dantiff2 said:Thats somewhat disheartening to know a gun is allowed to be manufactured and sold with one of its primary features nonfunctioning.
Dan
dantiff2 said:In my opinion, it is a part of the design! A properly working gun will extract it's spent case from the chamber. Mine don't. I must wiggle or tap the bolt handle toward the rear. Both the action and bolt handle have built in amped surfaces to aid in this extraction. How is this not part of the design??
Dan
CSM19Z5M said:Just had a varmint rifle built for me with a stainless 700SA that was trued. This old argument about the old actions being better than the new ones is functionally meaningless. Since you can't buy a 700 action by itself, the only way to get one is to buy a new Rem 700 rifle, throw away the barrel and stock, harvest the action and true it. That's it folks. I would love to have a supply of "old"700 actions but it isn't going to happen so if you want one you are stuck with the process I just described. My new custom varminter has one of these actions and it has been trued, tuned and polished and a new bolt handle installed and it is smoother to operate than any "old" 700 action produced. And it shoots like a laser so I don't care if it is forty years old or forty days old, it's a safe, strong and accurate action. If you don't like the new Remingtons' tolerances then just buy one and have your smith tune it up for you. Most of all the actions built today are built using CNC technology which means tolerances are consistent and repeatability in manufacture is improved. That does not mean that the "fitting" is as good necessarily because the craftsman have been replaced by operators. Have your new 700 actions tuned up and they will out shoot any other factory actions produced. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
butchlambert said:Joe, cross threaded? How did he repair that?
Joe Salt said:To my understanding the thing was bad. Cross threaded was my way of putting it. He had to chase the threads, what would you say it would be you have surely come across some like that.
joe Salt