• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

222 Rem Find

65swede

Silver $$ Contributor
Found this in a LGS. Fleur de lis checked stock. Any jeweling on the bolt is long gone. Tapped for iron sights, sights removed.
Came with the bushnell scope. Looks like an OX barrel code, 1973? Is this anything more than a ho-hum 700?

Either way it's going to make a fine varminter.

1.jpg
2.jpg
3.jpg
4.jpg
5.jpg
 
Last edited:
Nice find it it wasn't ridicuosly priced, I would buy one in a hearbeat at a reasonable price.

Typical early 70's BDL - I like that stock better than the later ones, I am fond of the fluer de lis pattern and that era of stocks were slightly slimmer than the later ones.

drover
 
Found this in a LGS. Fleur de lis checked stock. Any jeweling on the bolt is long gone. Tapped for iron sights, sights removed.
Came with the bushnell scope. Looks like an OX barrel code, 1973? Is this anything more than a ho-hum 700?

Either way it's going to make a fine varminter.
Congratulations on a great rifle!

I’ve snagged a few of those old Remington 700s with the flat safeties from that era in a variety of calibers, 222 being my favorite, most of them haven’t been shot a lot, just packed around. I have that same rifle in pristine condition and another one in the ADL version that was my Uncle’s main ranch rifle. Both are 222. Both are shooters!

Enjoy!
 

Attachments

  • 3A369719-F08A-493D-B719-F540AE47CFF7.jpeg
    3A369719-F08A-493D-B719-F540AE47CFF7.jpeg
    73.8 KB · Views: 56
Good brass for the money.





Lots of 222 brass on gunbroker. Norma, Nosler, etc. one of the nice things about 222 is you can find brass and dies. Lapua comes up often enough too. If your dead set on Lapua I have 50 I could spare for a fair price, Pm me.
 
Last edited:
Enjoyed 45 plus years with the 222, and had both the sporter first the Varmint Special purchased for $199 new in the 1970s. The Varmint Special action is now a 6 mm Dasher. But the sporter is still going. I have several thousand new pieces of 222 brass, and these old rifles are capable of small groups. My favorite sage rat load was 40 gr moly coated Nosler BT at 3750 fps in that 222 with H335...and 50 gr moly coated at 3400 fps . Today it would be considered a high pressure load...but load data for the 222 is mild pressures and underloaded. The 222 brass can handle the same pressure as the 223 brass...I ran thousands of through the 222s. The 25-06 Remington Varmint Special is now a long action 308 mag feed Aluminum chasis 30" barrel LR target rifle with a 8 twist, for heavy 200 to 230 gr bullets. Enjoy your find, a 222 will shoot accurately with many powder and bullet combinations. Many years ago had one five shot group so small with the Varmint Special it might have been a bench record...but it wasn't in a match, I was just testing out some match bullets at the rifle club, when I shot it, a real one holer with a 222 Remington Varmint Special factory rifle, I believe the powder was a zippy load of W748, it was the exception most groups were .3s or even a few .4s some in the .25" area for a factory rifle, it was accurate, no loads hit a 1/2" or larger if you stayed away from military 55 FMJ of the time.
 
I gave up chasing brass and then crazy price. Bought a file trim die to form with and made my own. And, like always 500 pieces came up for a great price.
I ended up with a great load using the 36 grain Barnes. Super speed, great accuracy
 
It is not how fast you can make it go it is can you hit what you are shooting at ?
I'm looking at some reduced load data from old Lyman manuals. I'd really like to find a tack driving fur friendly load that doubles as a coyote killer out to 200 yards. I already have a long throat Tikka 223 for the LR high speed stuff. Have some Speer 50gr SP and a few different Barnes, Berger, and Hornady bullets available locally. I think 2900 fps might be the sweet spot.
 
Last edited:
according to the chart in John Lacy's 700 book, that action/rifle appears to be from around November 1967

very nice find as that rifle should be putting coyotes out of their misery
 
according to the chart in John Lacy's 700 book, that action/rifle appears to be from around November 1967

very nice find as that rifle should be putting coyotes out of their misery
Interesting. So was the action made in ~1967 and later assembled with the barrel and stamped?
 
I'm not 100% sure on the assembly date since other factors could be involved. Personally, I don't research a rifle's age using barrel codes. I look up action serial numbers documented in the Lacy book and get a very close date down to the month and year. Also, various features of the action help confirm the age and when it was likely made (trigger, bolt shroud, bolt handle, action D&T for a Williams side mounted rear sight, action cutout for stripper clips, etc...) . Taking your newly acquired rifle as an example, follow my reasoning.

