Ammo & Gear Reviews

2012 Golden Bullseye Award Winners

Mike Piccione Editor, Guns & Gear
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American Rifleman editors announce their favorite guns and gear.

Of the numerous, and varied, duties of American Rifleman’s editors, few are as difficult as reviewing the past year’s issues and selecting the firearms, ammunition product and accessory most deserving of a much-coveted American Rifleman Golden Bullseye Award.

“This is the 10th anniversary of our Golden Bullseye Award,” said Joe H. Graham, Executive Director of NRA Publications. “It was unchartered waters for us. Now this much-coveted award is a symbol of excellence, innovation and quality in firearms, accessories and related equipment. We congratulate the winners.”

Whereas the Golden Bullseye Award acknowledges the finest products available in the shooting sports, the Golden Bullseye Pioneer Award specifically honors outstanding personal achievement.

“The Pioneer Award spotlights the exemplary achievement and cumulative body of work of an individual, members of a team or partnership, or family who were responsible for the development and introduction of shooting equipment that has made a profound, positive and enduring impact on the way Americans shoot and hunt,” said Graham.

NRA Publications will present its annual Golden Bullseye Awards and Golden Bullseye Pioneer Award at an invitation-only breakfast during the 2012 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in St. Louis, Mo.

The following products, and their representative manufacturers, received this year’s American Rifleman Golden Bullseye Awards.

Rifle of the Year: Savage Model 111 Lightweight Hunter

For Rifle of the Year, a category that is near and dear to our hearts, American Rifleman chose the new Savage Arms Model 111 Lightweight Hunter bolt-action because, at 5½ to 6½ lbs. and a suggested retail price of $875, it’s only “less” of a rifle than you’d expect from Savage in two categories where less really translates to more. The same Savage quality and accuracy are there, but all the unnecessary metal and wood have been removed so that at the end of a hard day of hunting, the Model 111 Lightweight Hunter rests nearly unnoticeably on the shoulder.

Shotgun of the Year: Stoeger Model 3500

In the Shotgun of the Year category, the American Rifleman editors picked the remarkably economical Stoeger Model 3500 semi-auto 3½ 12 gauge. Like its pricier Benelli cousins, the Stoeger’s Inertia Driven operating system is nearly flawless, making quick work of the heaviest 12-ga. loads. The fact that the gun doesn’t depend on propellant gases for its operation means that it runs cleaner, longer; and is easier to maintain. Not a bad combination for a gun that could see high-volume use in the duck blinds or dove fields.

Handgun of the Year: Kimber Solo

American Rifleman’s Handgun of the Year went to the innovative and classy Kimber Solo, an all-metal subcompact 9 mm Luger personal protection pistol. As with anything Kimber makes, the Solo is a class act that carries with it more than a little pride of ownership. The striker-fired, recoil-operated Solo is beautifully executed and, in the opinion of Field Editor Wiley Clapp, possesses excellent ergonomics to boot. That the Solo stands alone is a contention shared by nearly all fortunate enough to fire it.

Tactical Gun of the Year: FNH-USA SACAR 17S

When it comes to the selection for Tactical Gun of the Year, the choice can sometimes be difficult as the category has recently become broader and deeper. This time, however, it was unanimous and clear. The editors picked what they felt was the easiest-shooting, trimmest .308 Win.-chambered semi-automatic military-style rifle they’d seen in years: the FNH-USA SCAR 17S. This offshoot of the SCAR Light in .223 Rem. is what the U.S. Special Operations Command wanted all along and may just represent the pattern for U.S. military rifles of the future.

Ammunition Product of the Year: Winchester Elite Blind Side

For Ammunition Product of the Year, Winchester’s Elite Blind Side shotgun ammunition made for an easy choice. It’s hexahedron-shaped shot, ironically, exemplifies “outside the box” thinking and, combined with its Diamond Cut Wad, allows increased payloads to reach the target with greater density. What’s more, the non-round shot translates to more disruption on the target. So when it comes to the occasional marginal hit on ducks there are fewer “fly-offs,” yet damage to edible meat is minimal.

Optic of the Year: Leupold Mark 8 1.1-8X 24 mm CQBSS

With so many innovative optical products arriving on the market each year, The Optic of the Year category was a contentious one, but the Leupold Mark 8 1.1-8X 24 mm CQBSS stood out from the field for its quality, innovation and unique features. Built like a tank, but with crystal-clear optics, the Leupold proved not only accurate and repeatable, but rugged and—most of all—useful in its magnification range. Whether depended on for life and limb by actual warfighters or for a high score on the 3-gun ranges, the Leupold is incomparable.

Accessory of the Year: LaserLyte Laser Trainer Target TLB-1

Finally, in the Accessory of the Year category, it didn’t take the editors long to settle on one of the neatest products they’d seen in a while. After all, what could be better than a device that allows unlimited practice of the shooting fundamentals without spending a penny on ammunition? Enter the LaserLyte Laser Trainer Target TLB-1, a bookshelf-size electronic target that registers “hits” from one of the company’s sound-activated training lasers. The TLB-1 encourages perfect sight alignment, trigger control and breathing—the foundation stones of good marksmanship—and, best of all, it can be reset right from your chair.

Pioneer Award: Robert G. Morrison, President Emeritus, Taurus International Mfg., Inc. USA

 

Thanks to the National Rifle Association’s very own American Rifleman magazine for this contribution to The Daily Caller! Check out http://www.americanrifleman.org/.

Mike Piccione