I have a 32 year old Rem 700. I think it's time to rebarrel. What caliber?. Budget build for my 15 year old son.
Do you reload? What will you be hunting with it? WD
What model? The old BDL versions had decent fit and finish. The others, not so much. I'd rebarrel it because your sunk costs are already spent, so you only need to consider the incremental parts and labor for the rebarrel job. In a long action, I like 25-06 if your son doesn't reload and 6mm-06 if he does. Use a suitable twist for the high BC bullets now available in those respective calibers.I have a 32 year old Rem 700. I think it's time to rebarrel. What caliber?. Budget build for my 15 year old son.
This will mainly be for deer hunting and occasionally shooting steel targets beyond 400 yards.
270 gets it done. Why rebarrel? I have a couple of 270's older than that and they still shoot. I use em at huntin season so they don't get many rounds through them.. How do you know the barrel is bad? If it is at all?I have a 32 year old Rem 700. I think it's time to rebarrel. What caliber?. Budget build for my 15 year old son.

To be fair, my '67 700 VS is not box stock, it has been bedded/floated and the Rem trigger tuned, but the action and barrel are original.40 Deep, With your current rifle, bed it, freefloat the barrel, tune the trigger, then shoot it after a good cleaning. Then determine if you need a new barrel.
I must have missed the recoil stipulation. At 15 the lad could already be "big enough to eat hay" as my dad would say.Recoil is not bad with a .308 ,maybe start Him on mellow loads and work up as he grows . If you reload .257 Roberts on a long action works well and recoil is not much of a factor .
