With the Mesa FFT Titanium, shooters can experience one of the lightest steel-barreled rifles ever built. The compact hunting rifle features a featherlight contour stainless steel barrel with a bead blasted finish and a removable seamless radial brake. The natural carbon fiber FFT Sporter stock is finished with satin metallic gray accents for a striking look. The Mesa FFT Titanium Edition weighs in starting at 5.1 pounds and is backed by the Christensen Arms Sub-MOA Guarantee.
Features : -Left Handed Model
-Stainless Steel, Hand Lapped, Match Chamber, Button Rifled Barrel
-Removeable Seamless Radial Muzzle Brake
-Natural Titanium Receiver
-Remington 700 Scope Base Compatible
-Trigger Tech Trigger
-Hinged Floor Plate
-Carbon Fiber Stock
-Stainless Steel Bedding Pillars
Manufacturer Christensen Arms
Model FFT
Model Mesa
Action Bolt
Type Rifle
Caliber 6.5 Creedmoor
Barrel Length 20"
Color Silver
Hand Left Hand
Accessories Muzzle Brake
Type of Barrel Stainless
Capacity 4 Rounds
Description Titanium
Subcategory Hunting Rifles
Finish Stainless
Stock Carbon Fiber
Caliber Dictionary
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
The 6.5 Creedmoor was introduced by Hornady in 2008. Uniquely, it was designed for accuracy with long-range competition in mind. Using a 308 Winchester (30 TC, 300 Savage) case shortened to 1.920 inches, it will feed through the shortest existing bolt actions, but remains supersonic to well beyond 1000 yards. Standard velocity is a 140-grain .264-inch bullet at 2820 fps, also making it an effective but mild-recoiling medium-range hunting cartridge. The 6.5 Creedmoor was introduced with little fanfare, but after it started winning matches shooters took notice. This is an unusual phenomenon for a cartridge to suddenly "take off" years after its introduction, but that's the story of the 6.5 Creedmoor--after about 2016 it became one of the most-talked-about cartridges, with both rifle and ammunition offerings expanding rapidly. — Craig Boddington