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I'd quickly bet a dollar that the bar those receivers are made of is hardened and tempered to Remingtons' specs from the steel mill. No harder than a Rem. 700 receiver is, it's no match for carbide and EDMs. I work as a job shop machinist, part time for a good friend, besides my 'smithing shop (worked full time as a job shop machinist/tool maker from '74-'91). We cut 4350HT , 4140HT, and 4142HT on CNC and manual machines everyday. Look how easily the receiver can be faced in a "gunsmithing"' sized lathe with just a C6 brazed carbide bit. As thin as some of the sections are on 700s they'd "tie themselves in knots" when quenched, if heat treated after the were cut. Quite possibly they are "stress relieved" after they are machined, which done on a production basis, my induce some deflection.fdshuster said:Yes, the newer ones are machined on CNC equipment, probably to closer tolerences than the older ones, but much of that effort is wiped out when the machine finished receivers are heat treated resulting in the warped receivers, some worse than others, both old and new. Like anything else that is mass produced you may get a good or bad one.