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Monday, November 7, 2011

Armalon BGR and Armalon PR Sniper Rifle

Armalon BGR Sniper Rifle

With the BGR, Armalon asked several specialist gun shops in Britain to come up with their best ideas and components, then assemble them into a high-quality sniper rifle. They came up with a bolt with a short, even pull, a firing pin hard enough to ignite the hardest or lowest-quality primers, a match-grade hammer-forged fluted barrel, and a combination muzzle brake/flash suppressor. Though available in wood of any desired type, the normal stock for the BGR is made of carbon fiber or Kevlar. A rail under the foreguard will accept a bipod, sling, foregrip, flashlight, or laser-type sight, and though the sight mount is not a Picatinny rail, virtually any sort of Western sight equipment may be mounted, whether of military or civilian origin. Most were built for 7.62mm NATO chamberings, but .243 Winchester and .300 Winchester Magnum versions were also available.

Armalon PR Sniper Rifle

Starting from a Remington 700 base, Armalon’s primary goal with the PR was to greatly increase the magazine capacity of the weapon, to make more suitable as a platoon sharpshooter’s weapon. The later nylon-stocked version of the Remington 700 is used, and the barrel is increased in length and given more weight. It is available in 5.56mm NATO or 7.62mm NATO chamberings; 5.56mm NATO versions can use certain AR-15/M-16 series magazines, while 7.62mm NATO versions are fed by magazines designed for the AR-10, M-14, or M-1A. Other than caliber, the four versions are available: without a muzzle brake,
and one with a muzzle brake, both with or without fluted barrels.

Read and see Picture detailed Please visit Armalon.com or Klick here

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