Last year, I got my first experience with the Browning X-Bolt, using a Hell’s Canyon model in 6.5 Creedmore. I came away very impressed, my respect for the Browning name rekindled. They got a lot right with this model, from the trigger to the muzzle brake. So when the chance popped up to take a look at the X-bolt Pro in 300 Winchester Magnum, I hopped on it.
.300 Win. Mag.
Browning X-Bolt Pro Long Range 300 WM Full Review
BY Clay Martin Published: July 6, 2018 { 21 comments }Nemo Omen 300 Win Mag – AR Gets A Turbo Charger
BY Clay Martin Published: June 22, 2018 { 16 comments }When I heard semi-auto and 300 Winchester Magnum, I assumed the gun had to be gigantic. It is large, but not Micheal Bay oversized. At first glance, you can see the DNA shared with an AR-15. There are a few changes to accommodate the caliber, but it keeps the things I find important.
A Universal Magnum? The Story of the Amazingly Capable .300 Win. Mag.
BY Phil Massaro Published: April 19, 2017 { 9 comments }I have taken a few different heavy rifles on safari, but my light rifle has always been a .300 Winchester. I’ve taken it all over North America as well, using it for deer, bears, antelope, caribou and more. Why? What is it about the .300 Winnie that makes it such a universally applicable cartridge? Allow me to pontificate.
Hammer-Forged Steal: Steyr’s $850 Pro Hunter – Full Review.
BY Phil Massaro Published: April 13, 2017 { 13 comments }The Steyr firm can trace its roots back to the mid-1860s, in Steyr, Austria, and they’ve always prided themselves on producing rifles that have been on the cutting edge of technology. Their Pro Hunter is no exception, being a reliable, if futuristic-looking, bolt-action repeater that is designed to take the worst the elements can throw at it.
Sub-MOA NEMO .300 Win Mag AR & More – SHOT Show 2017
BY Clay Martin Published: February 14, 2017 { 9 comments }Fresh from its move from Montana to Idaho, Nemo Arms had some really interesting offerings on display at the 2017 SHOT Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The company made it name for itself thinking outside the box when it comes to firearm design, developing a .300 Win. Mag. AR-pattern semi-auto rifle. Let’s take a look at the newest version of that rifle as well as some the company’s other offerings.
ArmaLite Long Range Sniper AR-30A1T – .338 Lapua & .300 Win. Mag. – SHOT Show 2013
BY Guy Sagi Published: January 22, 2013 { 17 comments }Precision marksmen have known for years that ArmaLite produces some of the finest long-distance rifles out there, at an extremely reasonable price, out of the box. At the 2013 SHOT Show ArmaLite continued the legacy by unveiling the AR-30AT. Chambered in either .300 Win. Mag. (with an MSRP of $3,460) or .338 Lapua Mag. (MSRP $3,599), the rifle’s looks alone are enough to attract shooters, but it’s the performance that keeps them coming back. Both versions boast .25 to .75 MOA performance at 300 yards. The .300 Win. Mag. version comes with a 24-inch barrel, with the Lapua chambering boasting a 26-inch tube. Regardless of chambering, the barrels are chrome moly, have a one-in-ten-inch, right-hand twist, are fully free floated and are tipped by ArmaLite’s recoil-reducing, accuracy-enhancing brake. Each gun weighs 14.5 pounds, the stocks can be adjusted for lengths of pull between 13.6 and 15.6 inches, and the buttpad and cheekpiece can also to tailored to each shooter’s needs. A rail atop is long enough for law enforcement to mount night-vision optics in conjunction with their daytime scopes, it uses a robust Mauser-style safety and the bolt-actions come with a five-round box magazine.