane hunting distances (or what I call inside of 450 yards).

For my own purposes—whitetail and black bear hunting in the Catskill and Adirondack mountains of New York—I mounted a Leupold FX-II 4×33 fixed-power scope in Talley’s excellent detachable rings, giving me the option of using the iron sights should something terrible befall the riflescope.

Browning BLR Than The Lightweight ’81 Takedown 6
The BLR Lightweight ’81 Stainless Takedown, especially when equipped with Talley detachable rings, breaks down into a neat and portable package.

The 4x magnification allows me to make the farthest shot available in that terrain (probably 175 yards—and that’s a rarity), yet I can pick up close targets very quickly. And, like all of Talley’s detachable rings, they return to zero each time—or so close that it won’t matter in the deer woods. I’ve also tested a Leupold VX-3i 1.5-5x20mm on this rifle. Either scope makes an excellent choice.

Not the Same, Old Rifles

The Browning BLR Lightweight ’81 Takedown has a straight-grip rear stock of laminate hardwood and is checkered to 18 LPI, culminating in a ½-inch-thick polymer recoil pad with a nice texture on the butt end. The forend is also checkered and has a rather square front end (perhaps the only thing I don’t like about this rifle) just ahead of the barrel band. Underneath the forend, just north of the receiver, is the release lever for takedown. Overall, I find the feel of the BLR ’81 Lightweight to be a breath of fresh air in comparison to the multitude of cookie-cutter, polymer-stocked rifles on today’s market.

Operating the lever, you’ll find a different feel from the traditional Marlin 336 or Winchester 94 or 1886; that rack-and-pinion system gives all sorts of leverage. And, the fact that the trigger moves along with the entire lever assembly avoids the pinched trigger finger that plagues so many shooters. Even the .30-06 Springfield case (longer than most of the traditional lever-action cartridges) operates with what feels like a shorter lever throw than other designs.

The exposed hammer—with a wide surface that gives a good grip, even with gloves on in cold weather—has a half-cock feature via which you can tilt the hammer downward in order to verify the position at a quick glance. The trigger, as I mentioned earlier, isn’t a 10-ounce trigger, but it wasn’t as bad as some earlier BLR models have. My Lyman digital trigger scale gave an average reading of 5 pounds, 4 ounces; and while the front part of the trigger pull is a bit gritty, the accuracy of the rifle makes up for this.

Tough Guy BLR

This BLR was very happy with a good number of factory loads, as well as my own handloads. Because it’s chambered in .30-06, you get the wide selection of .30-caliber bullets; and, from 125 grains all the way up to 220 grains, there was a load for nearly all occasions. This gun liked the Federal Power Shok Copper 150-grain load (putting three of them into just under ¾-inch groups at 100 yards), as well as the Nosler 180-grain Ballistic Tip load, with the group size opening up just a little.

Not a lever-gun staple, the .30-06 is dynamite out of the BLR.
Not a lever-gun staple, the .30-06 is dynamite out of the BLR.

Norma’s new Bondstrike load, built around its proprietary polymer-tipped, bonded-core bullet, shot very well in the BLR, giving exactly 1 MOA performance. I’ve used this bullet on game in both the .308 Winchester and the .300 Winchester Magnum, and it’s a wonderful design for any big-game animal.

The BLR’s 22-inch barrel gave velocities very close to the advertised figures, and although it’s on the thinner side, barrel heat wasn’t a serious issue. My own handloads—built around the 180-grain Federal Trophy Bonded Tip and the 180-grain Nosler Partition—gave ¾-inch accuracy with no feeding or pressure issues in the lever gun.

This is a definite testament to the strength of the Browning BLR action: While other lever designs can handle the pressures of the .30-06 Springfield (the 1895 Winchester is certainly one), few can handle the 7mm Remington Magnum and .300 Winchester Magnum. The BLR, in any configuration, is one tough hombre.

I’m not overly fond of detachable magazines, because I admittedly lose things easily, but the design of the BLR steel magazine is sound. There are no plastic tabs to break or chip, and I know of many that are approaching the half-century mark and are still giving good service. Knowing my own propensity for misplacing things, I would definitely advise buying a second magazine as either a spare or a means of fast reloading—although with a capacity of four rounds, you probably won’t need a fast magazine change.

Browning BLR Than The Lightweight ’81 Takedown 3

Hunting with a lever-action rifle is usually a means of connecting with our hunting heritage. Lever guns are undeniably nostalgic, although they are as effective in the heavily wooded areas today as they were a century ago. It often seems that those now carrying lever rifles in the field are either carrying grandpa’s rifle (and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that) or have purchased an historic or historically inspired rifle.

However, in spite of the radical advancements in the bolt-action rifles, the lever rifle still hangs on. I’m glad Browning has seen fit to offer the BLR Lightweight ’81 Stainless Takedown; it’s a rifle that deserves to evolve and deserves to be taken afield. I do a significant amount of hunting with bolt-action rifles in calibers from .22 Long Rifle up through the .440 Jeffery, and I enjoy time in the deer and bear woods with a lever gun.

