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F.y.i. us army orders $50 million barrett mrads in 300 prc
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<blockquote data-quote="Litehiker" data-source="post: 1596048" data-attributes="member: 54178"><p>-> IMHO the <strong>Barrett MRAD</strong> is about the best bolt gun to meet the "change-barrel, change-cartridge" specs of the US SOCOM and US Army for their Precision Rifle solicitation. My friend has an MRAD in .338 LM and it is very easy to disassemble, clean, etc.</p><p>*The trigger is dead easy to remove and clean. Often the trigger is the first part to have problems. As far as I know the British Accuracy International rifles are the only other sniper rifles to have an easy to remove trigger assembly without removing the barreled action from the chassis.</p><p></p><p>-> I'm very surprised the Army went for a cartridge as new as the Hornady 300 PRC for the MRAD.</p><p>You'd a-thunk they would have wanted more testing on that relatively new cartridge. Evidently Hornady did a great sales job.</p><p></p><p>The previous US .30 caliber rifle/cartridge sniper rifle was the XM2010 Remington actioned W/Cadex chassis in .300 Winchester Magnum.</p><p></p><p>So now there are going to be two .30 caliber sniper rifles and two .30 caliber cartridges in the inventory. <em>Perhaps the best way to handle this possible logistics nightmare is to put the XM2010 rifles in the East Asian/Pacific theaters and the new MRAD/300 PRC rifles in the European/Middle East theaters. </em>Jus'sayin'...</p><p></p><p>Eric B.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Litehiker, post: 1596048, member: 54178"] -> IMHO the [B]Barrett MRAD[/B] is about the best bolt gun to meet the "change-barrel, change-cartridge" specs of the US SOCOM and US Army for their Precision Rifle solicitation. My friend has an MRAD in .338 LM and it is very easy to disassemble, clean, etc. *The trigger is dead easy to remove and clean. Often the trigger is the first part to have problems. As far as I know the British Accuracy International rifles are the only other sniper rifles to have an easy to remove trigger assembly without removing the barreled action from the chassis. -> I'm very surprised the Army went for a cartridge as new as the Hornady 300 PRC for the MRAD. You'd a-thunk they would have wanted more testing on that relatively new cartridge. Evidently Hornady did a great sales job. The previous US .30 caliber rifle/cartridge sniper rifle was the XM2010 Remington actioned W/Cadex chassis in .300 Winchester Magnum. So now there are going to be two .30 caliber sniper rifles and two .30 caliber cartridges in the inventory. [I]Perhaps the best way to handle this possible logistics nightmare is to put the XM2010 rifles in the East Asian/Pacific theaters and the new MRAD/300 PRC rifles in the European/Middle East theaters. [/I]Jus'sayin'... Eric B. [/QUOTE]
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F.y.i. us army orders $50 million barrett mrads in 300 prc
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