FEATURES:
- Carbon steel, matte black, barrel and receiver
- Medium-contour 10.5” barrel, with threaded muzzle 5/8-24 (.223 Rem. threaded ½-28)
- Machined aluminum, 1-piece chassis with 7” free floating modular forend with M-Lok slots and Cerakote
- 1-Piece 0 MOA rail
- Left hand bolt, right side eject
- Spiral fluted bolt body
- 2.5-6 lb user-adjustable AccuTrigger
- Picatinny rail at rear of chassis
- Accepts most AR-15 pistol grips
- Barricade grooves milled into the front of the magazine well
- Ambidextrous magazine release and AICS Magazine
AVAILABLE CALIBERS:
- 6.5 Creedmoor
- .223 Remington
- .300 AAC Blackout
- .308 Winchester
- .350 Legend
MSRP is listed at $999.00 for all calibers
----------------------------------------
Looks like we've now got our official first new model announced from Savage Arms for 2022. It's an interesting take on the old Striker bolt-action pistol platform that was discontinued in the mid 2000's, the major difference with the 110 PCS from the old offering being this new reiteration features a rear grip MDT LSS aluminum chassis for use with AICS pattern magazines whereas the Striker used a mid-grip synthetic stock and blind internal box magazine. Another notable difference is that while the older Striker model handguns featured 14" sporter weight barrels with magnum calibers featuring Savage's proprietary on/off brake system of the time, the new 110 PCS barrels are only 10.5" in length and feature a threaded muzzle to add the muzzle device of your choosing.
I've long wondered why Savage hadn't brought another 110-based bolt-action handgun to market since the discontinuation of the Striker series - especially considering how many shooters were buying Precision Target Actions and building them into handguns. There's been a huge hole in the market for such a handgun since the Striker was discontinued, and both Strikers and Remington XP100's are few and far between on the used market.
One major benefit of this new design is that it will utilize a standard trigger group with it's rear-grip design. One of the biggest complaints about the Striker models was the horrible triggers with tons of creep and over-travel due to the linkage mechanism that had to be utilized to facilitate the mid-grip stock design. The chassis on the 110 PCS appears to have a short section of picatinney rail machined into the rear area where a buttstock would normally attach - presumably to facilitate the mounting of an attachment point for a sling or possibly even a rear mono-pod.
The detachable AICS-pattern mag design will also be viewed as a huge plus for potential customers over the old Striker's blind magazine configuration. It's no secret that the AICS magazine pattern has become the defacto-standard these days, so it only makes sense for Savage to utilize it here on the 110 PCS.
The MSRP price is pretty steep coming in at $999, but I guess that's to be expected with ever increasing inflation, labor costs, and supply shortages. It's just the times we live in folks. Fortunately unlike many of Savage's current offerings the new 110 PCS shouldn't require any immediate upgrades since it comes from the factory with quality components right from the start. Aside from possibly an upgrade to an aftermarket trigger, swapping out the Magpul polymer magazine for a metal one and adding one's preferred muzzle device there's really nothing else that should need changing (unless of course you want to replace the barrel for one chambered in a round not offered by Savage).
It will be interesting to see how the market takes to the new 110 PCS as its predecessor, the Striker, never really took off and sold in huge numbers - thus why it was discontinued. The Striker to this day though has a cult-like following, and as stated previously a great many Precision Target Actions have been sold in the last 10-12 years that were purchased specifically to build into handguns.
vBulletin Message