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This month in G&A Magazine

  • XD-REMELY REDEFINED
  • Bargain Blasters
  • A Better Burn?

My G & A

REVIEWS

Browning X-bolt

A four-shot rotary magazine of sturdy, lightweight polymer delivers straight-up centered feeding.

The closure of Winchester's New Haven factory in 2006 made everyone in the shooting industry wince. Now what would happen to Browning, also owned by industrial giant Fabrique Nationale? A year and a half after the lights at 275 Winchester Avenue went out, I visited Browning's offices near Morgan, Utah. Surely these people had some news... .

"Browning and Winchester are thriving," Scott Grange assured me. "Both are putting news-making firearms on the shelf next year." Product managers from both houses then inundated me with photographs, specifications and marketing hyperbole. "You'll have the X-Bolt with you in the hills for a couple of days," said Denny Wilcox, who tends the Browning line. "We're proud of it."

The rifle he showed me had a trim three-lug action with detachable, spool-fed polymer magazine. The checkered walnut stock, finished in traditional Browning gloss, had a long grip. Shadow-line detailing gave the butt a streamlined look. A button on the bolt shank base enabled me to cycle the bolt with the two-position tang safety engaged. The gold-plated trigger, garish as ever, hung from a three-lever mechanism that tripped like an icicle snap at 31⁄2 pounds. "It adjusts from three to five pounds," said Denny.

"It looks like a refined A-Bolt," I ventured tactlessly. "Is it a replacement?"

Denny assured me it was not.

Browning wanted to partner the X-Bolt with the A-Bolt the way it had the Synergy shotgun with the Citori. "It's a styling option," he said, "with mechanical improvements like the rotary magazine, on-safe bolt movement and the new trigger. Finish on production rifles will be more satin than gloss."

He then handed me an X-Bolt in .308, and Scott ushered me to the range. The scope needed some adjustment after I shoved it ahead to accommodate my stock-crawling habit. When it printed two inches high at 100 yards, the next three 150-grain Barnes TSX bullets punched a .7-inch group.

Field testing is hardly necessary for most rifles. Lab and range tests tell all you must know except how the iron feels hanging from your shoulder after a day in the hills. The .308 cartridge has killed a lot of deer, and this rifle's sub-MOA accuracy delivered more reach than I could match as a marksman. Still, I never refuse a chance to hunt. "Let's see if it works on deer," I said, as if I had doubts.

Troy Justensen met us at the mouth of a long canyon hemmed by sage hills. Toward the Uintas, darker conifer slopes held a sugaring of October snow. We climbed ranch roads to a small, winter-wearied mobile home. It was comfortable, though, and anchored smack in the middle of a superb mule deer range.