I've had at least two dozen Rem 700 rifles. They came in factory original stocks and aftermarket stocks.
I finally decided to get a trio of barreled actions into stocks, because shooting a barreled action without a stock is not easy -- even after spending hours ensuring that the scope was mounted properly, doing OCW for my handloads, and making sure my front rest had the proper amount of fill in the sandbag.
I settled on 3 different stocks: McMillan A3 (recently advertised on this forum), Accuracy International AICS, and lastly a Bell and Carlson 'Medalist Tactical'.
The AICS comes with the action screws held captive in the stock, which seems very handy; you won't lose them!
The other two stocks require that you supply your own screws, which naturally I kept from the previous factory configurations (VSSF and 700P). After installing the barreled action, BDL floorplate, and related bits into the A3, I inserted the bolt, and immediately realize that it would not turn to close. Hmm, stop, investigate. Indeed the factory original front bolt was protruding into the action by about 1/8". Which apparently means the A3 has less belly or whatever you call the in-between depth than a factory Remington stock.
Ditto the Bell and Carlson Medalist Tactical. I quickly located the action which had come installed in this stock, which had been rebarreled and otherwise worked over by a riflesmith, and indeed its front action screw had been shortened, and ground down/polished on the end to simplify getting it started in the action hole...
Why am I boring you with this tale? Because -- despite shooting lots of different 700s for a lot of years -- I had not encountered this action screw length issue. I guess I had ASSumed that all of the after market stocks would utilize the screws that came with the original setup, and said screws would be good to go. Who knew? I'll be darned!
And if I shorten some of these screws accordingly, then they won't work for the original stock anymore, so I suppose I better get some spares... That, or I could insert some washers outside of the bottom metal, and in effect adjust the thread depth like that. Which wouldn't look great.
I finally decided to get a trio of barreled actions into stocks, because shooting a barreled action without a stock is not easy -- even after spending hours ensuring that the scope was mounted properly, doing OCW for my handloads, and making sure my front rest had the proper amount of fill in the sandbag.

I settled on 3 different stocks: McMillan A3 (recently advertised on this forum), Accuracy International AICS, and lastly a Bell and Carlson 'Medalist Tactical'.
The AICS comes with the action screws held captive in the stock, which seems very handy; you won't lose them!
The other two stocks require that you supply your own screws, which naturally I kept from the previous factory configurations (VSSF and 700P). After installing the barreled action, BDL floorplate, and related bits into the A3, I inserted the bolt, and immediately realize that it would not turn to close. Hmm, stop, investigate. Indeed the factory original front bolt was protruding into the action by about 1/8". Which apparently means the A3 has less belly or whatever you call the in-between depth than a factory Remington stock.
Ditto the Bell and Carlson Medalist Tactical. I quickly located the action which had come installed in this stock, which had been rebarreled and otherwise worked over by a riflesmith, and indeed its front action screw had been shortened, and ground down/polished on the end to simplify getting it started in the action hole...
Why am I boring you with this tale? Because -- despite shooting lots of different 700s for a lot of years -- I had not encountered this action screw length issue. I guess I had ASSumed that all of the after market stocks would utilize the screws that came with the original setup, and said screws would be good to go. Who knew? I'll be darned!
And if I shorten some of these screws accordingly, then they won't work for the original stock anymore, so I suppose I better get some spares... That, or I could insert some washers outside of the bottom metal, and in effect adjust the thread depth like that. Which wouldn't look great.