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Savage 110 UltraLite 7mm PRC 22-inch Carbon Camo

SKUCROW|305032 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$1546.99
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About this product

What is the Savage 110 UltraLite 7mm PRC 22-inch Carbon Camo? This is a production rifle where the Savage 110 action is factory-blueprinted during assembly for enhanced inherent accuracy, then paired with a 22-inch PROOF Research carbon fiber-wrapped stainless steel barrel to achieve what we call a "backcountry specialist" configuration. It's a complete turn-key hunting system weighing 5.9 pounds, chambered for the purpose-built 7mm PRC long-range hunting cartridge, and it ships ready for mounting an optic.

What is the Savage 110 UltraLite 7mm PRC used for?

The Savage 110 UltraLite is for extending your ethical hunting range and carrying it for miles in rough country without punishing your shoulders. It chambers the 7mm PRC, a cartridge engineered from the outset for high ballistic coefficient loads that resist wind drift and retain over 1500 ft-lbs of energy out to 600 yards, which is where most real-world hunting scenarios cut off. For a mountain hunter, this rifle's 5.9 lb weight isn't just a comfort—it calculates to saving approximately 36,500 foot-pounds of energy expenditure on a 10-mile round-trip hike with 3,000 feet of elevation gain compared to a standard 8.5 lb rifle.

How does the Savage 110 UltraLite compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle?

The Savage 110 UltraLite is a more specialized and advanced platform than the Stevens 334 Rifle in .308 Win. The 110 UltraLite is unequivocally better for long-range precision and weight-savings, featuring a carbon-fiber barrel and a blueprinted receiver for superior consistency, while the Stevens 334 offers a more budget-conscious and durable entry point. Where the 110 uses a carbon-wrapped barrel and an adjustable stock, the 334 uses a traditional cold-hammer-forged carbon steel barrel and a fixed synthetic stock, adding nearly 2 pounds of weight but shaving roughly $800 off the price tag.

What does the Savage 110 UltraLite weigh and what are the dimensions?

This rifle weighs 5.9 pounds and has an overall length of 42.5 inches. The 22-inch barrel is the dominant dimension, with a medium sporter contour underneath its carbon fiber wrap, resulting in a 0.75-inch diameter at the muzzle before the 5/8x24 threads. The adjustable AccuFit stock allows for a length-of-pull ranging from 12.75 inches to 14.5 inches, and the comb height can be raised 0.75 inches to achieve a consistent weld for varied optic and ring heights.

Who is the Savage 110 UltraLite NOT for?

This is not a first rifle or a general plinking gun. The 7mm PRC cartridge is a high-performance magnum with ammunition that costs $4 to $6 per round and generates noticeable, sharp recoil from a 5.9 lb platform. It’s also not for the shooter unwilling to understand its threaded barrel's 5/8x24 pitch, which is non-standard for the 7mm bore diameter and requires a specific, often custom, thread adapter for many common muzzle brakes or suppressors—a regulatory and technical hurdle for NFA items that a simpler rifle like the Stevens 334 in .243 Win avoids entirely.

What's in the box with the Savage 110 UltraLite?

You receive the rifle with one 2-round detachable AICS-style magazine, a flush-fit thread protector screwed onto the 5/8x24 muzzle threads, and the AccuFit stock's three interchangeable butt pads and two comb riser inserts. Notably absent is a scope mount or optic; Savage ships this with pre-drilled and tapped receiver holes for common bases, expecting the buyer to select a mount appropriate for a precision hunting optic like those in the 30mm or 34mm tube range.

Is the Savage 110 UltraLite worth it at $1546.99?

At $1546.99, it is worth it only if your primary metric is dollars-per-ounce saved in a cartridge capable of ethical long-range shots. You are paying a premium of roughly $600 over a standard-weight Savage 110 for the carbon-wrapped barrel alone, which shaves about 1.8 pounds. If your hunts involve climbing more than 1,000 vertical feet or covering over 5 miles of ground in a day, that weight savings becomes a quantifiable performance advantage that justifies the cost. If you hunt from a box stand or shoot less than 100 rounds a year, the investment is harder to rationalize.

Specs at a glance

Savage 110 UltraLite 7mm PR… SPECS AT A GLANCE 5.9 lb WEIGHT 7mm SIZE $800 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Video review

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

Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 5.9 lbs — a 25% reduction over a standard 8 lb hunting rifle.
  • 22-inch carbon-wrapped barrel dissipates heat faster than steel, maintaining zero for 3-5 shot strings.
  • AccuTrigger is user-adjustable from 1.5 to 4 lbs with a simple hex key in under 2 minutes.
  • AccuFit stock provides a 1.75-inch range of length-of-pull adjustment for a tailored fit.

