This^^I have worked with well over 100 Remington actions over the last few years. RR and RAR prefix. The front was square, headspace was within 0.002. Bolts could be swapped between actions if you wanted. Primary extraction would be fine for the 95% of users who shoot saami pressure loads. What more should Remington do?
Are you forgetting that the new Remington isn't the old Remington? They aren't the same people. How can you hold the new owners responsible for the problems of old Remington? Now if they create new issues for themselves then by all means bash them for that.
My post was not meant to bash Remington just simply pointing out why not fix the primary extraction it wouldn't be that difficult? I've got 2 right now that the bolt doesn't even touch the extraction cam.The primary extraction thing is overblown and thrown around on the internet. Most can get away with zero or near zero and never know anything different.
The Lugs weren't set back were they?My post was not meant to bash Remington just simply pointing out why not fix the primary extraction it wouldn't be that difficult? I've got 2 right now that the bolt doesn't even touch the extraction cam.
Nope, not on either one.The Lugs weren't set back were they?
Yes, exactly!Remington could easily do one thing very easy and thats to fix there primary extraction. Not like it would be that hard, they obviously were just turning a blind eye to it.
As Walt mentioned, Round Hill bought the firearms business directly from bankruptcy proceedings. Vista had nothing to do with the purchase of the firearms business.Last I heard, Vista bought em' out from the bankruptcy. i heard again
that Vista spun them off. I heard again that a Czech billionaire had his
fingers in the pie. I heard also that some firm named Round Hill has the
steering wheel.....Sounds like a shell game with a hot potato......
What I'm wondering is, if some of these are so far off to not even touch the cam,Nope, not on either one.
The 700 i built my 30-28 was horrible i could even hardly get it to extract a case.
I run it 100fps lower than when it starts to show pressure, after I had it fixed same exact load it extracts a case now just fine.
Maybe never to have gotten as complacent as they did to begin with?
Credibility is difficult at best to regain once lost.
There in is a MAJOR problem for RemArms today IMHO. Thanks to a period in which the company was raped by the Cerberus’ of the world, credibility associated with real ( and perceived) product quality issues was essentially ruined. When that happens, you might well manufacture the best product in its class, but the challenge is to get people to try it again. In most everything, you’ve got to have a critical mass of people saying something akin to, “ Damn, this thing is GOOD ! “Maybe never to have gotten as complacent as they did to begin with?
Credibility is difficult at best to regain once lost.
When I was a teenager growing up in the 60’s, when you went in the field, 9 times out of 10 either you or the guy walking next to you was carrying a Remington. I’m sure they had no trouble, but I don’t know how the people responsible for ruining a truly iconic American company could sleep at night.I see them advertised in my Black Friday searches this wk, believe they have a special Timney in them now, so that eliminates the trigger issue, haven't been into a store that had any to look at them. They want much the same money in the price points they chose to compete in for now. I've sold both the ones I had, they served me well for many years, never had any issues, both shot well. Would I run out and buy one? Probably not, I have a couple of Tikka's now, to me they seem to be a better value in the price point zones they compete in, Tikka trigger doesn't need replacing, just a spring and a quick adjustment. Remington will take a long while to climb out of the they got dug into, even though it's no fault of the current operators. They probably need to do a redesign of the line and model names to get out of it, hard to do when the 700 series set a standard like it did. They will most likely never again become what they were in terms of industry dominance.
