Usually TTAG reviews guns that we’ve borrowed. Over the next couple of months, I’m going to review a few guns that I personally own. We’ll kick it off with a heck of a target gun built by Precision Firearms in West Virginia. This beast, called the Enterprise Mod I, is chambered in 6.5 Grendel and features some unique touches.

Ordering a rifle from Precision Firearms is as simple or as complicated as you’d like. They usually have a few in stock on the site, ready-to-ship, but only a few. More often pre-built rifles will hit their Facebook page, up for grabs at a reduced price but never getting listed on PF’s actual website.

The vast majority of PF guns, though, are custom-built to order. There’s a base model, and then the buyer can select basically everything from barrel brand and length, barrel profile and any fluting, muzzle treatment, handguard, stock, grip, trigger, charging handle, cerakote on various parts, and more.

My rifle features a stainless steel Bartlein barrel with 1:8″ twist, 5R rifling. It’s a whopping 24″ long with a fairly heavy, straight profile and ball dimpling on nearly its entire length.

PF machines custom billet upper receivers for its Enterprise rifles, and they feature a right-side, forward charging handle. This knob is bolted directly to the bolt carrier and reciprocates with it.

If you can deal with the bit of added width, I happen to be a huge fan of the bolt-mounted charging handle. Not only does it work great for its titular purpose, it’s an exceptional forward assist and it does triple duty as case deflector. Especially with a large optic, it’s in a more convenient, easier-to-manipulate location than the standard AR-15 charging handle.

Unlike most side-chargers, this design still allows for the use of a standard charging handle. PF provides a few choices, and I went with the good ol’ BCM Gunfighter with medium latch. I never use it.

Up front is Precision Firearms’ own LMD Brake. The barrel threads are cut so the brake is perfectly timed when snug without the use of a crush washer or other spacer.

The LMD Brake reduces recoil by about 69% on a 5.56. That was good enough for a third place finish in Muzzle Brake Shootout #2 and fourth in the .308 Muzzle Brake Shootout. It manages this impressive performance without excessive concussion and with no blast for the shooter, while mixing in just a bit of muzzle rise and drift control. I also chose this brake for a custom .223 “DMR” upper build that I finished a few months ago (which otherwise has nothing to do with PF).

Behind the brake and over the barrel is a Seekins Precision SP3R handguard. Again, PF gives you the option of choosing between a handful of default offerings, or call them up and specify basically anything on the market.

Inside that handguard is an SLR Rifleworks adjustable gas block. This gives me the easy ability to tune the system for when I’m shooting suppressed (which is most of the time).

Inside the Precision Firearms 7075 billet lower receiver is the excellent Geissele SSA-E trigger that PF has taken the liberty of tuning up for an even crisper, cleaner break. This is the default trigger but, as with basically anything on the gun, other ones can be chosen instead.

Behind the trigger is a Battle Arms Development ambi safety, and behind that is a tensioning screw that removes any slack between upper and lower receivers. As both receivers are machined from blanks by Precision Firearms, they fit together very precisely and the screw isn’t actually employed. It may be handy if I want to slap other uppers on this lower, though, and presumably that’s why it’s included.

Inside the upper, the bolt carrier group is nickel boron treated and the bolt face and lugs are trued and lapped to the barrel extension, which is trued to the receiver and to the barrel, which is chambered by Precision Firearms to their specs.

Field stripping the upper, due to the fixed charging handle, requires removing the handle first. This is easily achieved with a hex wrench of the same size typically used for the pistol grip bolt. Once it’s off, everything else is as usual.

Unique receiver parts are rounded out by the Battle Arms Enhanced Modular Magazine Release and a PF-branded Hogue Overmold grip.

Finally, at the rear of the Enterprise Mod I (at least by default) is a Magpul PRS stock on which I’ve mounted an Accu-Shot Monopod.

When it all comes together, the end result is a fantastically tight firearm. Everything fits perfectly and works perfectly. Every moving part is as smooth and flawless as I’ve felt on an AR. Whether it’s the takedown pin or the safety or the trigger, it’s tight and smooth and precise.

And don’t even get me started on the action. Slowly rack the charging handle and you’ll be rewarded with the buttery smoothest action you’ve ever felt in an AR. It’s like a hand-lapped 1911 but without the bump at lockup. In fact, the Enterprise Mod I locks into battery so perfectly smoothly that there’s physically no way to lower the bolt without it going fully into battery.

On my other rifles, if I ease the bolt forward slowly enough it’ll stop at some point when the bolt lugs try to lock up with the barrel extension lugs. On one or two of those guns, the carrier needs a head of steam to lock up properly. That isn’t the case with the Enterprise. It slides into battery like hot greased butter.

Despite what you might expect from precisely fit parts with tight clearances, this gun is also fully reliable. Even plenty dirty and bereft of lubrication, it just runs and runs.

It can shoot, too. With my SIG Optics TANGO6 5-30×56 scope mounted up and ammo the Enterprise Mod I doesn’t like, it’s a 1 MOA rifle:

Literally group after group after group with four different ammo loads from three manufacturers almost always within a few thousandths of 1 MOA. As usual, we’re looking at five-round groups at 100 yards.

