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Nimrod Tactical Rifle

Nimrod Tactical Rifle

Not another tactical rifle!” I hear you say. Yes, but this new gun comes in many guises, as we shall see! Graeme Clarke heads-up Sporting Services and now imports a new rifle from Germany called the Nimrod, which will satisfy tactical aficionados, varmint hunters, long-range geeks and savvy hunters alike.

From the outside, the Nimrod is a typical and reasonably conventional bolt action offering. But the magic is on the inside, with use of high-grade materials and design, with close tolerances for accuracy coupled to tough exterior coatings. The barrel is a stainless steel, match-grade Lothar Walther unit, enough said and available at this time in a limited number of popular calibres, such as 243 Win, 6.5x47 Lapua and of course; 308 Win of which I had on test.

Best of all is the Nimrod’s ability to slip into different, after-market stocks to change its look and usage due to the Remington 700 action underside profile. You can also substitute different Remington 700 clone trigger units, so further enhancing its credentials and appeal. So, and according to your preference, you have the choice of the following furniture: Accuracy International Chassis System (AICS) thumbhole and some of the GRS laminate range. I had the AICS folding option.

Barrel, Action and Finish

Being made in the Fatherland almost guarantees the Nimrod`s quality, as the premium barrelled action is designed to extract the maximum accuracy potential. The action is fashioned from tool steel that has a tensile strength of 1200N/mm2 and is then gas nitride finished with a phosphate and polyurethane coating. This makes for a strong action internally to the firing and operational processes and tough exterior that can brave the elements! The finish is good at resisting those annoying scratches from belt buckles and roe sacks that seem to play havoc with my other rifles.

The bolt action uses a 3-lug operating system that locks into a central action ring imbedded into the action body. Each lug is 0.54-inches long and 0.35-inches wide and offers near 100% contact when engaged, which is impressive and certainly aids accuracy. It has a 60° bolt lift and is 7-inch long with a solid 0.84- inch inch O/D, with nine, radial flutes to reduce bearing surface and to reduce any unwanted binding due to debris falling on to the action! These are shallow and blacked inside to contrast with the polished bolt body.

Cases are extracted by a Sako-type claw set into the right-hand lug and cases are ejected in a timely manner by a sprung/plunger ejector in the bolt face. This .308 Win has a 25-inch barrel, with an outside diameter (O/D) at the muzzle of 0.86-inches and 0.92-inches just in front of the forend, so a varmint profile! The muzzle is threaded at 18/1.5mm (AI specification) and this can be fitted with a large muzzle brake for an additional £120 or a moderator. I popped on an MAE Scout muzzle can, which worked rather well. The twist rate is 1 in 12-inches; personally I would prefer a 1 in 10, which would suit heavier, longer range bullets better! Exterior finish is black Mil Spec painted and sighting wise the Nimrod wears a one-piece Picatinny rail without MOA bias.

Taking Stock

This model wears the folding version of the AICS stock system. This build offers a strong and rigid, internal, aluminium chassis member that the action bolts into. On top of this is the actual outer stock made of a strong, impact-resistant polymer material. You have three colour choices – black, O/D green and desert/sand, mine was in sand, which matched the Schmidt and Bender scope on top nicely!

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The barrel is allowed to free float well in the square profiled forend which has an accessory rail underneath for bipods etc. The trigger guard is moulded in and generous in size to allow easy access by the finger, but the blade does look a little lost inside! The thumbhole pistol grip is large and gives comfortable position, with a long reach to the trigger. The stock folds via twin hinged sections located above and below the thumbhole. A large button is depressed from the right side, allowing the rear butt section to swing and fold flat on the left hand side. There is a good adjustable cheekpiece, which is set up via two wingtype nuts, that when slackened allow it to be positioned to suit your own shooting-style. The length of pull is adjusted by adding or removing spacers from the rubber buttpad.

The trigger is a precision Shilen, with a precise single stage operation, which broke very cleaning at 1.85lbs on test. However, Sporting Services also stocks the excellent Trigger Tech and Cadex units, so you can specify what you want when you order. I have tried both and they are excellent alternatives for any Remy-based system. The safety is a wing-type lever that is sited on the bolt shroud and offers three positions. Forward is FIRE, middle is on SAFE with bolt operation and rear is SAFE with the trigger and bolt both being locked. Nice and precise but not really a clear click in the mid position though.

The floor plate and magazine assembly is a quick detachable unit, designed to accept Accuracy International AICS 5 and 10- shot mags that are released by a large one inch push forward lever in front of the trigger guard. This is practical option that offers a decent payload, fast changes and even different ammo to suit a given situation!

In The Field

I shot a lot of factory and reloads at 100-yards, then stretched its legs out 400-yard+; saying that and in the right hands, a good 308 should be able to reach out to 1000-yards easily. Truth is the Nimrod showed very good manners and was not at all fussy on what it was fed!

Accuracy and Targets

These Lothar Walther barrels are good and consistent, which showed in the groups the Nimrod was producing. Best factory load was a toss up between the Rem Match 168-grain and the Hornady SST. The former producing 2648fps/2616ft/lbs and 1-inch groups. The latter shot 0.85-0.95-inch groups for three shots at 100-yards for 3023fps/3045ft/lbs; impressive for a 150-grain bullet!

Reload-wise it would be nice to try some lighter loads with the 1 in 12 rifling twist barrel. Hornady’s 110-grain V-MAX shot ¾-inch groups with a max load of 45-grains of RL10X powder producing 3353fps/2745ft/ lbs. The 125-grain Nosler Ballistic Tips gave healthy, ½-inch groups for 3099fps with 40-grains of H4198.

150-grain bullets are more the staple of any .308 Win and this Nimrod liked the SSTs with a mid load of 44.5-grains of Varget, giving a mild 2778fps/2571ft/ lbs energy and ½-inch groups. The best reload went to the 165-grain Sierra Game Kings, with 47-grains of Vit N540 giving 0.45-inch, 3-shot groups and 2759fps/2788ft/lbs, a good deer load with excellent controlled expansion.

Conclusion

The Nimrod is well-designed with a smooth bolt and positive cartridge delivery and good detachable mag system, which is further enhanced by the excellent Lothar Walther barrel. Accuracy was not only excellent but consistent and dependable in all field conditions. A good trigger makes all the difference too and the folding stock offers the convenience of a smaller package or carriage, yet maintains that Tactical look which is ever popular. Prices start at £2175 and so offers performance at a good price, more calibres will be added in the future.

PRICE: £2175. Muzzle brake from £120
CONTACT: Sporting Services 01342 716 427,07860 219 902

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  • Nimrod Tactical Rifle - image {image:count}

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gun
features

  • Name: Nimrod Tactical Rifle
  • Type: Bolt Action
  • Calibre: 308 on test
  • Capacity: 5 & 10 DM (AI detachable)
  • Length: 46-inches
  • Barrel length: 25-inches
  • Weight: 9.85lbs
  • Finish: Matt Nitrided phosphate
  • Stock: AI folding
  • Sights: Picatinny scope rail
  • Trigger: Single stage adjustable
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