The Browning BLR just so happens to be a product of rifle evolution. So, before you cry, “Blasphemy!” give the rifle an audition. You might just make a new friend.

Browning BLR Takedown Specs:
Weight: 7 lbs., 4 oz.
Calibers: .30-06 Springfield (tested), .243 Winchester, 7mm-08 Remington, .308 Winchester, .358 Winchester (wicked cool!), .450 Marlin, .270 Winchester, .300 WSM, 7mm Remington Magnum, .300 Winchester Magnum
Action: Lever action; aluminum alloy receiver
Barrel: 22 in.; stainless steel
Magazine: Detachable box; four-round capacity
Sights: Marbles/TruGlo red front sight; adjustable rear sight; drilled and tapped for both receiver scope mounts and on-barrel scout scope mounts
Stock: Gray laminate wood; cut checkering, 18 LPI
Overall Length: 43.0 in.
MSRP: $1,309.99

For more information on the Browning BLR, please visit browning.com.

The article originally appeared in the December 2019 issue of Gun Digest the Magazine.

Browning Automatic Rifle: The Gun That Changed the Infantry

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Today’s sleeker, more refined Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) hardly bares a resemblance to those of yesteryear.
Today’s sleeker, more refined Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) hardly bares a resemblance to those of yesteryear.

THE U.S. ARMY'S Browning Automatic Rifle, always known as the BAR, was one of the great infantry weapons of its day.

Browning BAR Military History

The Browning Automatic Rifle served in World War I, World War II, the Korean War and other conflicts, and some are still in military service.

The U.S. Army adopted the BAR in 1917 and retained it as a standard infantry weapon into the 1960s. From its introduction, this reliable and rugged weapon's accurate and effective fire changed the basic infantry organization and tactics of the U.S. Army and the Marine Corps.

The BAR M1918A2 was the final version, only slightly changed from time to time after 1940.
The BAR M1918A2 was the final version, only slightly changed from time to time after 1940.

The Browning Automatic Rifle began as another of the remarkable ideas of the amazing arms inventor John Moses Browning several years before World War I began.

He conceived it as an automatic rifle to complement the bolt-action rifles used by infantrymen of the day, but he did not develop it at the time because he realized the U.S. Army of the period would not want it.

Browning's BAR in World War I

Shortly after WWI began, in the fall of 1914, Browning began to develop his “automatic rifle” at the Browning Brothers' experimental gun machine shop in Ogden, Utah.

In late 1916, he demonstrated a prototype at the Colt factory in Hartford, Connecticut, and it worked very well. By this time, the U.S. Army was learning to use its existing machineguns in the troubles along the Mexican border, and they were interested in the new Browning's possibilities.

The Army first tested the BAR in February 1917, several months before the United States entered WWI in April 1917. Like so many Browning designs, it showed great promise, and Colt was encouraged to continue with its development, although the Army had neither the organization nor the tactics to use it at the time.

Inventor John M. Browning (left) and Frank Burton of Winchester with an early production BAR in 1918.
Inventor John M. Browning (left) and Frank Burton of Winchester with an early production BAR in 1918.

Then in May 1917, the Army adopted the BAR, even though its design had not yet been finished. At the time, no production facility or tooling to manufacture it existed.

Colt could not put the BAR into production quickly because they had massive military orders for their pistols, revolvers and machineguns — all critically needed at the front.

The Army negotiated a license with Colt which allowed them to assign production of the BAR to any manufacturer they selected. In September 1917, after several false starts and much confusion, Winchester got a contract manufacture it.

In early 1918, after testing the pre-production Winchester BAKs, the Army standardized the weapon as the “Cal. 30 Browning Automatic Rifle, Model of 1918.” At the same time, Colt and Marlin-Rockwell were also given BAR production contracts.

Winchester began delivering production BARs in June 1918, and Colt and Marlin-Rockwell deliveries began in late July 1918. Getting the BAR from prototype to production in about one year was one of the most successful WWI ordnance projects.

The first BARs reached the American Expeditionary Force, the A.E.F., in France in August 1918. They were desperately wanted to replace the marginal French Chauchat machine guns American troops were using in combat at the time.

Second Lt. Val A Browning, the inventor's son, went to France with the first BARs to demonstrate them, and he is supposed to have been the first person to fire one in combat.

The prototype BAR tested in February 1917 differed in many respects, including its open-top receiver. This one still exists in the collection of John M. Browning's arms displayed in Ogden, Utah.
The prototype BAR tested in February 1917 differed in many respects, including its open-top receiver. This one still exists in the collection of John M. Browning's arms displayed in Ogden, Utah.

