VolCrew
New member

My love of Remington Arms started as a kid when my dad started me shooting his Remington 550. Looking through what was, by modern standards, the tiny tube of a Weaver B6, I would squeal with delight as those water-filled milk jugs exploded.
So it was with more than a little interest that I read about the introduction of the Remington R-15 VTR. I had come close to buying a Colt black rifle some years ago, but somehow it did not fit into my priorities at that time. Big Green’s announcement of the R-15 seemed at once to legitimize the platform and also provided the R-15’s raison d'être, predator hunting. It came at a time when I was eager to expand my field activities to pursuing coyotes and was investigating light carry options. The stars were aligned over South Texas.
I read all I could get my hands on about the new offering. All the Byron South posts (as well as many more contributors) on PredatorMaster forums, Greg Rodriguez’s Shooting Times article (April 2008), American Rifleman’s Dope Bag (April 2008) and Jon Sundra’s review in Predator Extreme (October 2008) were all readily devoured like a ravenous coyote on a warm bunny.
There were two calibers, two barrel lengths and two stocks configurations. What was the best combination for me? The flat-shooting .204 Ruger or the platform’s traditional Remy .223? The hollow A2 buttstock or the collapsible style? The carbine length 18” tube or the longer 22” rifle barrel? And then there was the Byron South Signature Edition, factory equipped on the showroom floor with a enhanced pistol grip, two-stage trigger and float tube enhancements.
I finally decided on a collapsible stock carbine in .233, and after finding a good gun show price, became the owner of a NIB black rifle disguised in MAX-1 HD camo.

My first impression was it was well-balanced and light, much lighter than my other center fire semiauto, a Remington 7400 in .243.

My other first impression was of how much I disliked the pistol grip and trigger guard. The former seems too small for a good grip and the latter too sharp-edged.

So with those thoughts, I began to tinker around.
Mod Numero Uno was to mount my Harris BRM-S on the float tube. Remington provided two swing swivel studs apparently for this reason. However, they are drilled and tapped too close together to allow the Harris to fully seat on the float tube between them. So the first mod was removing the forward stud to allow the bipod to install properly on the float tube.
With this “mod” in place, the carbine could be supported by the pistol grip and the bipod feet.
The second mod was slipping in a higher capacity magazine. I am kinda amused when every AR picture I see has a 30- to 40-round mag featured. One of my objectives was to avoid a super long mag that would get caught in the truck, my clothes, brush, the deer blind, etc. I think I found a mag I can be happy with in the Magpul PMAG 20.

At 5.5” in length, this mag is only about 1.5” longer than the factory 5-round mag but holds 20 rounds of .223. With the PMAG 20 inserted, the pistol grip is still the lowest part of the platform.

Coming up - Getting a Grip