The Savage 110 BA in .338 LM mated perfectly with the Leupold Mark IV Tactical 6.5-20X precision riflescope. Guardsmen were able to score ½-MOA accuracy at 500 yards.
Any firearm can be seen as a remote-control drill, but none so much as the “precision rifle.” A precise workman needs different bits to drill through different material and create holes of different depths and widths for different purposes. This is equally true for the precision rifleman and his long-distance “drill.”
Precision rifle shooting in this country has evolved primarily with military cartridges, and this is particularly true of sniper rifles. As a result, the 7.62mm NATO round has long been the standard, basic tool of military snipers, and because the seminal S.W.A.T. team founded by LAPD in the late 1960s was modeled after our military, and the rest of the police establishment was modeled off LAPD S.W.A.T., the same is true in law enforcement. When lighter rounds with less penetration were needed in urban environments, the 5.56mm NATO was the predictable choice.
The substantial oversized bolt handle coupled with a silky smooth action help make the rifle a long-range shooter’s ergonomic dream!
If the 7.62mm NATO (.308 Winchester) is the baseline, and the 5.56mm NATO (.223 Remington) is a lower power level, certainly the top tier is the .50 BMG (Browning Machine Gun) cartridge. The Barrett “Light Fifty” has been used with conspicuous success over the last two decades by our military snipers, and has found its way into many police armories. In addition to its splendid potential at very long range for anti-personnel work, the .50 BMG is an awesome “anti-materiel” weapon capable of destroying vehicle engines and wreaking similar industrial-grade havoc on the enemy’s war-fighting ability.
The .338 Lapua Magnum ammo is pricey, but worth it for the added tactical options it brings to the table. Sgt. Fisher finds the AccuTrigger-enhanced 110 BA deadly off the bipod at long range.