The first Army unit to use the BAR in combat was the 79th Division in an action on September 13, 1918. While the BAR was an instant combat success, integrating it into the U.S. Army infantry organization was a major project.

Machine guns were regimental weapons in World War I, but the BAR became a company weapon. Originally, a U.S. Army WWI rifle company consisted of four rifle platoons. One of these was converted to a BAR platoon of three squads with two BAR sections each.

In combat, one BAR squad was assigned to each rifle platoon. At the end of the war, plans were being made to enlarge the BAR platoon so there would be one BAR for each eight-man rifle squad. This organization did not go into use because there weren't enough BARs or BAR men.

The BAR's Use By Infantrymen

Teaching a soldier to use and care for a BAR was not difficult. It was fired from the same prone, sitting, kneeling and standing positions as a regular infantry rifle.

In addition, the WWI BAR magazine belt provided a special pocket for the butt of the BAR which was used when firing from the hip in the “assault position.”

The 18-pound WWI Model 1918 Browning Automatic Rifle fired from an open bolt, and the forward movement of the bolt caused some aim disturbance. However, the BAR was a very accurate weapon, particularly when fired from any handy rest.

It could be fired in its semi-automatic manner, but it was found to be most effective firing short three- or four-round full-automatic bursts. Longer full-automatic bursts were inaccurate and a waste of ammunition.

Short bursts were easily fired by simply pulling and releasing the BAR's trigger quickly. This mode also kept the weapon from overheating.

The BAR saw relatively little combat in World War I, but it proved its worth beyond any doubt, so much so that it was one of the very few weapons kept in production after the end of World War I.

Some 102,125 BARs were built during WWI, and about half of them were delivered after the end of the war. At that point, Winchester had built 47,123; Marlin-Rockwell, 39,002; and Colt, 16,000.

The BAR 1918A1 is a 1930s improvement with prone-fire enhancement in mind.
The BAR 1918A1 is a 1930s improvement with prone-fire enhancement in mind.

The Army's WWI combat success of the BAR caused the British to consider adopting it, and they tested a version in their 303 rifle caliber. The French also considered adopting it in 30-06 caliber. Neither of these projects continued after the end of WWI.

At the end of that war, the BAR manufacturing rights reverted to Colt, and they manufactured BARs in the 1920s and 1930s for export military sales. The calibers included 6.5mm, 7mm and 8mm Mauser. Colt also built a special law enforcement “Monitor” version of the BAR and sold a few of them.

Foreign-Licensed Machine Gun Variants

In the 1920s, Browning licensed foreign manufacturers to build the BAR. FN of Belgium built it as their Model 30 and sold them to Belgian, Chilean, Chinese and other armies in limited numbers.

After World War II, FN reintroduced their BAR as the improved Model D with a quick-change barrel, something the U.S. Army never considered necessary or desirable. The FN Model D BAR in .30-06 caliber was used by the Belgian army, and the Egyptian army bought a number in 8mm Mauser caliber.

The Swedish government also bought a license to build BARs in 1920, and their army adopted it as the M21 in their 6.5mm. In the late 1930s they introduced an improved model with a quick-change barrel as their M37 BAR.

Poland also bought a license to build the BAR in the 1920s, and their army used them in 8mm as the Model 28. The Poles also built an experimental 8mm infantry rifle based on the BAR design, which they never placed in production.

In 1922, the U.S. Army adopted a modified BAR known as the “Cal. 30 Browning Machine Rifle M1922,” at the request of the Cavalry Board.

It was nothing more than a slightly heavier BAR with a finned barrel, bipod, and buttrest. This model was specifically for use with horse-mounted cavalry, and it became obsolete before World War II. Existing models were converted back to regular BARs.

All through the 1920s and 1930s, our Army worked on finding the best way to integrate the Browning Automatic Rifle into the infantry organization. By the end of the 1930s, two structures had been developed.

One was an infantry platoon with three eight-man rifle squads and a fourth eight-man squad with three BAR teams; that was standard at the end of the 1930s. The second approach involved a new, larger infantry platoon with four twelve-man squads, each with its own BAR team.

Extensive troop testing proved the twelve-man squad was tactically superior. It was adopted for Army and Marine Corps infantry in 1941, and it remained standard through WWII and as long after that as the BAR remained in service.

Early Improvements to Browning's Automatic Rifle

In the 1930s, the Army looked into improving the BAR. It was agreed the most effective fire was delivered prone, so a bipod was added and a hinged buttplate was provided to stabilize the gun in prone firing.

This version was adopted in June 1937 as the “Cal. 30 Browning Automatic Rifle M1918A1” and put in production by modifying existing M1918 BARs.

While both the M1918 and M1918A1 BARs were used in combat and for training until about 1942, a better gun, the “Cal. 30 Browning Automatic Rifle M1918A2,” was adopted for use in 1940.

This was the model used in WWII and thereafter, as long as the BAR remained in military service. Both M1918 and M1918A1 BARs were rebuilt as M1918A2s, and the M1918A2 was the WWII production model.

