drummerboy
Well-Known Member
Morning, guys thinking of buying a friends remington 700 .243 and rebarelling to 7mm 08, what was the best year for the 700? As in build quality and reliability?
Regards Neil
Regards Neil
Personally, I would never buy another Remington. Always regretted buying them.
An old Howa would be a better donor. See Brock & Norris
I'd prefer a Remington over a Howa in the meantime. They are by far not perfect but once put together right very user friendly.
I recently came across two blued remmy actions that an internal crack between the two rear scope mount screws. Have never seen that on any remmy stainless action.
edi
Look for anything pre 1980sMorning, guys thinking of buying a friends remington 700 .243 and rebarelling to 7mm 08, what was the best year for the 700? As in build quality and reliability?
Regards Neil
I don't believe there are many factory rifles that you can guarantee to be super accurate out of the box, there are good ones and bad ones. If you go for a rebarrel by a GOOD 'smith you are guaranteed a rifle that shoots well - sub 0.5 MOA if you do your bit. By the time you have replaced/bedded the stock and rebarrelled you will have spent £2k plus, but you will have a brand new tack driver. You can also choose your barrel length and twist rate which is important if you want to start playing with the new heavy for calibre bullets.
Different people look at it in different ways, but I'm very happy with the semi custom route I have taken with my rifles.
I think this is the crux of the matter. That difference between MOA and half MOA, i.e. 10mm or so at 100yds, doesn't mean much in practical terms, to the average deer stalker. Or the deer. So it comes down to what degree the shooter is "into" the accuracy side of hunting, and what they are prepared to spend to achieve their goals.
The last five new rifles I've bought were Howas and Tikkas. Two of those have received an aftermarket stock / chassis. In their original form, all five shot their guaranteed 1 MOA out the box. Only ever shot hand loads. I only struggled (briefly) with one to find the right load.
The one I have since sold, the Howa Mountain Rifle (which was too light for me), was required to prove this accuracy by the buyer, with premium factory ammo, I forget what (7mm08). I admit to being a little nervous because the rifle had never shot this ammo before, only my hand loads. But it shot the eyes off a fly, and I got full price, no quibble.
I believe modern budget rifles from several of the manufacturers are 95%+ good for their 1 MOA guarantee, the ones we hear about are the couple in a hundred that aren't. Made up numbers of course but I just don't believe that most of the main competitors to Remington produce the same quality and inherent risk (and need for a gunsmith).
