Excerpts from: "Special Weapons for
Military & Police" - Magazine
CheyTac M-200 .408
Magnum
Extreme Long-Range Training…
Test Your Skills At Ranges Up To 3000 Yards
By Anthony Gimmellie
INSET – Shooter engaging targets at 1650 yards with
the CheyTac M-200 rifle.
With the current advancement in bullet manufacturing
and the use of blended metal technology has come the
creation of near-perfect high-ballistic coefficient
(BC) bullets that allow shooters to stretch the legs
of the big-bore guns to distances once thought
impossible.
For many shooters, 500 yards is a long shot, and to
a skilled marksman with a precision rifle, solid
optics and superb ammunition, 1000 yards is just the
starting point. With the .408 CheyTac, first-round
accurate hits are achievable at distances over 2000
yards. Over the last few years the need of our
military to “reach out and touch someone” has been
an understatement. Today’s snipers have the need to
extend their engagement distances beyond what was
possible on yesterday’s battlefield. Snipers have
made some incredible shots with the M82 Barrett .50
caliber rifles since the early 1990s.
As technology continues to advance, the time has
come to have more accurate purpose-built weapons
systems designed to use these highly advanced rounds
of ammunitions being produced to enhance the extreme
long-range sniping efforts. The introduction of
these calibers with superior ballistic advantages
has not only become quite popular but has now become
the standard for tactical superiority, to allow for
mission success while limiting collateral damage
For years British snipers have used the .338 Lapua
Mag as their long-range platform to augment their
Accuracy International .308 rifles. In fact, the
British have almost totally abandoned their .308
rifles and have for the most part gone to the .338
Lapua Mag caliber for its effective long-range
capabilities and enhanced penetration with the
ability to be a great tool in the urban environment.
A similar situation is also occurring here in the
United States.
The US military and numerous federal law enforcement
agencies have tested, and continue to conduct
extensive testing of the .338 Lapua Mag to fill the
gap be- tween their primary weapons system and their
extreme long-range systems. But still there’s the
need to shoot flatter, faster and more accurately at
greater distances than even the .338 Lapua Mag can
reach.
That’s where the .408 CheyTac comes into the
picture.
For those of you who haven’t heard about the .408
CheyTac until now, you have been missing out.
CheyTac Intervention has been in business since
2003. Corey Kupersmith, who owns the company, is a
civilian shooting enthusiast who bought the company
out of his love for long-range shooting.
INSET - CheyTac M-200
CALIBER: CheyTac
BARREL: 30 inches
OA LENGTH: 55 inches
WEIGHT: 24 pounds (carbon fiber barrel), 27 pounds
(steel barrel)
SIGHTS: None, mil-Std-1913 rail
STOCKS: Retractable
ACTION: Ultra Heavy Bolt
FINISH: Black, OD green, desert camo
CAPACITY: 7-shot mag
PRICE: Call for pricing
CheyTac M-200 rifle and advanced ballistic computer
ready for action.
INSET - With the A08 CheyTac, first-round accurate
hits are achievable at distances over 2000 yards.
INSET - CheyTac offers training to students who want
to shoot past 2500 yards.
Gun Details
The CheyTac M-200 in .408 caliber rifle has a CNC
machined receiver with an attached Mil-Std-1913
base, integral bipod, a 30-inch detachable steel
barrel, 3.5-pound trigger and an extremely effective
muzzle break. The rifle weighs 27 pounds and
measures 55 inches with its retractable stock fully
extended.
The CheyTac fires two primary rounds, a 419-grain
bullet with a BC of 0.94 moving at 2900 fps (feet
per second) and a 305-grain round with a BC of 1.12
moving at 3300 fps, both of which are lathed turned
bullets made out of a copper nickel alloy, which
allows one to easily reach out to 2500 yards and
beyond.
Jamison International currently makes .408 CheyTac
ammunition and components. CheyTac ammunition can be
ordered through CheyTac or directly from Jamison,
which rumor has it, will be changing its name to
CheyTac Ordnance in the coming year.
Recently, a new .408 armor piercing round was
designed and developed by Dr. John D. Taylor with
the help of William Wordman. The new .408 AP round
is a 370-grain projectile with a standard velocity
of 3100 fps with capabilities that are superior to
the M2 ball and the M8 .50 caliber due to its
efficiency and the high energy of its patent pending
lathed turned projectile. Made from a proprietary
cop- per alloy, the bullet is drilled and plugged
with a tungsten carbide penetrator core.
The weight and thickness of the projectile’s outer
copper alloy body allows the bullet to act like a
buffer letting the tungsten carbide penetrator stay
solid for a longer period of time before it loses
its energy. Currently, not a lot of test information
has been publicly released about this new round. I
have been told that the new AP round will easily
penetrate through a 1-inch certified AR500 piece of
steel at 100 yards, and a ½-inch certified AR500
steel plate at 775 yards.
Not only does CheyTac build one of the most accurate
extreme long-range rifles on the market, they offer
some of the most advanced training for shooters
looking to reach out past the 2500-yard mark. If
your weapon system cannot shoot accurately at 2500
yards, CheyTac will teach you how operate in its
last 25 percent of its capable envelope, not its
first 75 percent, which usually most skilled
rifleman can already accomplish. The arduous
mountainous terrain, long rolling plains, and
extreme engagement distances that CheyTac offers
resemble the real world conditions commonly found on
the battlefield in Afghanistan.
