To add to that on a barrel nut setup the nut takes the beating, you put the barrel in a vise and loosen or tighten the barrel nut as needed easy as pie.
On a Remington there is no way to lossen the barrel from they action, "there is no way to grab it" so what ends up happening is you loosen they action from the barrel and those factory barrels are on there believe me. So you end up putting a lot of leverage, torque, force, on the action in a way it was never made for, an action is not that stong when you twist it sideways and they start to distort I have seen some that the rings wound not realign with the mounts after removing a stubborn barrel. Hey just some observation I have made over the years.
Dean
On a Remington there is no way to lossen the barrel from they action, "there is no way to grab it" so what ends up happening is you loosen they action from the barrel and those factory barrels are on there believe me. So you end up putting a lot of leverage, torque, force, on the action in a way it was never made for, an action is not that stong when you twist it sideways and they start to distort I have seen some that the rings wound not realign with the mounts after removing a stubborn barrel. Hey just some observation I have made over the years.
Dean
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