Field Test: New Ultra Light Arms Model 28

by
posted on August 26, 2017
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
forbes_light_rifle_f.jpg

Editor's Note: Executive Editor Adam Heggenstaller recently had a chance to test the New Ultra Light Arms Model 28 while on an elk hunt in New Mexico. You can catch up on that story here.

Gunsmith Melvin Forbes pioneered the concept of the ultra-lightweight hunting rifle in the 1980s when he built a bolt-gun that weighed less than 5 pounds. From his West Virginia workshop he formed Ultra Light Arms (now New Ultra Light Arms) and launched a revolution at a time when most centerfire rifles weighed almost twice that. More than 30 years later, Melvin’s rifles are still the ones against which all other so-called “ultra-light” rifles are compared.

The Model 28 I took to New Mexico for elk was chambered in .300 Win. Mag. yet weighed just 6 pounds. It was a joy to both carry and shoot—a product of a well-designed, graphite-reinforced Kevlar stock that directed recoil straight back to my shoulder and not my cheek.

Like all New Ultra Light Rifles, the Model 28 is built on a hand-lapped, push-feed action of Melvin’s own design. It, along with the Douglas barrel, is bedded along the entire interface with the stock. Melvin discovered this precise fit dampens barrel vibrations, leading to better accuracy. It works; hunters who say lightweight rifles aren’t accurate have never shot one of Melvin’s rifles.

Another feature that aids accuracy—or more correctly, a shooter’s ability to obtain accuracy—is the rifle’s trigger. Melvin insists on a Timney trigger for all his rifles; modern manufacturing processes and stringent quality-control measures ensure Timney triggers offer clean, consistent breaks. They’re dependable. Timney offers drop-in replacement triggers with a range of pull weights for a wide variety of rifles, and installing one is a simple upgrade that can work wonders in the field.

Latest

CVA Paramount Muzzleloadersafety Recall
CVA Paramount Muzzleloadersafety Recall

Recall: Stop Use Order for CVA Paramount Series Muzzleloaders

CVA is issuing a safety recall for all Paramount, Paramount HTR, Paramount Pro, and Paramount Pro V2 muzzleloading rifles. This recall pertains.

An Ode to the Double Rifle

There are few who appreciate double rifles more deeply than our regular contributor, Phil Massaro. From the guns' storied history, to their heft and utility, the double rifle has fascinated Phil for a lifetime, and he has carried them in pursuit of game at home and abroad. Read on for his tribute to the classic design.

New for 2026: Spartan Precision Equipment Valhalla Gen 2 Bipod

Spartan Precision Equipment has announced the Valhalla Gen 2 Bipod, a shooting support system engineered for exceptional stability, rapid deployment, and lightweight performance for hunters and long-range precision shooters.

D.C. Legislators Who Understand Hunting and Shooting’s Role in Conservation

Yes Virginia, there are members of U.S. Congress and the Senate who hunt, fish or participate in the shooting sports despite their Beltway jobs.

Lever-Actions, Riflescopes and Suppressors?

The historic lever gun, modern optics, fancy ammunition, and suppressors all in one hunting unit. Should that even be allowed? Welcome to the clash of old versus modern.

Remington Collaborates with Original Grain on the Hunt Club Series

Remington Ammunition has announced Original Grain as an Official Remington Brand Licensee. The two companies have recently partnered to launch The Hunt Club series of watches. At launch, the four-watch collaboration includes Mother of Pearl Chrono, Ebony Barrel Chrono, Silver Barrel Auto and Black Chrono, with more styles planned.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.