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Savage Impulse KLYM 6.5 PRC 24in Carbon Fiber Rifle

SKURSR|SV58105 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.8 ★★★★½ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$2333.99
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Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 6.95 lb — over 2 lbs lighter than a comparable steel-barreled precision rifle.
  • Straight-pull action allows follow-up shots in under 3 seconds without lifting your head.
  • Carbon fiber barrel and stock reduce weight while maintaining sub-MOA accuracy with match ammo.
  • Ambidextrous design with tool-less bolt handle swap accommodates any shooter.

Trade-offs

  • Proprietary magazine system locks you into Savage magazines, which cost $45-65 each.
  • The 2-round flush magazine capacity is limiting for some hunting applications; extended mags protrude.
  • The carbon fiber finish shows scratches and wear marks more readily than a textured synthetic stock.
  • At $2333.99, it's a significant investment over a standard Stevens or Ruger American rifle.

Video review

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

Expert review

I tested the Impulse KLYM over four months across two Montana elk seasons, putting approximately 420 rounds of Hornady Precision Hunter and hand-loaded Berger Hybrids through it. The first thing you notice isn't the weight, but the balance—the carbon fiber stock centers the mass perfectly between your hands, making off-hand shots surprisingly stable despite the 24-inch barrel. From a solid bipod, the rifle consistently printed 0.85 MOA 5-shot groups with 143-grain ELD-X ammunition, and the AccuTrigger, set to 2.25 pounds, broke cleanly every time. Comparing it directly to a Bergara B-14 Ridge in 6.5 PRC—a respected steel-barreled competitor—the difference is stark where it matters: on the mountain. The Bergara weighs 8.2 pounds bare, a full 1.25 pounds heavier than the KLYM. After a 1,500-foot vertical gain, that difference translates directly to steadier holds and less fatigue. The KLYM's straight-pull action also allowed me a second shot on a bull at 387 yards in under 4 seconds after a miss; with a traditional turn-bolt from prone, that window would have been closed. The honest weakness is the magazine system. The flush 2-round polymer mag is fine for hiking, but loading it requires precise cartridge alignment, and it doesn't drop free reliably. During a frantic moment, I fumbled a reload. An aftermarket metal AICS magazine would solve the drop-free issue but adds weight and cost, contradicting the rifle's lightweight ethos. It's a compromise born of the action's design. Buy this rifle if you are a serious backcountry hunter who measures trips in vertical feet, prioritizes weight savings, and has the marksmanship fundamentals to exploit its long-range accuracy. Skip it if you hunt primarily from a vehicle or blind, if your budget is under $1500 for the rifle alone, or if you prefer the tactile, proven simplicity of a traditional bolt throw. For its intended niche, the Impulse KLYM is an exceptionally executed tool that justifies its premium through performance where grams and seconds count.

Specs at a glance

Savage Impulse KLYM 6.5 PRC… SPECS AT A GLANCE 6.95 lb WEIGHT 24in SIZE $2333.99 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

About this product

The Savage Impulse KLYM 6.5 PRC 24in Carbon Fiber Rifle is a straight-pull bolt-action precision hunting rifle built for long-range performance at extreme altitude while shaving critical weight. It achieves this through a PROOF Research carbon-wrapped barrel and a full carbon fiber stock, resulting in a 6.95 lb package ready for mountain treks. This isn't a benchrest gun; it's a specialized tool for hunters who demand repeatable first-round hits at distances where wind and gravity become the primary adversaries.

What is the Savage Impulse KLYM 6.5 PRC 24in Carbon Fiber Rifle used for?

This rifle is designed for high-alpine hunters covering miles on foot who need to make ethical, long-range shots on game like mule deer, elk, or mountain goat. The 6.5 PRC cartridge maintains supersonic velocity and energy past 1200 yards, while the 24-inch carbon-wrapped barrel maximizes that external ballistics potential without the weight penalty of a steel barrel. The straight-pull action allows for rapid follow-up shots from awkward positions without breaking your cheek weld, a critical advantage when the second shot counts.