CheyTac offers a variety of training for civilians,
and they offer restricted custom type training for
the military and law enforcement agencies needing to
employ the .408 CheyTac or any other extreme
long-range weapons system. In addition to this basic
extreme long-range class, they offer an 8-hour ABC
(Advanced Ballistic Calculator) and CABC (Civilian
Advanced Ballistic Calculator) course, and an 8-hour
armorer’s course for the .408 CheyTac weapons
system.
Training Details
I recently had the opportunity to spend four days
with Team CheyTac at their training facility.
Upon meeting our head instructors Jason and Dave
Durham, a very knowledgeable father/son combination,
and Kevin Houcek, we proceeded into the classroom
for the initial safety brief and introductions, and
then we spent a good portion of the morning getting
familiar with the ABC and CABC. We would soon learn
that in order to achieve rounds on target we would
have to know exactly how to use and plug in accurate
information into the handheld ballistic calculators.
INSET - Students zeroing their rifles in CheyTac’s
zeroing pit.
As you probably know when using any ballistic
software on your home computer or a handheld device,
“junk in will get you junk out,” so more precise
data in will help you achieve first round hits.
After lunch we had a ballistics class and
fundamentals of marksmanship class. We were given a
quick break and we loaded up the vehicles and headed
out to the 100-yard zero range to chronograph, zero
and get some basic data in our new environment. Upon
completion, we packed up our gear and went back to
the shop to clean the weapons and to debrief the
day’s training.
On day two we found ourselves heading to CheyTac’s
range where we would get ample shooting from 100 to
2000 yards. The complete day was spent on making
sure that everyone understood the fundamentals of
marksmanship, and that they could effectively employ
the CheyTac weapons systems using the ABC or CABC
hand- held devices. Upon the conclusion of training
it was back to the shop for debriefing and to clean
weapons and equipment to get all the dust off. As a
side note, the CheyTac flat range will allow for
shots out to 3000 yards.
INSET - “We quickly found achieving first round hits
at ranges of 1500 yards with the .400 CheyTac to be
a simple task.”
Day three found us moving up to the range bright and
early. The drive up to our shooting area took about
35 minutes to get there. This allowed us to enjoy
some of the most scenic views of the valley, plains
and mountains that Idaho has to offer. Upon reaching
the pass we left the vehicles, and unloaded the gear
and got ready to stretch our legs. I started looking
for targets. When pointed in the right direction I
was barely able to make out the small white specs
that these guys call targets over the numerous
valleys and ridges located on the large
mountainside.
My shooting partner Rob Ormond and I got down and
made a quick range card, and started to range the
various targets across the mountain. Once our range
card was complete we started to input data into our
ABC and the target engagements began. We quickly
found achieving first round hits at ranges of 1500
yards with the .408 CheyTac to be a simple task. We
spent the complete day on the range working over
firing solutions and engaging targets in 25-mph
winds throughout the day out to 2200 yards.
Day four took us back out to Arco Pass to again ring
out steel and see how much info we retained and how
well we were using the ABC/CABCs. My shooting
partner and I spent the day seeing how fast we could
input the data into the ABC, working our way through
the target arrays with the least amount of shots.
This also provided us the chance to work on
communication between shooter and observer while
engaging multiple targets at multiple ranges,
elevations, angles with various wind directions and
speeds.
Course Impressions
The training we received over those four days was
top notch, to say the least. There was very little
down-time and plenty of shooting each day. I was
highly impressed with the accuracy, and the
simplicity of the ABC and the ability to put rounds
on target and achieve first-round hits at 2000
yards. The .408 CheyTac M-200 or M-310 weapons
systems are easy to manage and shoot. I know there
are people out there saying, yeah right, but to
prove to you how simple and easy this weapons system
is to shoot I want to share with you a little story
from our training.
We had Officer Shelly Pharis of the Hailey PD, who
was up on the range for the last day of the
training. Pharis is a small framed but tough lady
with an ambition to get into tactical shooting. I
will have to say in my many years of shooting I have
never seen a woman who listened to, applied and
understood the funda- mentals of marksmanship and
applied them while shooting these big .408s.
Pharis was able to apply the data on the rifle to
make a second-round hit on an 1 8x1 8-inch piece of
steel at 2000 yards using the CheyTac M-200. She had
just missed making a first round hit by roughly 6
inches off the right side of the plate due to being
slightly off with the wind call. That was pretty
impressive, if you ask me.
Final Notes
If you’re an individual who is looking to take some
extreme long-range training and you don’t own an
extreme long range weapons system that can achieve
these distances, no problem. You can rent one of the
CheyTac’s .408 systems for $150 dollars on top of
your course fee, and you can purchase the required
ammunition for the course through them as well. Upon
completion of the course if you decide to buy a .408
CheyTac within six months of your training, CheyTac
will discount your new rifle purchase for the $150
rental fee you paid.
I highly recommend this course to any- one who wants
to test their skill at ranges that in the past could
only be dreamed about. The days of “luck shots” at
distances over 2000 yards are gone. You can now
effectively and consistently achieve a successful
first-round hit using these advancements in weapons,
equipment and ammunition.
For More Information
CheyTac USA
363 Sunset Drive Dept. SWMP
Arco, ID 83213
866-680-4867
www.CheyTac.com
Jamison International Inc.
3551 Mayer Ave, Dept. SWMP
Sturgis, SD 57785
605-347-5090

By Anthony Gimmellie
|