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A17 savage rifle
A17 savage rifle







  1. #A17 savage rifle full
  2. #A17 savage rifle plus

After machining, the mounts are tumbled, sand blasted, and Type II anodized for long lasting durability. We machine these in our shop using one of our machining centers. Our one-piece scope mounts are the obvious choice for hunters and tactical shooters alike. Also, in many cases, it will not obstruct usage of factory iron sights. The channel in the center reduces the overall mass of the mount.

#A17 savage rifle full

Picatinny cross slots run the full length of the rail, which gives the shooter flexibility when mounting scope rings and other accessories. We recommend measuring the hole spacing in your receiver to confirm it matches with the dimensions we have published. And that’s impressive.Our Savage A17 mount is made specific to the gun. “No matter its shortcomings, Savage still did what Ruger and the other guys couldn’t do. So what do I think of the Savage A17? Well, it has a bit of a cheap plastic feel to it (especially the magazine), but the trigger is nice, accuracy is fine, and reliability was perfect. By taking more time and effort, I’m sure we could have easily kept these groups to an inch or less. Neither of us tried to drive tacks and were able to fire these two-inch groups quickly and easily. We didn’t have a ton of time, but after zeroing the rifle we each emptied a 10-round mag of the A17 ammo at 100 yards, using different points of aim to keep our groups separate. 100-Yard Target Shot With Savage A17 (Photo © Russ Chastain)

#A17 savage rifle plus

I mean, this box of groceries retails for $60-$65, plus tax and/or shipping. Kind of pathetic, especially when you consider the cost of this stuff. In the A17 box, these inserts are just lying on a couple vertical pieces of cardboard, with the weight of the ammo holding them down via gravity. What we have is a cheap paper box with four of the familiar plastic cartridge holder inserts that CCI has been using for decades in their slide-top plastic boxes (such as the blue-labeled one above). That’s also how we discovered the cheapening of CCI’s ammo packaging. When Art opened the box of ammo, he found that a corner of the box hadn’t been properly glued at the factory. A defective and poorly designed box of CCI A17 17 HMR Ammo (Photo © Russ Chastain) We later switched to CCI’s special A17 ammo, and it also did well. Speaking of ammo, we began with the 17 HMR ammo shown above, and it cycled the rifle fine. The rifle went bang every time we asked it to and fed the ammo reliably. Perhaps a thorough cleaning will do away with such things, but whatever was clunking around in there, it didn’t cause us any problems that we could detect. The next time I noticed it was not after firing–I believe it was after I chambered a new round from a fresh magazine. The first time I noticed it was after I’d fired the first few rounds a few seconds after one of the shots I felt/heard a spring-loaded clunk. Odder yet, it didn’t happen consistently. This was odd: More than once, I detected an internal clunk in the action. The magazine never failed to feed, and the rifle smoothly loaded, extracted, and ejected each round. I found I needed to insert it carefully and firmly press upward with a wiggle or two until I noted a click of the latch at the magazine’s front end. Installing the mag into the rifle isn’t a slap-it-in process either. We did find the A17’s rotary magazine a bit awkward to load.

a17 savage rifle

We began with a few rounds of CCI V-Max 2550 FPS ammo, which worked well and shot accurately. CCI V-MAX fps Ammo (Photo © Russ Chastain) The large objective is a bit oversized for some users, but this rifle will soon be heading west to the high plains, where it will need to reach out and touch some prairie dogs. Art mounted a Centerpoint 4x-16x 40mm AO scope on it, and it looks right at home on this rifle. His rifle looks just about like the one I fondled at the 2015 SHOT Show, although the stock seam I noted in the original A17 post is less pronounced on this one. Savage Model A17 17 HMR Semi-Automatic Rifle. That’s held true, as this rifle cost him $399 at Bass Pro. I mentioned in the original article that MSRP was $465, with an expected street price around $400. My good friend Art has been waiting for a semi-auto 17 almost since the 17 HMR was invented, so he got one. To sum it up, the A17, developed jointly by Savage Arms with CCI ammunition, was touted as the first-ever commercially viable semi-automatic rifle chambered for the diminutive 17 HMR cartridge. One was the brand-new Savage A17, which I wrote about during this year’s SHOT Show. This morning, I hit the range with a friend to shoot a couple of his new rifles. Range Report: Shooting the Savage A17 17 HMR Semi-Auto









A17 savage rifle