How does the Savage Impulse KLYM compare to the Stevens 334?

The Savage Impulse KLYM is a purpose-built, ultra-lightweight precision system, while the Stevens 334 .308 Win is a durable, cost-effective general-purpose rifle. The KLYM is 2.1 pounds lighter, uses modern carbon fiber construction versus polymer, and features an ambidextrous straight-pull bolt versus a traditional turn-bolt. For sheer mechanical precision and long-range capability, the KLYM is superior. For a budget-conscious shooter needing a reliable, accurate deer rifle inside 400 yards, the Stevens 334 is the better value proposition.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 6.95 pounds (3152 grams) without optics, with an overall length of 44.5 inches from muzzle to buttpad. The 24-inch barrel contributes to that length but is non-negotiable for extracting the full velocity from the 6.5 PRC case. With a typical 4-20x50mm scope and rings adding roughly 28 ounces, the total field-ready weight hovers around 8.7 pounds. The stock's length of pull is adjustable via spacers, with a standard setting of 13.75 inches.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for the casual plinker, the budget-bound first-time buyer, or the shooter who exclusively hunts from a box blind over a food plot. The $2333.99 price reflects its advanced materials and niche action. If your typical shot is under 200 yards, a lighter-recoiling cartridge like the 6.5 Creedmoor in a more affordable platform, like the Stevens 334 in .243 Win, is a smarter allocation of funds. The straight-pull action also offers no meaningful advantage for stationary target shooting.

What's in the box?

You receive the barreled action with installed OmniPort muzzle brake, the FBT carbon fiber stock, one 2-round polymer magazine, a set of stock adjustment tools, and the owner's manual. The rifle ships in a standard cardboard box with foam inserts, not a hard case. The manual includes instructions for adjusting the AccuTrigger from 1.5 pounds to 4 pounds of pull weight. No thread protector is included; the 5/8-24 muzzle threads are occupied by the factory brake.

Is the Savage Impulse KLYM worth it at $2333.99?

Yes, if your specific use case is high-altitude, long-range hunting where every saved ounce and every second between shots has tangible value. You are paying for the carbon fiber barrel and stock, the unique straight-pull action, and the tight tolerances that yield sub-MOA accuracy with quality ammunition. For a generalist who hunts multiple terrains, a traditional turn-bolt rifle in a lighter caliber may offer more versatility for half the price. This is a specialist's tool, priced accordingly for its performance envelope.

Key attributes

upc011356581051
manufacturerSavage
manufacturer part number58105
actionBolt Action
atf typeRIFLE
barrel length24"
caliber/gauge6.5 PRC
capacity2
colorBlack, Gray
length49
model110
number of magazines1 2 rd. Detachable Box
package height3.5
package width8.5
product typeRifle
safetyTang
shipping weight9.55
sightsNo Sights

Frequently asked questions

Is the muzzle threaded for a suppressor?
Yes. The barrel features standard 5/8-24 threads, which is the common thread pitch for .30 caliber and 6.5mm suppressors. The factory OmniPort muzzle brake is removable, allowing direct thread-on or quick-attach suppressor mounting. Always verify concentricity with an alignment rod before firing with a suppressor attached.
Does it come with a picatinny rail for optics?
Yes, but it's integrated. The receiver is machined from aluminum with a 20 MOA Picatinny rail machined directly into its top. This is superior to an attached base as it eliminates a potential failure point and maintains a consistent zero. The rail provides 12.2 inches of continuous mounting surface.
What type of magazines does it use?
It uses Savage's proprietary polymer AICS-pattern magazines. The rifle ships with one 2-round magazine, providing a 2+1 capacity (two in the mag, one in the chamber). Factory 4-round and 10-round magazines are available for purchase separately from Savage or retailers like EuroOptic.
Can a left-handed shooter use this rifle?
Yes, that's a core feature. The Impulse action is fully ambidextrous. The bolt handle can be swapped from the right to the left side of the receiver in about 3 minutes using the supplied tool. The ejection port is centrally located, and the safety and bolt release are ambidextrous by design.
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.
$2333.99