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Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2025
Good Product!
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on January 23, 2025
Everything it says it should be. Says to put at 20 inch lbs with blue loctite. I went closer to 30, and used blue loctite though. Zero problems. Looks and fits perfectly on my Remington 700 short action. Just awaiting my vortex venom so I can go try it out !
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2024
Love EGW quality , never disappoints.
Chris Tinkler
Reviewed in Canada on July 17, 2024
Works perfect and looks great
Larry Walters
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2024
Very nice rail !!!! NO maching marks perfect finish and screws seem to be high quality....installed on christensen arms mesa fit was perfect
lynn gould
Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2024
Well made perfect fit and durable. I have several of these and never had a problem. This is another 20moa rail for shooting over a 1000yds. So I have plenty of dial up. Great value also.
Nathan Dawley
Reviewed in Canada on October 28, 2024
Goes on easy solid connection to the rifle
Dan S
Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2024
I liked what I wore because it was exactly what I wanted and what I needed fit right in just like it's supposed to
D. Dorn
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2024
I chose this pic rail because it was a little longer, which I need for larger scopes with 4" eye relief . There are 1 or 2 other rails that extend a little over the barrel but are 3 times this price . Have used EGW rails in the past and have been satisfied .
jbasile
Reviewed in Canada on April 28, 2024
To date, I have not been disappointed with the EGW picatinny rails. The construction and quality are superb.I have installed this rail mount on my Bergara B14 Timber rifle, supporting my new Vortex 4 - 6 x 50 AO scope.Very pleased.
Donald Nall
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2023
this isn't my first EGW rail, and I keep coming back to them because they are great!
Greg M.
Reviewed in Canada on January 11, 2020
No issues. Once I got a good load developed, I've been nailing the 700 yard gong
bajaX
Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2019
I will update this review with use over time.So, just got this picatinny base which will be going on a Bergara B14 HMR.Out of the box, it seems nice.3 things immediately stand out that impress me:- The anodized finish is phenomenal. This isnt the matte black anodizing on normal ARs, this isnt the cheap "mil spec" coating Anderson Manufacturing puts on their piece of crap "rifles". This is serious, heavy duty, thick semi-glozzy type III hardcoat anodizing that seems almost identical to the anodizing used on Daniel Defense rifles. Very smooth, silky, thick, and very strong.- The weight. Man, this thing is light.- The metal, 7076 T6 forged aluminum. Very nicely done. You can tell it is quality material, extremely rigid and sturdy as well.Now the bad...Look at it. Marks all over.Now, I am not sure if all of these are "tooling marks" or "forging marks", but I am sure they are both.There are a lot of edges and machined areas, and chamfered portions that are just... not pretty. The top of the rail has vertical grooves running the length of the piece, which should be smooth and straight but are gouged all to hell with tooling marks.Chamfers around the picatinny "teeth" also have plenty of tool marks as well.Other marks on the main body of the item also look like tooling marks, but could possibly be marks left from forging. I dont know.If EGW made this from a mold (i.e. they poured molten aluminum into a mold that looks like this base and made a few quick final runs through a CNC to finish it), then I could understand the marks being forging marks. I have some Trijicon options which are known for having uneven finishes due to forging marks. No biggie.If they are tooling marks, which seems more likely, then that makes me wonder how careful they were with machining these. Why should I be concerned about that?Well, I purchased a 20 MOA base to mount a scope onto a long range rifle. If the tooling marks are indicative of sloppy machining, how do I know the mount is within spec is is ACTUALLY 20 MOA? How do I know the bolt holes are drilled and threaded to spec? How do I know the picatinny rail is machined to spec? If these specs are off, my scope is off, and I miss that deer or lose a match.I am being nitpicky, but its a valid point to make. Based on reviews I think it will be fine, so we shall see after I mount it and shoot every thing.Updates to come.I have some Trijicon optics
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