Franklin Armory’s Prevail rifle debuts a Total Round Control bolt action that blends Push Feed speed with Controlled Round Feed reliability.
The design targets hunters and precision shooters who want consistent feeding without legacy bolt-action compromises. Franklin built the Prevail around adaptability, aiming to support everything from competition use to hard field work. The rifle enters the premium bolt-gun space with a focus on mechanics.
Total Round Control Action Explained
The Prevail centers on Franklin Armory’s new Total Round Control (TRC) action. The system manages each cartridge from magazine to ejection. As a round feeds upward, it contacts a lifter that activates the ejector. That interaction keeps steady pressure on the case head as the bolt cycles rearward.
Once the case clears the ejection port, it ejects cleanly. The design also combines controlled-round feed stability with push-feed efficiency. The extractor snaps over the case rim without relying on an oversized claw. Shooters can also single-feed directly into the chamber, skipping the magazine when needed.
Franklin designed the TRC action to sidestep the long-running push-feed versus controlled-round-feed debate. The company focused on function across the full cycle rather than allegiance to one system.
Modular Action and Compatibility
Franklin built the Prevail to be modular from the start. The action uses replaceable bolt heads in .378, .473, and .532 sizes. That setup supports cartridges ranging from 5.56 up through magnum-class short-action calibers.
The action follows the Remington 700 footprint. The firing pin spring matches Remington 700 specifications. Franklin includes its in-house Conquest trigger, but users can install any 700-compatible trigger. The bolt knob uses a common thread pattern, allowing easy swaps.
Barrels follow Zermatt specifications, allowing the use of any Zermatt pre-fit barrel. Shooters can change barrels at home without sending the rifle to a gunsmith. That feature targets PRS shooters who routinely replace barrels after high round counts. Also, Franklin plans to offer the Prevail as a complete rifle, a barreled action, or a standalone action.
Barrel Options
The Prevail offers two barrel choices: a carbon-ceramic option or a fluted steel sporter barrel. Franklin says the carbon-ceramic barrel pulls heat faster than standard carbon fiber while keeping weight low, which benefits long-range or competition shooters. Barrels pre-fit to a Zermatt action will work, letting users swap them at home without a gunsmith.
The action also features a machined-in 20 MOA rail, a bedded breach block, and feeds from AICS-pattern magazines, all paired with Franklin’s carbon fiber-wrapped stock.
Pricing and Availability
The carbon-ceramic Prevail model is priced at $3,899. Franklin Armory expects rifles to start shipping between April and May.
With its hybrid feeding system, modular design, and barrel options, the Prevail enters a crowded precision rifle market with a unique mechanical edge.
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