Bushmaster Var24 ATACS vs Remington Arms 4S Standard Model 22LONG

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Rifles Bushmaster Var24 ATACS Remington Arms 4S Standard Model 22LONG
Summary
Rating
Firearms Review Rating Not Rated
Firearms Review Rating Not Rated
Rank
#23862
#31618
Length 42.25"
Action Semi-Automatic
Caliber .223 Remington .22 Long
Barrel Length 24" Heavy Barrel 22.5"
Capacity 5 17+1
Finish Camo Black
Gun Type Rifle Single Shot
Sights Front Blade
Details
Brand Bushmaster
Reviews See 1 Review N/A
Prices
MSRP $816.89 $0.00
Used Price $571.82 $0.00
Sale Price $735.20 $0.00

Rifles Descriptions

Bushmaster Var24 ATACS

Features a fluted 24 inch chrome-moly steel extra-heavy varmint barrel (one inch diameter out to gas block) and eleven degree competition muzzle crown. Coated bore and chamber. One in nine inch twist free-floated with a vented aluminum fore-end. Two-stage competition trigger (3.5 pound takeup, 1 pound letoff). Ships with manual and 5 round magazine. Covered in A-TACS camouflage finish.

Remington Arms 4S Standard Model 22LONG

The Remington Model 4 rifle was a single shot, rolling block boy's rifle designed/invented by F.A. Houghton, J.O. Simpson, and O.H. Loomis and made by Remington Arms from 1890 to 1933. Approximately 356,000 of them were made in that time. Variations: Improved Model 4, No.4S Boy Scout Rifle, and No.4S Military Rifle. It was chambered for .22Short, .22 Long, and 22 Long Rifle cartridges, but also for .25 Stevens, .32 Short, and .32 Long rimfire cartridges. It was also available in smooth bore for.22 or .32 short cartridges. The Model 4 has an automatic ejector. Three types of Model 4 were made: From 1890-1900 the Sold Frame model was made, from 1901-1925 the Takedown model was made with a small lever on the right side of the receiver, and from 1926-1933 the Screw Release Takedown model was made. The Remington Model 4 rifle was also made in three styles: Standard style, Boy Scout aka Military Model and Cadet Model. They were likely discontinued as sales of early Remington single-shots must have dropped considerably by the early 1930s.