The M1918A2 BAR had some major changes from the earlier models: It had a bipod attached to its muzzle at its flash hider. A new forend with a metal heat shield was provided. Clip guides were added to the front of the trigger housing to improve magazine loading and survivability.

A completely new fire-rate-control buffer mechanism was installed in the buttstock, which allowed the BAR to fire selectively at full-automatic cyclic rates of 350 or 550 rounds per minute. The buttstock was also provided with a hinged fire support buttplate and a detachable butt support.

The M1918A2 BAR was in the hands of troops when WWII began for the U.S. armed forces. All of its modifications proved very successful except the buttstock support, which was no longer used by troops after 1943.

A U.S. Army manual for the Browning Automatic Rifle M1918 with the parts names common to all models of the BAR.
A U.S. Army manual for the Browning Automatic Rifle M1918 with the parts names common to all models of the BAR.

Very few changes were made to the BAR during WWII. An accessory carrying handle, the T4, was adopted in December 1942, but it was seldom issued during the war. It remained available as long as the BAR was standard, but it saw only limited service.

In 1942, a plastic stock for the BAR was developed because of stock-wood shortages and problems with rot encountered in jungle warfare.

At the end of WWII, a prong-type flash suppressor, the T35, was developed to replace the old tubular flash hider, but it was not extensively used until later during the Korean War.

The BAR Re-Enters Production During World War II

The huge expansion of the U.S. armed forces for WWII made it necessary to put the BAR back in production.

The project began by using the basic production tooling from Colt, Marlin-Rockwell and Winchester, which had been placed in storage after WWI. Deliveries of new BARs began in 1942, and 208,380 were built: 188,380 by New England Arms Co., a wartime company; and 20,000 by IBM.

The BAR M1922 was meant for the cavalry but neither worked out.
The BAR M1922 was meant for the cavalry but neither worked out.

The WWII supply of Browning Automatic Rifles was adequate to allow the Marine Corps to develop a special infantry organization around them for jungle combat. This was a four-squad rifle platoon with three BARs in each squad, or a dozen per platoon.

Each squad fought as three “fire teams,” each with its own BAR, and it proved very effective in jungle combat. While this organization was used in a number of Marine and Army infantry units during WWII, it was not used much after the end of the war.

Combat conditions, particularly in the jungles of the Pacific theater, caused BAR men to lighten their BARs.

They commonly took off the bipod, and sometimes the flash hider, to make the gun handier for jungle or street fighting, but this was never authorized. In open-country warfare, the bipod and flash hider were desirable since they allowed the BAR to deliver accurate and effective fire from the prone position to as far as 1000 yards.

From about 1942 until after WWII, the Army experimented with a number of weapons designed to be lighter “squad automatic weapons” than the BAR. A number of these were modifications of the standard M-1 Garand infantry rifle with selective full- or semi-automatic fire, but none of these proved satisfactory.

The Winchester Automatic Rifle designed by J.R. Williams of M-1 Carbine fame was more promising when tested in 1945–1946, but the end of the war precluded its adoption.

The Browning Automatic Rifle M1918 — the first to fire in combat.
The Browning Automatic Rifle M1918 — the first to fire in combat.

The Korean War Years

When the U.S. entered the Korean War in 1950, the Army used its latest and best WWII weapons and tactics, and the BAR was a main-stay of the infantry. Requirements for BARs for our armed forces, as well as those for United Nations allies such as the Republic of Korea, caused the weapon to be put back into production for one last time.

The Royal McBee Typewriter Co. manufactured 61,000 guns using tooling which had been saved at the end of World War II.

At the time of the Korean War, the U.S. was preparing to issue new infantry rifles to its armed forces in the new 7.62mm NATO caliber. While it was easy to convert the BAR to the new 7.62mm caliber, the Army did not do it because they considered the gun too heavy for their future squad automatic weapon.

At the same time, the Army experimented with a quick-change barrel feature for the BAR to make it more suitable for sustained fire as a light machinegun, but none of this type was ever produced.

BAR Competitors and the March to the Present

The Browning BAR Mark II Safari with BOSS muzzle brake system.
The Browning BAR Mark II Safari with BOSS muzzle brake system.

The Army adopted the new 7.62mm “Rifle M-14” for its infantry in May 1957. The M-14 fired selectively, and the bipod-equipped, heavy-barrel M-15 version was adopted as the squad automatic weapon (SAW) to replace the BAR.

As the M-14 rifles and M-15 SAWs went into service in the late 1950s, the M-l rifles and BARs they replaced were placed in “war reserve storage,” and by the early 1960s, the BAR had been retired from the U.S. armed forces.

However, many BARs had been given to various countries as military assistance, and they again saw service in the Vietnam War. Even today, the Browning Automatic Rifle is as rugged and reliable a weapon as there is, and they will still be found in service with some foreign armies.

