TuskerOrd wrote:Cheers mate - Im a big Musgrave fan - have been grabbing them as soon as they become available.
I'n currently shooting a Barnard SMS on my PRS style rifle and Howa or Tikka for basically everything else.
on_one_wheel wrote:.......... mighty REM 700
Good old 3 rings of steel.
straightshooter wrote:on_one_wheel wrote:.......... mighty REM 700
Good old 3 rings of steel.
Gratifying to see just how effective relentless advertising and propaganda can be.
An early criticism of the Rem 700 series was (and is) the amount of cartridge case head protrusion from the support of the chamber. Instead of the solid head of a typical case being inside the chamber they rely on part of the tapering web for safety. Under normal circumstances it's not a problem but under abnormal circumstances it could be.
Remington quite cleverly turned a design liability into an advertising strength, hence the three rings of steel malarkey.
The design history of the 721, 722, 700 series was to make a rifle action as cheap as possible yet retain the feel and appearance of a quality rifle. This gave Remington a huge cost and profit margin advantage over the then market leader Winchester.
straightshooter wrote:on_one_wheel wrote:.......... mighty REM 700
Good old 3 rings of steel.
Gratifying to see just how effective relentless advertising and propaganda can be.
An early criticism of the Rem 700 series was (and is) the amount of cartridge case head protrusion from the support of the chamber. Instead of the solid head of a typical case being inside the chamber they rely on part of the tapering web for safety. Under normal circumstances it's not a problem but under abnormal circumstances it could be.
Remington quite cleverly turned a design liability into an advertising strength, hence the three rings of steel malarkey.
The design history of the 721, 722, 700 series was to make a rifle action as cheap as possible yet retain the feel and appearance of a quality rifle. This gave Remington a huge cost and profit margin advantage over the then market leader Winchester.
wrenchman wrote:the 700 has not been made for a few years they have been reworked i have not got to hold any yet they had the big box store buying them for years here
bigrich wrote:I had one recently and while the metal work was great, the stock had a noticeable pale stripe across the bottom of the whole fore end where it was not stained correctly. That was a little off putting initially. This was a new production rifle from the new company as well. As for “ the most accurate out of the box rifle “ it didn’t live up to that even with hand loading. The bolt face wasn’t square either. It had a half moon of cartridge contact on one side of the bolt face only. Needless to say after much perseverance I gave up and sent it down the road. I’ve had much better rifles with out of the box tikka’s. Old push feed model 70 xtr’s and Mauser rifles have been better than this new Remington. Dunno if I’d bother trying a new Winchester either as they just don’t make stuff like they used to in general. I would be tempted to try a new Lithgow centre fire however. After paying good money for a new Remington I was disappointed. If anyone else gets an accurate one consider yourself lucky. JMHO
Wyliecoyote wrote:
I never saw a VSSF of any caliber in the early days that didn't perform. Remington just lost the plot from then on. What i found as the biggest killer of a lot of their later guns was nothing to do with their actions but with the fitment of the barrel itself. If you spun them up between centers using a lathe dog on the crown end, the shoulders were out of square which in turn caused a lot of the half moon brass rub on the bolt face and groups that would form in the plane that was aligned to the high and low spot of the abutment of action, recoil lug and action. Basically the group started or finished in line with the stress point that will alter with temperature and will never correct itself over time where a great barrel would never shoot to its full potential. Something good BR smiths are aware of and align barrels between centers then a steady or use a cat head fixture in the tailstock. All it takes is a very light skim to square the shoulder to the bore and chamber axis and a light skim on the bolt lugs to corrrect the headspace and any error on the lugs turned 90% of those problem childs into tack driver.