ab_bentley
I fix stuff, sometimes....
The early 17 remingtons also has a iron coated stainless barrel that was blued.
The early 17 remingtons also has a iron coated stainless barrel that was blued.
You're saying 7 rem mag. I presume?
Yes sir 7 mm Remington magnum, sporter , stainless, with a stripper clip cut out in the top rear of the action . To my knowledge it was factory original. One would assume that when checking with Remington on year of manufacture I would have found out otherwise.You're saying 7 rem mag. I presume?
The Marine Sniper rifle was built on a 40X. The M24 Sniper rifle was built on a 700 long action.
Dale, what did they ask of you to date your rifle? How were they able to date it?Yes sir 7 mm Remington magnum, sporter , stainless, with a stripper clip cut out in the top rear of the action . To my knowledge it was factory original. One would assume that when checking with Remington on year of manufacture I would have found out otherwise.
the real value is in the USMC version of the replica'sThe M24 sniper rifles used a special 10X made by Leupold.
The cereal number. I volunteered the caliber and heard nothing to the contrary.Dale, what did they ask of you to date your rifle? How were they able to date it?
Thanks
You can call Remington's help desk at 1-800-243-9700 or go to the website and click on contact us , give your information then type in what you are wanting and the cereal number and they will get back to you, if the firearm in question does not have a number, give the barrel markings or the proof markings on the receiver. You use to be Abel to upload a file i.e. Picture but I am not sure if you can now or not.Dale, what did they ask of you to date your rifle? How were they able to date it?
Thanks
The rear bridge cutout was discontinued on the 700 sometime after 195,XXX? A local guy has a 199,XXX that does not have the rear bridge cut out! Some of the first test M40's were probably built on 40-X and also receivers in the 168,XXX. There were 700 rifles shipped to the Corps from June till end of Aug of '66 according to Senich's 'The Long-Range War, Sniping in Vietnam'. A few under 200,XXX but the bulk in the 211-212,XXX and 221,XXX serial number range. All marked 700, never seen a pic of an M40 marked as '40-X' on receiver. Not that there might not be a handfull but I have never seen a pic nor read of such.
I measured a 44,XXX 40-X receiver I have and also 2 early 700's in the 10X,XXX range and the early receiver cutout could be machined to a "clip slot" but they ARE NOT a clip slot per say like on a 40-X repeater or what the USMC M40's utilized on the first run. I have one C prefix that has rear bridge drilled on left side. It is a Varmint Special 222 that also has sight block on end of barrel so probably not factory as son selling father's estate stated he built it for silhouette shooting? The other 2 C prefix I currently own are not drilled and tapped on left of rear bridge. Never seen another C prefix drilled/tapped. Have seen and owned B's and earlier that are.
If anyone wishes to argue about the USMC M40 then go here
http://www.m40rifle.com/
or read Peter Senich's books "The Long-Range War" or "The One Round War"? which all will give you mostly correct facts or at least an idea if you are right, wrong or completely full of it. lol
Perhaps someone feels a certain serial number or range might be worth more to them or such but it will never be a USMC M40 so if they can or want to somehow justify a higher price it is their choice. The serial number range sure won't make it shoot better or make it something it never was nor will be. Unless you have a rifle with documents that it is an M40 for and from the Corps it IS NOT an M40, only a copy similar to those contracted by the Corps. You can use copy, clone, tribute, replica or moonbeam but,.....well, hopefully you get it?
Just my worthless 2 cent contribution to the argument that I won't argue about.
Respectfully,
Dennis
PS-Apologize for spelling etc., stroke apparently will never get better.![]()
Dennis, My info came from The Remington 700 by John Lacy. John wrote this book with the help of Remington and a host of about 40 contributors. The Marine Corps sniper rifles (M40) were all 40X. Were they all marked 40X? I don't know, but they weren't marked 700. The 40X models were all short actions. The M24 Sniper rifles were built on the 700 long action.
Remember when dating the Remington 700 they were like cars. The model year starts the winter of the earlier year. Serial# is not the way to date a Remington rifle. The date code is on the barrel. 40X receivers came off the same line as the 700. Originally they hand picked them from the lot and they were roll stamped 40X.
I personally don't care to own a real or fake sniper rifle. I'm not looking to snipe anybody and if I did there better weapons for that. If I collected old rifles I might want a real one and sure wouldn't want a fake.
I'll stick with Remington's book, thanks.
OK, I will go with one of the guys that built them....
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