This article appeared in the 1997 Edition of the annual Gun Digest book.


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UPDATE: The Browning Automatic Rifle Today

The lightweight Hell’s Canyon Speed model is designed with the western hunter in mind, weighs just over 6 pounds in typical short-action deer chamberings (just over 7 lbs. in the heavy magnums).
The lightweight Hell’s Canyon Speed model is designed with the western hunter in mind, weighs just over 6 pounds in typical short-action deer chamberings (just over 7 lbs. in the heavy magnums).

Today the Browning BAR not only remains in production, but the entire line has been modernized for both hunters and tactical shooters.

The 2020 Browning Automatic Rifle comes in a variety of configurations — eight to be exact — each available in a slew of modern chamberings ranging from .243 Win. up to .338 Win. Mag.

The Mark II Safari with BOSS uses Browning’s proprietary weighted muzzle brake system. It sports an attractive blued finish throughout with tasteful engraving on the receiver.

For western hunters, the lightweight BAR Hell’s Canyon Speed model has a burnt bronze Cerakote finish on metal parts with an A-TACS camo stock.

Barrel lengths span the gamut from 22 to 24 inches depending on caliber, which can be had from .243 Win. to .300 Win. Mag. The Hell’s Canyon model weighs from 6 lbs. 10 oz. in the smaller chambers to 7 lbs. 8 oz. in the big magnums.

To learn more, visit Browning at www.browning.com.

Corey Graff contributed to this article.

Video: The CVA Paramount Pro Precision Muzzleloader

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Engineered for the utmost precision, the CVA Paramount Pro muzzleloader goes the distance and then some.

Muzzleloaders are steeped in tradition. That said, this isn’t your granddaddy’s muzzleloader. Heck, one quick look at the CVA Paramount Pro would tell you that in spades.

Completely rethinking the age-old game getter, the muzzleloader experts at CVA created the next generation of the gun. From buttstock to muzzle brake, the Paramount Pro completely rethinks what a muzzleloader is and how it should perform. As to the latter end, minimum, this baby is on target out to 300 yards. That’s impressive.

Designed much like a precision hunting rifle, the CVA Paramount Pro boasts many of the same features. Starting from the ground up, the muzzleloader boasts a Grayboe fiberglass stock, providing not only the rigidity a precision firearm requires but also the lightweight system hunters look for in a field gun. Amazingly, the Pro weighs a full pound lighter than its predecessor—the CVA Paramount—tipping the scales at a svelte 8.75 pounds. Moreover, if you look at the underside of the gun you’ll notice something missing—a ramrod. Still part of the kit, and collapsible carbon fiber, it isn’t attached to the barrel and stock, given the Grayboe completely free-floats the barrel to maintained pristine harmonics.

CVA Paramount Pro

Given the muzzleloader can accept magnum charges, you’d figure the Paramount Pro has the disposition of a cross mule. Far from it, since CVA incorporates a muzzle brake (3/4×20 thread), which tames down felt recoil considerably, thus eliminates the potential of developing a flinch. Other notable on the Paramount Pro include CVA’s VariFlame Ignition system, self-headspacing bolt assembly, TriggerTech Trigger, primer storage, Cerakote finished stainless-steel barrel and Nitride treated bore. That’s a tidy package for a muzzleloader (available in .45 and .50 caliber) and it even comes with a sling.

The Paramount Pro runs a pretty penny, with an MSRP of $1,668, but promises to live up to its price tag with unparalleled performance. Welcome to muzzleloading 2020.

For more information on the Paramount Pro, please visit https://cva.com/.


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Marlin Model 60: Delivering Accuracy To Everyman

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Marlin Model 60 With Ammo
Photo: GunAmerica.com

Affordable, reliable and, above all, accurate, the decidedly unglamorous Marlin Model 60 continues to define what a semi-auto .22 rifle should be.

What Sets The Marlin Model 60 Apart:

  • Older version boasted an accurate 22-inch barrel.
  • These rifles also held 18 rounds of .22 LR ammo.
  • Marlin's MicroGroove rifling improved a bullet's indexing and caused less deformity.
  • Started life and remains one of the most affordable semi-automatic .22 rifles on the market.

You’d have to enjoy kicking puppies for sport and snatching candy from babies not to have a place in your heart for the Marlin Model 60. It is what a semi-automatic .22 rifle is supposed to be—accurate, reliable, simple as daybreak. The gunmaker got it right fairly early on. Now, 60 years later, the 60 soldiers on, enduring so much that a new specimen is nearly backward compatible with the first ones to roll out of New Haven.

Riflemen of every ilk knew a winner when they saw one, and the Model 60’s production numbers speak of its success. At this point, well over 11 million of the rifles have been produced. If it weren’t for that pesky Bill Ruger and his 10/22 it would have easily gone down as the most popular .22 rifle of all time.

