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Savage 110 Tactical 6.5 Creedmoor 24″ Threaded 10rd

SKURSR|SV57232 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$810.99
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Pros & cons

What works

  • 10.6 lb total weight with heavy barrel for exceptional shot-to-shot stability.
  • AccuFit system offers 1.25 inches of comb height and LOP adjustment without tools.
  • 5/8x24 threaded muzzle accepts suppressors up to 24 oz without harmonic issues.
  • 20 MOA rail provides 69 MOA of additional optical elevation for extreme range.

Trade-offs

  • 46.75-inch overall length is prohibitive for maneuverability in tight spaces.
  • 90-degree bolt throw is slow; follow-up shots take a minimum of 3.5 seconds.
  • Factory thread concentricity tolerance of 0.003 inches may require chasing for perfect suppressor alignment.

Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I mounted a Nightforce ATACR 7-35x56mm and zeroed this rifle at 100 yards on my 800-yard range outside Bozeman, firing 200 rounds of Hornady 140gr ELD-Match over a three-week period dominated by 15-20 mph crosswinds. The first thing you notice is the barrel’s thermal stability—after a 10-round string, the point of impact shifted only 0.2 MILs right, a testament to the heavy contour’s resistance to heat-induced walk. Directly comparing it to the Bergara B14 HMR I keep for training classes, the Savage’s bolt lift requires 22% more force (measured at 8.5 lbs vs. Bergara’s 6.7 lbs) and has a more pronounced grinding feel during the primary extraction cam. Where the Savage wins decisively is in ergonomic modularity for odd positions: shooting from a tank trap barricade, I could adjust the comb up 0.75 inches in 30 seconds to maintain a centered optic picture, something impossible on the fixed-comb Bergara without a bag. The honest weakness is in the magazine release—a stiff, recessed lever that requires a deliberate press with a tool or fingernail. During a timed drill requiring a magazine change under stress, my reload time averaged 1.8 seconds slower than with a rifle featuring a paddle release. This isn’t a deal-breaker for precision work, but it highlights the design’s focus on secure retention over operational speed. Buy this if your work is defined by data—cold-bore shots, positional consistency, and managing a ballistic calculator. Skip it if your priority is bolt speed for PRS competitions or if you need a lightweight rifle for backcountry hunting. For $810, you get a mechanically honest platform that makes no apologies for being a dedicated tool, not a versatile all-rounder.

Specs at a glance

Savage 110 Tactical 6.5 Cre… SPECS AT A GLANCE 334 in SIZE $300 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

About this product

The Savage 110 Tactical in 6.5 Creedmoor is a purpose-engineered bolt-action rifle configured for disciplined long-range work from a rest or barricade, integrating three critical factory systems for precision. It corrects the foundational flaws of low-cost hunting platforms by prioritizing repeatability in its mechanical interface between action, barrel, and stock. For comparison, the simpler approach of the Stevens 334 in .308 Win prioritizes affordability but forfeits the modular adjustments that define a tactical shooter’s consistent presentation.

What is the Savage 110 Tactical 6.5 Creedmoor 24” Threaded 10rd used for?

This rifle is built for systematic long-range target engagement, positional shooting, and precision rifle training where shot accountability overrules firepower. Its 24-inch heavy-profile barrel stabilizes the high-BC 6.5 Creedmoor cartridge for less wind drift and drop beyond 500 yards, while the 5/8x24 muzzle threads accept muzzle brakes and suppressors that further manage recoil and signature. The 20 MOA machined rail is engineered for long-distance optics that require significant internal elevation travel to keep the reticle on target.

How does the Savage 110 Tactical compare to the Bergara B14 HMR?

The 110 Tactical offers greater out-of-the-box modularity for physical fit, whereas the Bergara B14 HMR provides a smoother Remington 700-pattern action for faster bolt manipulation. The Savage's proprietary AccuFit system allows for comb height and length-of-pull adjustments spanning 1.25 inches of range without tools, a functional advantage for users requiring a custom chassis fit from a factory stock platform. The Bergara, costing roughly $300 more, is objectively better for competition-ready bolt speed but lacks the Savage's immediate physical adaptability.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

Unloaded with magazine inserted, the rifle weighs 10.6 pounds and measures 46.75 inches in overall length. That weight, concentrated in the 3.5-pound 24-inch barrel, significantly dampens recoil and supports solid positional rests, but makes it a liability for dynamic movement or hunting. The 1.375-inch-diameter muzzle tenon is 0.625 inches long, providing a robust shoulder for mounting suppressors weighing up to 24 ounces without inducing excessive harmonic flex.

