this came out of Remington's personal archives when they went bankrupt.
No, it's 100% legitimate. Not sure what the heck was going on over at Remington with that one.I think someone is fishing for sucker there.
No, it's 100% legitimate. Not sure what the heck was going on over at Remington with that one.
how would you go about getting certified provenance on something from a company that went under and got sold off?I thought it was Nov. 1 not Apr. 1. And this looks like a drunk with a hacksaw and duct tape. Without certified provenance it's nothing but a scam.
Seeing these gorgeous older Remington's from the 70's and 80's makes me wish I was born about 30 years sooner. Luckily I snagged a 2004 dated vls when I was 15-16 and was able to experience some of the good Remington quality before the rails completely fell off with themKind of going into the "rabbit hole" of this one but it truly irks me that Remington went sideways. So, allow me the joy to vent!
I've owned a bunch of old 700's that always performed well, were reliable and reasonably priced. They offered a sensible range of calibers for almost every conceivable shooting purpose.
Their old varmint models with the synthetic stiff and bedded stocks were easily capable of 1/2 to sub 1/2 moa with tuned reloads. The old trigger system was relatively easy to adjust with a crisp pull, no creep or over travel.
True, some of their old walnut stocks would have to be bedded to obtain maximum accuracy potential but out of the box, my old 222 Remington sporter weight rifle shot consistently in the 1/2 moa range with tuned reloads. Other sporter weight rifles with walnut stocks that I owned shot well within hunting application use, out of the box with tuned reloads. Sub 1 moa was not difficult at all to obtain, again with tuned reloads even without bedding those walnut stocks.
When I shot small bore pistol competition in the 70's, the Remington Target 22 LR was reliable, accurate, and economical. So much so, we used it on the Army Post Pistol team I shot with and as a civilian, our club pistol team would buy and entire lot, (100,000 rounds) every year or so. We had several Distinguished Expert and a few Master Class shooters using this ammo.
If Tikka can produce a functional synthetic factory stock, why couldn't Remington instead of those junk injection molded stocks? If Tikka could produce a factory ejection system that is 100% reliable why couldn't Remington? If Tikka could produce an easily adjustable trigger with outstanding performance characteristics why did Remington "fix" their old trigger system to something worse?
I have no idea why their 22 LR standard velocity ammunition went sideways in the mid 90's with a preponderance of misfires and drop off in accuracy. I shoot close to 2,000 rounds of CCI 22LR standard velocity ammo a year and rarely, if ever have a misfire. The flyers attributable to ammo are less than 1%. Why did the Remington 22 LR ammo go sideways?
Thanks, I feel better now, I think.
they are a business, gunbroker does a pretty good job at determining the market value of stuff. I'm sure the price will come downI like how the "starting bid" is $500
Remington would never let that piece of S!%t out.
At any stage, it would be more refined than that.
Someone is just throwing something at the wall
and hoping it sticks.
I looked at the add ,
If memory serves me correctly the seller ,GunRepairCenter, is one of the entities that purchased part of Remingtons guns, parts etc
some basic google searches does in fact confirm gunrepaircenter did acquire remington stuff when they went bankrupt. they are even listed on remingtons website.Man!!
I don't think I would even have that be under the seat in my old beater truck!!
Providence be damned!! Some things just shouldn't be done.