Runner up isn’t bad, especially to the likes of the 10/22. And for those in the know, there’s a touch of rarefication in favoring the 60. Maybe it’s a smattering of snobbery that in choosing the Marlin Model 60 you didn’t go along with the crowd, knowing a little something the mob didn’t.

If there was any something to the tubular-magazine rifle with Mary Anna good looks, it wasn’t any huge mystery. Half a century on, the rifle plum gets the job done, at a price any shooter—young, old, pauper or rich man—can afford. When it was introduced it was the great equalizer, the everyman’s solution to perforating paint cans and sending cottontails to bunny Valhalla. It still is today.

Making Of The Marlin Model 60

As its name suggests, the Marlin Model 60—also known as the Marlin Glenfield Model 60 for about two decades—made its appearance in 1960. Although, its history goes back slightly further. Essentially the same rifle hit the scene a year earlier. The Model 99 designed by Ewald Nichol flourished with a slew of variations over its production run.

Outside of the Model 99's walnut stock, there's not a ton of surface differentiation between it and the 60.
Outside of the Model 99's walnut stock, there's not a ton of surface differentiation between it and the 60. Photo: icollector.com

Where the old and the new direct blow-back .22 rifles differed—outside of a few minor design points—was material. The Model 60 was made much more economically, primarily in its stock and magazine inner tube. Whereas the 99 used walnut and rolled steel for these parts, the 60 turned to birch and brass. Arguably, the older rifle boasted a more resilient makeup, but it’s a stretch to say it was more finely made than what has become the standby Marlin .22.

Serendipitously, the more cost-effective material in the Marlin Model 60 perhaps made it a better overall rifle. Particularly the brass inner tube. The cheaper metal proved more apt, impervious to corrosion in an area pervious to moisture and rust, if steel is used. Split hairs if you must over thriftier material, but their assets, for the most part, go down as pluses in most people’s books.


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Design-wise, the Model 60 was as trim and sporty as the 99 and subsequently the 10/22 for that matter. Despite a more traditional tubular magazine, its sleek lines—particularly around the receiver—maintained a contemporary look over all these years. Furthermore, Marlin saw fit to modernize the rifle to suit shooters’ tastes at the time and moving forward. Grooving the receiver to better accept scope mounts was a magnitude more convenient and helped milk the Model’s 60’s accuracy potential.

Not that you’d need a scope to get and keep the rifle in the black. Open rear and ramp front (common on many models) proved more than accurate enough for most .22 applications.

Accuracy Of the Marlin Model 60

It’s been repeated ad infinitum at this point, but still holds true—”only accurate guns are interesting.” Which goes a long way in explaining the persistent appeal of the Marlin Model 60. It’s a tack driver, particularly early iterations.

Among other things, the Model 60's accuracy is enhanced by more readily accepting a scope.
Among other things, the Model 60's accuracy is enhanced by more readily accepting a scope.

No knock against the latest runs of the rifle, as they’ll smite the ass of a gnat, but those who’ve been lucky enough to spend time behind an original version understand it was something special. Namely, because Marlin didn’t skimp on barrel.

Gargantuan, especially by modern .22 LR standards, the Marlin Model 60 originally boasted a 22-inch barrel. Long sight radius added to more than enough pipe to ensure a complete powder burn equaled a rifle—once dialed in—that could murder the X-ring, tin cans, varmints, what have you, with unparalleled precision. That’s an endearing point, one that certainly lingers in the minds of those who cut their teeth on the 60. There’s nothing like tasting success early in the process, and shooting is a game of accuracy.

Further enhancing the rifle was Marlin’s MicroGroove rifling. Cutting-edge thinking, Marlin figured shallower grooves for rifling and more of them (16 total) would improve a bullet's indexing down the centerline of the bore, while causing less deformation. Protecting the integrity of the unique system in the Model 60, a target crown, ensuring you didn’t nick the muzzle and blow out the accuracy of the rifle.

Finally, the rifle was optimized strictly for .22 LR ammunition. That might sound funny to contemporary ears, after all a .22 LR is a .22 LR. Except the use of .22 Short and .22 long were much more prevalent when the Marlin Model 60 made its appearance. The cartridges far from mirror each other’s performance, so Marlin making the call to tailor the gun strictly for .22 LR gave it a leg up with the dominant cartridge.

Shoot It All Week

The other factor nearly everyone loved about the Marlin Model 60, regardless of their brand loyalty, was its capacity. Running beneath the 22-inch barrel was an equally long 18-round tubular magazine.

A Marlin Glenfield Model 60 and its long and lovely 18-round tubular magazine.
A Marlin Glenfield Model 60 and its long and lovely 18-round tubular magazine. Photo: hyattgunstore.com

That’s plenty big enough to suit most people’s needs; more than ample to keep the traditional magazine style kicking when removable box magazines were becoming more common. Not to mention, the full-length tube added to the overall aesthetic appeal of the gun—it just looked like it could run.

