Remington Model 7 Rifle 300 Blackout 16.5" Barrel Mossy Oak Bottomlands Camo
Carry a Model Seven in the field and you'll understand why it's considered one of the finest dense-cover rifles in America. Lightning-fast in close quarters. Superbly accurate for the long shot.
Calibers include 6.5 Creedmoor, 300 Blackout and 308 Win.
• Mossy Oak Bottomlands Camo
• Hinged Floor Plate
• 2 3/8" shorter overall length than Model 700 its counterpart, the Model Seven is perfectly sized for small-statured shooters and dense cover hunting situations
• Compact design for fast, easy handling
• Features the same legendary strength as the Model 700 action: "Three-rings-of-steel" with the bolt face, barrel and receiver encasing the cartridge head
• Cylindrical receiver design provides a consistent bedding area in the stock
• SuperCell Recoil Pad
• X-Mark Pro externally adjustable trigger
• Thread pitch 5/8"-24
• Picatinny rail
Caliber: 300 Blk
Mag. Capacity: 5
Overall Length: 34 1/4"
Avg. Wt. (Lbs.): 6
Barrel Length: 16 1/2"
Barrel Material: Carbon Steel
Barrel Finish: Matte Blue
Stock Material: Synthetic
Stock Finish: Mossy Oak Bottomlands
Twist Rate: 7
Length of Pull: 13 3/8"
Drop Comb: 1 1/12"
Drop Heel: 1 1/4"
Caliber Dictionary
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
The 300 AAC Blackout (300 BLK) was developed in 2009/2010 by Advanced Armament Corporation and approved by Sporting Arms and Ammunition Institute (SAAMI) in 2011. Based on the 223 Remington case necked up to 30-caliber, it was intended for the M4 Carbine and designed to function in standard AR15/M16 magazines. Thus converting an AR to 300 AAC Blackout requires nothing more than an upper receiver group. Dimensionally it is identical to the 300 Whisper, but the 300 Blackout is fully standardized. Supersonic and subsonic ammunition is manufactured, with a 125-grain bullet producing 2215 feet per second, while the subsonic load uses a heavier bullet at much lower velocity: 220-grain bullet at 1080 fps. Military applications are obvious; as a sporting cartridge performance is similar to the 7.62x39. — Craig Boddington