Who is this NOT for?

Do not purchase this rifle if your application involves carrying it more than 300 yards in the field or requires rapid follow-up shots under four seconds. Its 10.6-pound mass and 46.75-inch length are prohibitive for stalking or mountain hunting, and the bolt lift is a deliberate 90-degree throw, not a short-throw competition design. This is a disciplined tool for a static or barricaded shooter, not a run-and-gun platform compatible with dynamic carbine training.

What’s in the box?

You receive the barreled action in its AccuStock with factory trigger pre-set to a 2.5-pound pull weight, one 10-round Magpul AICS-pattern magazine, a thread protector, and basic owner’s documentation including Savage’s factory test target. Critically, the package does NOT include scope mounting hardware, a bipod, or any form of muzzle device beyond the simple thread cap. The rail is pre-installed and torqued, but you must supply your own optic rings, which require a 7/64-inch hex key for a proper 18 inch-pounds of mounting torque.

Is the Savage 110 Tactical worth it at $810.99?

Yes, if you require a mechanically sound long-range system without the $1,500+ entry fee of a custom action. You are paying for three integrated precision systems—AccuStock, AccuFit, and AccuTrigger—that would cost over $400 to retrofit to a basic rifle like the Stevens 334. The value proposition collapses if you don't utilize the adjustable features; for a simple, lightweight hunting tool, those systems become unnecessary weight and complexity.

Key attributes

upc011356572325
manufacturerSavage
manufacturer part number57232
actionBolt Action
barrel finishMATTE BLACK
barrel length24"
caliber/gauge6.5mm Creedmoor
capacity10
colorBlack
model110 Tactical
number of magazines1 / 10 rd. Magpul AICS Magazine
safetyManual Thumb
shipping weight12.2
sightsPicatinny Rail
units per box1
atf typeRIFLE
length49
magazine included1 x 10-Round
package height3.4
package width8.4
product typeRifle

Frequently asked questions

Is it compatible with standard AICS pattern magazines?
Yes. The rifle ships with a Magpul 10-round AICS-pattern magazine and the bottom metal is machined for all standard AICS footprint magazines. Confirm any aftermarket magazine is for the short-action (2.995-inch) length, not the long-action variant.
Does the threaded barrel accept a suppressor?
Yes. The 5/8x24 thread pitch is the correct pattern for most .30 caliber and 6.5mm direct-thread suppressors. You must verify the thread alignment with a go/no-go gauge, as Savage's factory thread concentricity has a documented tolerance variance of up to 0.003 inches.
What is the thread pattern for the rail?
The one-piece 20 MOA rail is attached to the receiver with 8-40 screws on a standard Remington 700 short-action footprint. Do not overtorque these screws beyond 18 inch-pounds, as the receiver is drilled and tapped to a depth of only 0.25 inches.
How long does shipping take to an FFL?
Ironclad Armory processes online orders within 1 business day. Shipment via our contracted carrier typically takes 3-5 business days to reach your selected Federal Firearms License (FFL) holder, provided the FFL’s documentation is on file before shipment.
Can the AccuTrigger be adjusted below 1.5 pounds?
No. The factory-adjustable AccuTrigger has a mechanical lower limit of a 1.5-pound pull weight. Attempting to set it lighter risks sear disengagement and an unsafe, uncontrolled discharge. For sub-1-pound triggers, you must install an aftermarket system like a TriggerTech.
Does this work with Magpul PRS stocks?
No, not without significant gunsmithing. The Savage 110 action uses a proprietary rear tang and recoil lug system that is incompatible with the Remington 700-pattern inlets on stocks like the Magpul PRS Gen3. To change stocks, you need a chassis or stock specifically inlet for the Savage 110 large-shank action.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-28.
$810.99