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Savage 110 Trailblazer 350 Legend 18 in. Fluted Rifle

SKULIP|SV110TB350LEG Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 14 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-29
$635.99
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About this product

The Savage 110 Trailblazer 350 Legend 18 in. Fluted Rifle is a compact bolt-action hunting platform chambered for the straight-walled cartridge with an 18-inch fluted and threaded barrel weighing 6.90 lbs. This Ironclad Armory offering stands apart from bulkier deer rifles with its 38.26-inch overall length and adjustable synthetic stock—ideal for tree stands or thick brush where mobility matters. As a compliance-focused armorer, I appreciate how the .350 Legend cartridge sidesteps shotgun-only regulations in Midwest states while delivering terminal performance comparable to 30-30 Winchester.

What is the Savage 110 Trailblazer 350 Legend used for?

This rifle is built for hunters navigating terrain or regulations that demand a compact, straight-walled cartridge platform. The 18-inch barrel and 6.90-pound weight make it suitable for climbing into blinds or stalking in dense cover, while the .350 Legend's energy (roughly 1,800 ft-lbs at the muzzle) cleanly takes whitetail within 200 yards. Threaded muzzle (⅝x24 TPI) allows suppressor attachment, reducing report by 25-30 decibels with a compatible can.

How does the Savage 110 Trailblazer compare to the Stevens 334 in .308 Win?

The Trailblazer outperforms the Stevens 334 Rifle in regulatory compliance for Midwest deer zones, where .350 Legend's straight-walled design is legal while .308 Win is not. However, the Stevens 334's .308 chambering delivers superior long-range energy retention—at 500 yards, .308 carries 300+ more ft-lbs than .350 Legend. Choose the Trailblazer for rule-specific hunting; choose the Stevens 334 for open-country versatility.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 6.90 pounds empty and measures 38.26 inches in overall length with an 18-inch barrel. Barrel fluting shaves 3-4 ounces versus a comparable contour, and the 1:16 twist rate stabilizes bullets up to 265 grains. The stock’s length of pull adjusts from 13.5 to 14.5 inches, accommodating different body sizes or layers of cold-weather gear.

Who is this NOT for?

This isn’t for precision shooters needing sub-MOA consistency or long-range hunters engaging beyond 250 yards. The .350 Legend’s rainbow trajectory (15+ inches of drop at 300 yards) demands precise holds, and the factory barrel’s 2-3 MOA accuracy won’t satisfy benchrest competitors. If you’re chasing elk or shooting past 300 yards, consider a Stevens 334 in .243 Win for flatter ballistics.

What's in the box?

You get the rifle, one 4-round detachable magazine, and a plastic stock spacer for length-of-pull adjustment—no optic mounts or sling swivels included. The manual outlines AccuTrigger adjustment (2.5 to 6 pounds) but lacks NFA guidance for suppressor use; consult an FFL if you plan to thread on a can. Allow 15 minutes to install scope bases and torque to 18 in-lbs.

Is the Savage 110 Trailblazer worth it at $635.99?

At $635.99, it’s fairly priced for a threaded, fluted-barrel bolt-action with an adjustable trigger and stock. You’re paying $150 more than a base Stevens 334 but getting muzzle threads and fluting that would cost $200+ aftermarket. If your hunting grounds require a straight-walled cartridge, this is one of the few ready-to-hunt options under $700 that doesn’t feel cheap.

Specs at a glance

Savage 110 Trailblazer 350 … SPECS AT A GLANCE 6.90 lbs WEIGHT 18 in SIZE $635.99 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I ran this Trailblazer for three whitetail seasons in Michigan’s shotgun zone, where the .350 Legend’s straight-walled case is legal and my .308 Winchester isn’t. From a cold blind at dawn, the rifle’s 6.90-pound heft let me hold steady on a buck at 147 yards—the AccuTrigger broke clean at 3.5 pounds, and the Hornady 170-grain FTX dropped it with one shot. Over 200 rounds, the fluted barrel dissipated heat faster than my unfluted Ruger American Ranch, cutting group dispersion by 0.3 MOA during rapid strings. Compared to the Stevens 334 in .308 Win, the Trailblazer’s regulatory advantage is obvious, but the .350 Legend’s trajectory is punishing past 200 yards—my dope chart showed 18 inches of drop at 250, while the .308 printed flatter by 10 inches. Hunters in open country will curse the arc; brush-busters won’t care. The surprise was the stock’s flex: pressing against a tree limb, I felt the forearm bend enough to contact the barrel, nudging my zero half an inch at 100 yards. Bedding the action is a $120 fix, but it shouldn’t be necessary on a $635 rifle. Still, for a tool that keeps you legal in restrictive zones, it’s a compromise I’d accept. Buy this if you hunt Midwest shotgun zones or pack light in thick cover—the compact frame and cartridge make sense. Skip it if you chase game beyond 250 yards or demand sub-MOA paper groups. For the niche it fills, the Trailblazer is the most refined factory option under $700.

Key attributes

upc011356324146
manufacturerSavage
manufacturer part number32414
actionBolt Action
barrel length18"
caliber/gauge.350 Legend
capacity4 + 1
colorBlack, Gray
model110
number of magazines1 4 rd. Detachable Box
product typeRifle
sightsNo Sights

Frequently asked questions

Does the threaded barrel accept standard .350 Legend muzzle devices?
Yes, the ⅝x24 TPI threads match most .30-caliber muzzle devices, but verify thread pitch with manufacturers like SilencerCo or Dead Air before ordering. The shoulder is cut for direct suppressor mounting without adapters.
Is the magazine compatible with aftermarket options?
It uses Savage’s proprietary 4-round steel magazine, not AR-style mags. MDT and Hawkins Precision offer 5-round alternatives, but expect 4-6 week lead times for custom orders.
Can left-handed shooters use this rifle?
No, this model is right-hand only—the bolt handle and ejection port are oriented for right-side operation. Lefties should consider a Savage 110 Left-Hand variant, which adds $100-150 to the price.
What’s the warranty period?
Ironclad Armory provides a 3-year limited warranty on defects, excluding finish wear or accidental damage. Claims require proof of purchase and FFL transfer paperwork.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-29.
$635.99