Remington Arms 600 Mohawk

Remington Arms 600 Mohawk


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About Remington Arms 600 Mohawk

Remington Model 600 was a push-feed bolt-action rifle produced by Remington Arms from 1964–1968. Remington Model 600 was the son of the XP-100 pistol that was introduced one year earlier in 1963. The Model 600 shares these features with the original XP-100: a new short action, a vent rib on the barrel, “shark fin” front sight and unusual “dogleg” bolt handle. There were approximately 94,086 rifles produced in the available calibers of: .222 Remington, .223 Remington, 6mm Remington, 6.5mm Remington Magnum, .243 Winchester, .308 Winchester, .35 Remington, .350 Remington Magnum. The rarest is the one chambered in .223 Remington; only 227 were produced—most in the final year of production. In its advertising, Remington promoted it heavily, not as a rifle, but as a high power “carbine”. There were several variations in the original production line and they were the: 600 Magnum Carbine, 75th Anniversary Montana Statehood and 100th Anniversary Montana Territory. Remington Model 600 Magnum was the same as the Model 600 except that it was available in 6.5mm Remington Magnum and .350 Remington Magnum. Also featured a laminated walnut stock, recoil pad and sling. Remington Model 600 Mohawk was the same specs as the Model 600 except featuring an 18.5 in (47 cm) barrel with no rib. It was a promotional model produced from 1971-1980.

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