To many shooters' chagrin, this ended in the late 1980s due to the infinite wisdom of New Jersey state legislators. Marlin shaved down the magazine to 15-rounds to meet recently implemented laws in that state, thus keeping its market share.

Not ugly by any stretch of the imagination, the abbreviated tube gave the rifle a lopsided look—certainly not as smart in appearance as the older version. Someone at Marlin must have agreed, given the barrel soon followed suit in the 2000s, shrinking down the 19-inches to even the rifle out. It also made the Model 60 nimbler and, by most accounts, did little to decay accuracy.

Ready For Action

Not every new tweak to the Marlin Model 60 was met with narrowing of eyes and furrowing of brows. Safe to say, the action has improved over the years, primarily in the 1980s, when a last-round hold-open feature was introduced. It holds halfway after emptying the magazine, though you can lock it fully open by depressing the bolt handle when the bolt is fully rearward.

Outside of that, there isn’t much to improve on the action overall. Not that it’s perfect, though some might take that stance. But there’s literally not much to the mechanism, which is an exceedingly good thing.

It was an economy model, but you could still get some styling with your Model 60. Nice Squirrel.
It was an economy model, but you could still get some styling with your Model 60. Nice Squirrel. Photo: armslist.com

Reliability generally walks hand in hand with simplicity, which is the case with the Marlin Model 60. Further on, its Spartan design also makes it a snap to disassemble and maintain. Remove two screws to free the barreled action. Pull one pin to remove the trigger group. Detach the bolt handle to extract the bolt. Easy peasy, and gives you few excuses for not keeping the Model 60 clean as a whistle.

Parting Shot

No bones about it, there’s plenty to like, even revere, in the old-timey base 22-inch barrel Marlin Model 60. It was everything you needed and nothing more. It’s still worth the hunt to chase down this vintage if you’re lucky enough to find some sucker willing to part with his or hers. Good luck with that.

If you can’t find one on the market or aren’t next in line to inherit one, you’re not out of luck with the company’s present selection. In addition to the base Model 60, there are five variations of the rifle, including 60SB, 60SS, 60C, 60SN and a 60SN with a 4x20mm scope.

Basically, it’s a choice of different stocks and the addition of semi-buckhorn rear sights in some cases. Though the 60SS, it’s also the receiver and barrel material, which are nickel-plated. It’s a sporting option and, like the rest, won’t set you back a paycheck.

And therein lies the real on-the-ground advantage of the Marlin Model 60—old and new—especially for penny pinchers. Over the course of its existence, there might not be and gun that provides greater value. Right now, the MSRP runs from $212 to $321, which is paltry.

Nickel-plated, the contemporary Model 60SS is dashing option.
Nickel-plated, the contemporary Model 60SS is dashing option.

Yeah, there are plenty of options when it comes to .22 rifles and more seem to hit the market every day. But for 60 years running and some 11 million rifles made, most prove pale imitators of the Marlin Model 60. Likely it will continue this way well into this century and many more rifles rolling off the assembly line.

For more information on the Marlin Model 60, please visit marlinfirearms.com.

Sako S20: First True Hybrid Bolt-Action Rifle?

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The Sako S20 accepts one of two available stocks — one for hunting, the other a tactical-precision style.

Sako (pronounced “Sock-o”) — now owned by Beretta — has long been a leader in high-end European bolt guns. Discerning hunters favoring the Sako 85 action don't blink when paying north of $2,000 for a factory rifle. And now the firm's newest offerring, the Sako S20, doesn't dissappoint those expecting exclusive product from the Finnish maker.

The Sako S20 tactical stock configuration.
The Sako S20 tactical stock configuration.

As the video below shows, the most notable thing about the Sako S20 is its unique interchangeable chassis-stock system. You can use the thumbhole version for hunting, or swap it out for a sniper-precision stock, ideal for precision match use. 

Sako can serve two masters. It's possible thanks to Sako's legendary from-the-box accuracy (including a 5-shot sub-MOA guarantee). 

But rather than tell you all about the Sako S20, watch the recent Launch Event and see for yourself:

Sako S20 Press Release:

Sako Unveils the First True Hybrid Rifle, the Sako S20

(Accokeek, MD) February 23, 2020 Beretta and Sako are pleased to announce the launch of a new category of bolt-action rifles by introducing the Sako S20, the first true hybrid rifle. Designed with today’s diverse range of shooting styles in mind, the new S20 rifle features a takedown stock interface and adjustable ergonomics presented in an unprecedented design that delivers unique modularity, exceptional durability, and unparalleled SUB MOA accuracy.

The unique modularity of the highly configurable stock allows the shooter to adapt their rifle to their preferences with different rear stocks and forends. Along with the launch of the S20 rifle, Sako offers separately for aftermarket purchase both a tactical precision stock and an ergonomic hunting stock and corresponding forends.

