Black Collar Arms is now offering complete bolt-action pistols built on their Pork Sword chassis. Originally intended for hunting, the Pork Sword is an interesting and lightweight pistol that’s pushing into a lot of different parts of the shooting world.
It’s simple. The Pork Sword is fun. Like a lot of fun guns, people want to shoot it for shooting’s sake, and the Pork Sword is so different and engaging people just want to get behind its trigger.
The Pork Sword is a bolt-action chassis gun patterned off the Remington 700. It uses a short action receiver and is chambered for either .308 Winchester or 300 AAC Blackout.
Barrel options vary depending on what the pistol is chambered for. In 300 BLK buyers can choose a 6.5-, 9- or 10.5-inch barrel. In .308 Black Collar Arms offers the Pork Sword pistol with either a 10.5- or 12.5-inch barrel. In every configuration the Pork Sword comes standard with a threaded barrel.
Black Collar Arms is running a special First 100 edition of the Pork Sword and orderers can select their preferred serial number if it’s available. According to Black Collar number 69 is already taken.
Pricing starts at $899 for 300 BLK models and $919 for .308 pistols. The sky’s the limit when it comes to custom options with Black Collar and the Pork Sword is offered with a huge selection of upgrades including barrels, forend styles, chassis finishes, custom engravings, folding braces, trigger packs, pistol grips, foregrips, bipods, optics and optic mounts.
Black Collar Arms says the current lead time on orders is about a month. Of course they also offer the base components separately for people looking to build their own bolt-action chassis pistol or rifle.
See Also: Remington’s 700 CP is a Tactical Bolt-Action Hunting Handgun
The Pork Sword chassis is modular and accepts SIG-style fixed and folding stocks, varying length M-Lok forends and a wide range of Remington 700 short action receivers.
Black Collar uses “Remage”-style barrels with their actions, which are Remington 700 barrels with a Savage-style barrel nut system. This makes their complete Pork Sword pistols and rifles that much more flexible, adding the ability to swap out barrels and bolts and host multiple cartridges with the one firearm.
The Pork Sword is just plain interesting, whether or not it’s primary role is a hunting gun or a lightweight chassis gun. As a pistol it gives hunters more options for when and where they can hunt, which is a nice side bonus.
And while it’s not the cheapest of range toys, the Pork Sword is fairly competitive compared to other Remington 700-based chassis rifles and pistols. This is one gun that will develop a following, even if it’s not for everyone.
Dumb.
Amen.