Barrett Firearms
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Heritage & History
Barrett Firearms Manufacturing was founded in 1982 by Ronnie Barrett in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, with an ambitious goal: build a shoulder-fired .50-caliber rifle that one person could operate. Working from his garage, Barrett developed the M82 — a semi-automatic rifle chambered in .50 BMG that would become one of the most recognizable firearms in modern military history.
:::callout
The .50 BMG cartridge was previously confined to crew-served heavy machine guns. Barrett's recoil-operated system and muzzle brake design made it feasible as a precision rifle platform for the first time — a genuine paradigm shift in long-range capability.
:::The M82 was adopted by the U.S. military as the M107 Long Range Sniper Rifle, and variants were purchased by armed forces in dozens of countries. This military adoption provided both credibility and financial stability that allowed Barrett to expand beyond its original .50-caliber focus.
Key milestones:
- 1982 — Company founded; first M82 rifles completed
- 1990s — U.S. military adoption as M107; extensive combat deployment
- 2011 — M107A1 introduced with suppressor-ready design
- 2013 — MRAD modular platform launched
- 2019 — MRAD selected as U.S. SOCOM Mk 22 Advanced Sniper Rifle
- 2022 — 40th anniversary; established as leading anti-materiel rifle manufacturer
Barrett is a SAAMI member and manufactures all rifles in the United States.
Product Lines
Model Caliber Action Weight Role M82A1 .50 BMG Semi-auto, short recoil 28.7 lbs Flagship anti-materiel rifle M107A1 .50 BMG Semi-auto, short recoil 27.4 lbs Improved M82, suppressor-ready MRAD .338 LM, .300 NM, 7.62 NATO Bolt-action, modular 14.8 lbs Multi-role precision, Mk 22 platform MRAD ELR .338 LM, .300 NM Bolt-action ~15 lbs Extreme long range (1,500+ yards) Fieldcraft 6.5 CM, .308, magnums Bolt-action < 5 lbs Lightweight hunting rifle REC7 5.56 NATO, 6.8 SPC Piston-driven AR ~6.5 lbs Modern sporting rifle REC10 .308 Win Piston-driven AR-10 ~9 lbs Large-frame AR platform The .50 BMG rifles (M82A1 / M107A1) are the signature products — 29-inch barrels, 10-round detachable magazines, and the distinctive multi-chamber muzzle brake that makes the cartridge's recoil manageable for a single operator.
The MRAD platform is Barrett's most versatile offering:
- Folding stock with adjustable LOP and comb height
- Quick-change barrel system for caliber swaps
- Selected by USSOCOM as the Mk 22 Advanced Sniper Rifle
- Best-received Barrett product among precision shooting enthusiasts
:::callout
The Fieldcraft hunting line has received mixed reviews. Some examples deliver excellent accuracy at under 5 pounds, but user reports describe inconsistencies requiring factory service. Barrett typically accepts returns for correction — but test accuracy thoroughly before committing.
:::Innovation & Technology
Barrett's primary engineering achievement: making .50 BMG viable in a shoulder-fired platform.
Recoil management system:
- Short-recoil operated action (similar to heavy machine guns, scaled to rifle form)
- Multi-chamber muzzle brake redirects propellant gases to counteract recoil and muzzle rise
- Combined system reduces felt recoil to roughly equivalent to a 12-gauge shotgun slug
MRAD modular architecture:
- User-serviceable barrel changes without gunsmith tools
- Caliber conversion between .338 Lapua, .300 Norma, and 7.62 NATO
- Folding stock collapses for transport; adjustable to fit different operators
- Built from military feedback requiring multi-mission flexibility
Manufacturing:
- CNC machining for all critical components
- Quality control designed for military specification consistency
- Suppressor integration standard on current production models (M107A1, MRAD)
Community & Reputation
Barrett's reputation splits across market segments:
Segment Reception Notes Military/LE Excellent M82/M107 proven in combat since 1990s, trusted worldwide Precision rifle community Good (MRAD), mixed (others) MRAD respected; Fieldcraft QC concerns Civilian long-range Strong .50 BMG is the ultimate extreme-distance platform AR market Moderate REC series competes but lacks differentiation The .50 BMG rifles are common at long-range shooting events and have been used to set various distance records. However, their size, weight, and ammunition cost ($3-5/round) limit appeal for most recreational shooters.
:::callout
Barrett's customer service reputation is generally positive — the company accepts returns and corrects accuracy issues, particularly on Fieldcraft models. But buyers should expect to verify performance rather than assume it out of the box.
:::Buyer's Guide
Cost reality for Barrett rifles:
Model Approximate Price Ammo Cost/Round Practical Consideration M82A1 / M107A1 $8,000 - $12,000 $3 - $5 (.50 BMG) Need a range that allows .50 cal MRAD $6,000 - $8,000 $2 - $4 (.338 LM) Most practical Barrett for precision work Fieldcraft $1,800 - $2,500 $0.50 - $2.00 Verify accuracy before trusting on a hunt REC7 / REC10 $2,000 - $3,000 $0.30 - $1.00 Competitive but crowded market segment Who should buy what:
- Military/LE agencies — M107A1 for anti-materiel; MRAD Mk 22 config for multi-role precision
- Extreme long-range enthusiasts — M82A1 if you have the range access and budget; MRAD ELR for a more practical alternative
- Hunters — Fieldcraft (lightweight mountain rifle) but test accuracy thoroughly; many alternatives exist at this price
- AR buyers — REC series is solid but doesn't stand out in a crowded field; compare against Daniel Defense, LWRC, etc.
- Collectors — .50-caliber rifles hold value well and represent genuine firearms history
Legal note: Some jurisdictions restrict or prohibit .50-caliber rifles. Verify local and state compliance before purchasing. Finding ranges that accommodate .50 BMG can also be challenging — many lack adequate backstops or distance for safe use.
References
- Barrett Firearms official site: barrett.net
- American Rifleman: "Barrett — 40 Years of .50-Caliber Authority"
- The Firearm Blog: "Long Range Dreams — Inside Look at Barrett Firearms"
- Field Ethos: Barrett MRAD / Mk 22 review
Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club Editorial Team
Join the Discussion
Have you ever gotten behind a .50 BMG, and if so - was it the Barrett or something else, and how did it actually compare to what you expected?
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