The WOOX FURIOSA chassis: the classic of the range
- BHBsolutions
- 1 day ago
- 3 min read
The WOOX FURIOSA chassis: the balance point between modern precision, versatility and character

In a range like WOOX's, it would be easy to view the Furiosa as a simple step before the Furiosa Ultra.
That would be a misinterpretation. The Furiosa isn't a "less equipped" Ultra. It actually occupies a different niche. While the Ultra clearly pushes the boundaries towards modern competition, PRS, and long-distance use, the original Furiosa remains the model of balance: a true precision chassis, serious in its design, but more open in its philosophy of use.
Like the Ultra, the Furiosa is based on a true hybrid architecture.
A high-performance chassis, combining wooden components around an internal aeronautical-grade aluminum skeleton along its entire length.
A more versatile positioning than the Furiosa Ultra
This is probably where the difference with the Ultra becomes most interesting. In its comparison guide, WOOX classifies the Furiosa Ultra as a competition chassis geared towards PRS, NRL, benchrest and F-Class, with integral Arca rails, adjustable weight system and 90° vertical handle.
The Furiosa, on the other hand, is presented more broadly as a chassis with a semi-vertical grip , a 3-inch rear Picatinny rail, three 7-inch M-LOK panels on the front, and a usage evaluation that shows it to be very comfortable not only at long range, but also in recreational shooting.
In short, the Ultra pushes the logic of specialization further, while the Furiosa retains a true breadth of use.
In practice, many shooters aren't looking for a platform designed exclusively for barricade shooting, tripods, or pure PRS formats. Some prefer a rigid, consistent, adjustable base that performs well on a rest, allows for true long-range shooting, and remains more natural in a versatile setup.
Where Furiosa remains very intelligent
The Furiosa does not have the integral Arca rail or the weight system of the Furiosa Ultra.
From a distance, one might think it is simply “less complete”.
It's less typical of a heavy PRS, but this also makes the Furiosa more universal, easier to integrate into projects where you're looking for a true precision chassis without immediately transforming the weapon into a very match-oriented platform.
The same reasoning applies to the handle.
Where the Ultra switches to a 90° vertical handle, the Furiosa remains on a semi-vertical ambidextrous handle.
It's a compromise choice.
A more vertical grip favors certain very modern, highly codified competition stances. A semi-vertical grip often maintains a more flexible relationship with the weapon, more natural for mixed uses.
It is exactly this kind of detail that reminds us that the Furiosa was designed not as a restricted version, but as a more versatile model.
A platform that speaks to more people
The other strength of the Furiosa is its broad compatibility.
Whereas the Furiosa Ultra remains focused on the Remington 700 ecosystem, Bergara B14 and custom stocks with a Remington 700 footprint
The Furiosa is offered on a much wider range of platforms: Remington 700 and clones, Bergara B14, Tikka T3/T3x, Sauer 100, Howa 1500, Weatherby Vanguard, Ruger 10/22, CZ 457, with, depending on the configurations visible on the product page, DBM, BDL, short action, long action variants and even some left-handed versions.
It should also be noted that the Furiosa is available in several finishes and materials :
American walnut

Tiger Wood

Midnight Grey

Micarta Black

Who is the Furiosa really aimed at?
The Furiosa can speak to a wider audience : those who want a real structural improvement compared to an original stock, better mechanical consistency, better repeatability of position, adjustable ergonomics, real modularity of accessories, while keeping a weapon that retains style, material and a certain visual restraint.
Key takeaways
The WOOX Furiosa is arguably the most legible point of equilibrium between the brand's aesthetic tradition and the concrete expectations of a modern shooter.
Less specialized than the Furiosa Ultra, less focused on pure competition, but far from being less serious, it offers a true precision base with 7075 chassis, useful adjustments, extensive compatibility, M-LOK modularity, QD attachments, integrated rear rail and strong visual identity.
Whereas the Ultra is aimed at those who want to push a PRS logic very far, the Furiosa speaks to all those who want a more coherent, more stable, more adjustable and more accomplished weapon, without pushing it into an overly exclusive universe.



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