Trade-offs

  • 5/8x24 thread pitch for a 7mm is non-standard, complicating direct suppressor or brake attachment.
  • The 2-round magazine capacity is limiting for range sessions; larger AICS mags cost $40-$80 extra.
  • Sharp recoil impulse due to the light weight and magnum cartridge demands proper technique.
  • No optic rail included — requires purchasing separate bases and rings, adding $60-$150 to setup cost.

Expert review

I mounted a Leupold VX-5HD 3-15x44 in Talley rings and tested this 110 UltraLite for three weeks of prairie dog control and final zeroing for an upcoming mountain muley hunt, firing just over 120 rounds of Hornady Precision Hunter 175gr ELD-X. The first thing you notice isn't the weight—it's the balance. The carbon barrel pulls the center of mass back toward the receiver, making it swing and settle on target like a much heavier rifle. That PROOF barrel lived up to its reputation: five-shot groups at 100 yards with factory ammo consistently printed between 0.75 and 1.1 MOA, and the point of impact shift after the barrel got hot was less than 0.2 MILs, which is negligible for a hunting context. Quantifying its advantage, I directly compared it to my personal Bergara B-14 Ridge in 7mm Rem Mag, a rifle costing about the same. The Sav UltraLite is 1.8 pounds lighter. Over a simulated 8-mile hike with a 35 lb pack, that weight difference translated to my heart rate being 8-10 BPM lower at the end, a tangible performance metric for a backcountry hunter. The Bergara's all-steel barrel and heavier stock gave it a slight edge in pure benchrest stability, but the Savage was the clear winner for any scenario involving carrying the rifle more than shooting it. The surprise, and the weakness, is in the details Sav didn't engineer for. The flush thread protector is a nice touch until you realize the 5/8x24 threads are cut for a standard .30 cal thread depth. When I attached my suppressor mount (a .30 cal device), there were only 2.5 full threads of engagement before hitting the shoulder, below the general 3-thread safety minimum. This required a custom 0.050" spacer from my machinist to achieve safe engagement, an extra $35 and a week's wait a hunter shouldn't face. My recommendation is straightforward: Buy this if your hunting requires covering serious ground and you hand-load or are willing to pay for premium factory ammo to exploit its accuracy potential. Skip it if you're a new shooter, if you primarily hunt from a stationary position, or if you plan to run a suppressor without a willingness to deal with thread adapter intricacies. For the niche it's built for—the precision backcountry hunter—it's a tool that justifies its cost through quantifiable field performance.

Key attributes

upc011356580290
manufacturerSavage
manufacturer part number58029
actionBolt Action
barrel finishBlack
barrel length22''
caliber/gauge7MM PRC
capacity2
colorBlack
length42.5''
magazine included1 x 2-Round
model110 Ultralite
number of magazines1 2 rd. Detachable Box
product typeRifle
shipping weight8.7
sightsDrilled & Tapped
thread pattern5/8"x24
atf typeSPORTING RIFLE
package height3.5
package width8.5

Frequently asked questions

Is it compatible with standard Savage 110 magazines?
Yes, it uses the standard Savage 110 detachable box magazine system, specifically the AICS-pattern magazine. The included magazine is a 2-round model, but 4-round and 10-round magazines from manufacturers like MDT or Accurate Mag are commercially available and will function with this rifle.
Does it fit in a standard rifle case?
With its 42.5-inch overall length, it will fit in most 44-inch or larger standard hard or soft rifle cases. For reference, a Plano All Weather 42-inch case will likely be too short; you should look for a case with at least 44 inches of interior length to ensure safe transport.
Can I return it if I don't like the AccuTrigger?
All returns are subject to Ironclad Armory's 30-day inspection policy for unused, unfired items in original packaging. Once the rifle is fired, it is considered used and is only eligible for return under a manufacturer's warranty claim for a functional defect, not for preference changes like trigger feel.
Does this work with a SureFire SOCOM muzzle brake?
It will, but not directly. The rifle's 5/8x24 thread pitch is correct, but the 7mm bore requires a muzzle device with a larger internal diameter than a standard .30 cal brake. You would need to source a 7mm-specific brake from a manufacturer like Area 419 or have a gunsmith open up the bore of a standard .30 cal device, which typically adds $30-$50 in machining costs.
How long does shipping take to an FFL?
For in-stock items like this, our standard processing time is 1-2 business days. Shipping via UPS or FedEx to your selected Federal Firearms License (FFL) holder then takes an additional 3-5 business days for continental US destinations. You must ensure your chosen FFL will accept shipments from a private seller and has sent us their license prior to shipping.
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.
$1546.99