The Bushmaster BA50 is a bolt-action, magazine-fed rifle designed to shoot the .50 BMG cartridge. It has a 22- (carbine) or 30-inch, match grade Lothar Walther free-floating barrel with a 1-in-15-inch twist rate (standard for the .50 BMG cartridge). The rifle weighs 30 pounds (without a magazine or ammunition) and has a muzzle brake to help tame the recoil. Bushmaster literature says that the rifle recoils like a .243 Winchester. The barrel has a MIL-STD-1913 rail (Picatinny style) for mounting a rifle scope.

Bushmaster BA50 Rifle
Place of originUnited States
Service history
WarsMexican Drug War
Production history
ManufacturerBushmaster
Unit cost$5657.25 MSRP
Specifications
Mass13.6 kg (30 lb)
Length1,473.2 mm (58.00 in)
Barrel length762 mm (30.0 in)

Cartridge.50 BMG
ActionBolt action
Feed system10-round magazine
SightsNone, MIL-STD-1913 rail

The BA50 was the original design of Cobb Manufacturing. Bushmaster purchased the design and upgraded it and released it as the Bushmaster BA50.

Bushmaster states that the rifle is capable of shooting 1 minute of angle (MOA) with M33 ball ammunition.

In 2020 Remington, who owns Bushmaster, rebranded the rifle to be released as the "R2Mi."[1]

Features edit

  • Bolt action: bolt is on the left side of the receiver
  • Magpul PRS adjustable buttstock with LimbSaver® recoil pad
  • High-efficiency recoil-reducing brake minimizes rearward force comparable to .243 Winchester
  • Disassembles like an AR-type rifle for cleaning and maintenance
  • Rate of twist: 1 in 15″
  • MIL-STD-1913 rail at 12 o'clock position on vented fore-end
  • Steel bipod with folding legs(M60 style)
  • ErgoGrip Deluxe Tactical Pistol Grip
  • Lower receiver machined from T6-6061 aluminum billet
  • Upper is machined from T6-6061 extrusion with MIL-ST-1913 rail
  • Manganese phosphate finish on steel parts
  • Hard anodized black finish on aluminum parts (mil-spec)
  • Barrel free-floated within vented fore-end

Users edit

References edit

  1. ^ Eger, Chris. "REMINGTON ANNOUNCES R2MI .50 CALIBER BOLT ACTION RIFLE". Guns.com. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  2. ^ Trevithick, Joseph (18 October 2019). "Cartel "Narco Tanks," Heavy Weapons On Full Display During Battle Over El Chapo's Son". The Drive. Retrieved 2 April 2020.

External links edit