The new tactical precision rear stock combines great modularity with unparalleled ergonomics for the most demanding precision shooters. The forend of the precision stock was crafted specifically for precision shooting with a flat bottom that helps balance the rifle when you’re shooting without a bipod.

The S20 hunter rear stock was designed with ultimate shooting comfort and ergonomics in mind with an ergonomic grip that improves shot accuracy without compromising comfort. The hunter stock’s forend is designed to handle versatile hunting environments with its integrated, soft “leather-like” grip surface made from high-quality synthetic materials and provides an optimal grip in any weather condition.

The user will be able to switch between the stocks and forends quickly and easily and can change the rifle from a tactical to a hunting rifle or vice versa in a matter of minutes with no need to re-zero optics after assembly. The stocks can be taken down easily by loosening up two screws between the rear stock and forend.

Inside the S20 stock is an aircraft-grade aluminum chassis that carries all the recoil forces. The durable structure of the frame has been carefully designed for maximum stiffness to increase accuracy and robustness. Additionally, the S20 utilizes strong H.I.R (high impact resistant) material over the chassis to give a professional grade performance with a high level of comfort and adaptability.

Overall, the adjustable ergonomics are a big part of the S20 design. The multi-adjustable trigger (available as both single-stage and two-stage variants) can be moved backwards or forwards to better fit different hand sizes, and a quickly adjustable cheek piece and spacer help to find the best possible shooting position. Combined with a wide selection of M-LOK and QD compatible accessory options, S20 adapts to all body sizes and shooting situations.

The cold hammer-forged barrel combined with the whole-length aluminum V-Bedding system increases the repeatable accuracy of the S20. The receiver of the rifle has been engineered with rigidity in mind and has an integrated Picatinny rail that is machined directly into the steel receiver. The bolt of the S20 is manufactured from high-grade stainless steel for better weather resistance. To increase safety and performance, the S20 has a firing pin safety and a very high locking lug surface area and this feature combined with the three locking lug design enables a smooth, safe, and precise operation of the rifle.

The Cartridge Plus magazine is made from glass-reinforced composite and is designed to support reloaders with longer maximum cartridge length. Due to the unique structure of the magazine, cartridges are supported from the shoulder to prevent bullet damage from recoil. The S20 comes with a 5 round (3 Magnum) magazine, and a 10 round (7 Magnum) magazine is available as an accessory. At launch, the S20 comes in 243 Win, 308 Win, 6.5 CM, 270 Win, 30-06 Sprg, 7mm Rem Mag, 300 Win Mag, and 6.5 PRC calibers.

The new Sako S20 rifle will be officially unveiled at the upcoming 2020 IWA Outdoor Classics Show in Nuremberg, Germany on March 6, 2020.

Also check out:The Sako 85 Carbonlight Heads to America

To learn more about the Sako S20, visit Sako.fi

Video: The Innovative Sig Cross Rifle

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Changing the hunting game, Sig rethinks the field gun with the introduction of the Cross Rifle.

Each year, it’s difficult to pick the top new product to hit the gun market. Sig Sauer, however, made it easy in 2020. Minting its first new bolt-action rifle in quite a spell, the prolific gunmaker has come up with one of the most innovative and, honestly, intriguing firearms of the year. In short, the Sig Cross Rifle is anything except blah.

What sets the bolt gun apart from other precision rigs to take the stage in recent years is it’s not a chassis gun. Yes, it certainly has the look, but if you study it closely you’ll see it has a solid-piece receiver running from the handguard back to where the buttstock attaches. Milled from 7075 aircraft-grade aluminum, the hunk of metal creates a rigid platform required for repeatable accuracy. At the same tick, it also keeps the rifle light, making it more practical away from the benchrest and precision-rifle matches. Exactly what Sig was shooting for, given the company bills the Cross Rifle as a modern-day hunter.

Sig Cross Rifle
Sig Cross Rifle

Top to bottom designed by Sig, using almost all Sig components (except pistol grip), the company poured a lot of itself into the Cross. Translate this too, there are plenty of forward-looking features that get and keeps it on target. Starting at the front and working back, it has a tapered muzzle for the addition of a Sig suppressor, a stainless steel heavy barrel, a lightweight handguard with ample M-Lok slots, a 60-degree bolt throw, an ambidextrous selector and a proprietary adjustable trigger. Further, the Cross rifle is a switch barrel. Need a longer pipe? Want to jump calibers (three available, .308 Win., 6.5 CM and .277 SIG Fury)? Easy as pie and executable at home without the aid of a gunsmith. Finally, the gun boasts a fully-adjustable, skeletonized, folding buttstock.

Needless to say, a lot is going on with the Sig Cross Rifle and plenty to catch the eye, including its starting MSRP of $1,499. As stated, it at the top of the heap when it comes to new guns.

For more information on the Sig Cross Rifle, please visit sigsauer.com.


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