With ammunition that the gun likes a little more but doesn’t love — in this case Federal American Eagle 120 grain OTM and a load from Precision Firearms using a 123 grain Sierra MatchKing projectile — it shoots from 0.6 to 0.8 minute:

At 400 yards, this approximate accuracy was maintained:

With the three loads I’ve found so far that the rifle does really like, the Precision Firearms Enterprise Mod 1 6.5 Grendel is a half MOA or better gun. More like better, actually, when I do my part:

Precision Firearms ammo with a 130 grain Berger VLD Hybrid shoots about half minute. I was very happy to find a factory load that the Enterprise shoots lights out. As a lot of shooters on the 6.5 Grendel forums have found, Hornady’s BLACK ammo with its 123 grain ELD Match projectile is extremely accurate. In this gun its good for consistently sub-half-MOA, five-round groups.

The best round, though, through this PF has been PF’s own. Firing a 120 grain Lapua Scenar-L pill at 2,550 fps, this load is always handily sub-half-minute for me and I’ve shot a few 0.3x MOA groups. So, 0.41-inch or smaller maximum center-to-center spreads.

It’s certainly nice stuff, but at $1.58 per round it’s fairly expensive as 6.5 Grendel goes. MSRP on the Hornady BLACK is $1.10 per and it typically retails for more like $0.90 per. Of course, it isn’t quite as accurate, is it? I’ll be testing Federal’s Gold Medal Berger soon, as it has proven fairly amazing in a couple other calibers, but then we’re back up to about $1.50 a pop.

Fired pretty rapidly at the head of a steel torso target at 100 yards, the rounds stacked on top of each other. Well, four out of five rounds agree.

After shooting my Enterprise for almost a year now, if there’s anything I’d change it would be the barrel length. 6.5 Grendel simply doesn’t need this much barrel — it’s perfectly happy on an 18″ tube, for instance, and is better-suited than 5.56 on short barrels. On anything, oh, 20″ and under it’s an awesome caliber for hunting and, shall we say, “tactical” uses.

However, I built this rifle for shooting off a bipod or other rest or object. The extra barrel length and weight — especially with a pound of suppressor affixed — makes it more stable. Though it’s also likely more sensitive to harmonics and POI shift as it gets hot. Mostly to try and cut down on those two effects, I may eventually send the upper back to Precision Firearms and have them chop a few inches off this gorgeous barrel.

With half the recoil of .308, compatibility with standard AR-15 receivers, and about 1,900 ft-lbs of energy with a slippery 6.5mm bullet, it’s easy to see the appeal of the Grendel. Oh, and how about Wolf ammo for under 24 cents per round, shipped? I promise, I’ll try some Wolf eventually and will report back (along with Federal Gold Medal Berger results).

While a custom-made rifle from Precision Firearms won’t come cheap, it will be accurate, precise, and smooth like you wouldn’t believe.

Specifications: Precision Firearms Enterprise Mod I 6.5 Grendel

Billet 7075T6 Upper and Lower

Barrel by Bartlein, Krieger, or Lilja

Threaded 5/8×24 with Precision Firearms 6.5 LMD Brake (target crown available for $125 less)

PRI Carbon Fiber Handguard in black or natural weave

Precision Firearms Hogue Grip

SuperMatch NiB Side Charger Carrier Group

Geissele SSA-E 2-stage Trigger tuned by PF

Ambi Safety and Extended Magazine Release by BAD

Magpul PRS stock

Barrel fluting options, cerakote, other triggers, handguards, bipods, etc. all available on request

MSRP: $2,800 in standard configuration (add $125 to $200 for barrel fluting, depending on choice)

Ratings (out of five stars):

Accuracy * * * * *

I want to whine about ammo pickiness but even the stuff it doesn’t like shoots minute of angle. Even “weird” loads like American Eagle 90 grain Speer TNT. Bottom line, though, is that it’s a reliable semi-auto rifle that’s shooting even factory ammo sub-half-minute with me behind it, and that’s five star badass.

Ergonomics * * * * *

Absolutely amazing. The sole argument against the ergos would be the long, heavy barrel but I stuck with that on purpose for shooting off a rest. For more of an all-around rifle, I’d chop the barrel down to 18″ and probably run a lighter profile, and swap the stock out for something better-suited to hunting or defensive uses. Basically, it would be more like PF’s Arion Type I.

Customize This * * * * *

Precision Firearms is a custom manufacturer and builder. If you don’t like how I spec’d mine, spec yours your way. At the end of the day, it’s an AR-15.

Reliability * * * * *

I’ve shot hundreds of rounds of ammo from 90 grain to 130 grain, suppressed and not, in freezing temperatures and 103 degree temperatures, with lube and dry and dirty, and it has never hiccuped. It’s crazy smooth and precise, yet confident.

Value * * * *

On the AR-10 platform it’s easier for me to see prices of high-end guns hitting the $3,000 mark and think, “oh, okay, sure,” but on the AR-15 it’s a tougher pill to swallow (even if ammo is cheaper). When all is said and done, though, everything on this rifle is as good as it gets. You wouldn’t save a lot of money doing it yourself while choosing parts of this quality. And Precision Firearms does the most important parts — barrel work including chambering, extension, receiver fit and truing, etc. — and does it well. That’s where the sub-half-minute accuracy out of a reliable semi-auto comes from.

Overall * * * * 1/2

The PF Enterprise Mod I is a premier, but expensive AR-15 with somewhat limited utility. I may eventually have 4-6″ chopped off the barrel and find that last half star. Of course, Precision Firearms is a custom manufacturer so their rifles can be anything you desire. But they’ll always be accurate, precise, and oh-so-smooth.