The original rifle was likely chambered in .222 and left the factory around Nov. 1967. Owner could have shot out the barrel from high volume shooting at prairie dogs. Due to poor accuracy issues, rifle is pawned or sold to a new owner. Years later, another owner replaces the barrel with a $25 take-off found on a table at a gun show. Replacement barrel has stamped codes dating it for a completely different year or decade. When I buy used 700's, I want to know how old the action is, not the barrel.

Here is an actual example of a rifle I bought several years ago from a pawn shop in North LA. It was listed as a custom Rem 700 in 25-06. Based on the components, I could tell it was a "Frankenstein" rifle, that was assembled from various components over multiple decades. The action SN is 1754, dating it back to 1962, one of the first rifles (actions) made by Remington. My guess it was originally chambered in 30-06 or 270. Barrel was a factory 25-06 chambered take-off, with all the normal stampings that was dated to 1998. Stock was an HS Precision from the early 2000's. BA and the stock were all painted with fresh cerakote to appear as a new custom build. I ended up parting it out and selling everything. Hope that helps

Lwhole2506.JPG

Lactioncloseup.JPG
 
Found this in a LGS. Fleur de lis checked stock. Any jeweling on the bolt is long gone. Tapped for iron sights, sights removed.
Came with the bushnell scope. Looks like an OX barrel code, 1973? Is this anything more than a ho-hum 700?

Either way it's going to make a fine varminter.

View attachment 1360835
View attachment 1360836
View attachment 1360837
View attachment 1360838
View attachment 1360839
Not a ho-hum rifle by any means, They took mor care with the precision rifles out of Remington. I've seen them shoot same hole groups a number of times.
 
I'm not 100% sure on the assembly date since other factors could be involved. Personally, I don't research a rifle's age using barrel codes. I look up action serial numbers documented in the Lacy book and get a very close date down to the month and year. Also, various features of the action help confirm the age and when it was likely made (trigger, bolt shroud, bolt handle, action D&T for a Williams side mounted rear sight, action cutout for stripper clips, etc...) . Taking your newly acquired rifle as an example, follow my reasoning.

The original rifle was likely chambered in .222 and left the factory around Nov. 1967. Owner could have shot out the barrel from high volume shooting at prairie dogs. Due to poor accuracy issues, rifle is pawned or sold to a new owner. Years later, another owner replaces the barrel with a $25 take-off found on a table at a gun show. Replacement barrel has stamped codes dating it for a completely different year or decade. When I buy used 700's, I want to know how old the action is, not the barrel.

Here is an actual example of a rifle I bought several years ago from a pawn shop in North LA. It was listed as a custom Rem 700 in 25-06. Based on the components, I could tell it was a "Frankenstein" rifle, that was assembled from various components over multiple decades. The action SN is 1754, dating it back to 1962, one of the first rifles (actions) made by Remington. My guess it was originally chambered in 30-06 or 270. Barrel was a factory 25-06 chambered take-off, with all the normal stampings that was dated to 1998. Stock was an HS Precision from the early 2000's. BA and the stock were all painted with fresh cerakote to appear as a new custom build. I ended up parting it out and selling everything. Hope that helps

Lwhole2506.JPG

Lactioncloseup.JPG
Pics of groups? ;)
 
I'm not 100% sure on the assembly date since other factors could be involved. Personally, I don't research a rifle's age using barrel codes. I look up action serial numbers documented in the Lacy book and get a very close date down to the month and year. Also, various features of the action help confirm the age and when it was likely made (trigger, bolt shroud, bolt handle, action D&T for a Williams side mounted rear sight, action cutout for stripper clips, etc...) . Taking your newly acquired rifle as an example, follow my reasoning.

The original rifle was likely chambered in .222 and left the factory around Nov. 1967. Owner could have shot out the barrel from high volume shooting at prairie dogs. Due to poor accuracy issues, rifle is pawned or sold to a new owner. Years later, another owner replaces the barrel with a $25 take-off found on a table at a gun show. Replacement barrel has stamped codes dating it for a completely different year or decade. When I buy used 700's, I want to know how old the action is, not the barrel.

Here is an actual example of a rifle I bought several years ago from a pawn shop in North LA. It was listed as a custom Rem 700 in 25-06. Based on the components, I could tell it was a "Frankenstein" rifle, that was assembled from various components over multiple decades. The action SN is 1754, dating it back to 1962, one of the first rifles (actions) made by Remington. My guess it was originally chambered in 30-06 or 270. Barrel was a factory 25-06 chambered take-off, with all the normal stampings that was dated to 1998. Stock was an HS Precision from the early 2000's. BA and the stock were all painted with fresh cerakote to appear as a new custom build. I ended up parting it out and selling everything. Hope that helps

Lwhole2506.JPG

Lactioncloseup.JPG
Thank you sir, very inciteful. Wish I had a copy of that book.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,310
Messages
2,216,094
Members
79,543
Latest member
drzaous
Back
Top