I don't know why you 'need' double plungers... I always cut 3 coils off the original 700 ejector spring... so the brass isn't ejected so violently and so far...
They seem to have abandoned the three rings of steel. Actually, the three rings of steel turned out to not be of any benefit. See, Remington was trying to protect their customers from accidents where they fired an overloaded cartridge or the wrong cartridge. It just never occurred to them that the real danger was that their customers would shoot each other.
The 700 is pretty hard to improve upon but you need to introduce some improvements over the years to keep people interested. So you invent solutions to problems that don't exist to keep the attention of new buyers who don't know better.
Not a troll post but an honest question:
The double ejectors seems like a pretty novel approach to the m16 style extractor. Isn't that a pretty common modification on target rifles based on the m16? Don't some factory bolts have a similar extractor?
It's got nothing to do with reliability...700's eject great.
It's got to do with the angle of ejection changing with the installation of a M16 style extractor.
The addition of the second ejector brings the ejection angle back to where the spent case will reliably eject even with large tube scopes with big windage turrets.
Does this reflect theory or reality? The reason I ask is that for a long time now, custom rifle builders have installed SAKO and AR-15 style extractors on M-700 bolts, without the need of modifying the position of the plunger in order to maintain a suitable angle of ejection. You might be on to something though if the Remington Custom Shop folks positioned of the new extractor so as not to line up the bolt lug recess in the receiver, when the bolt handle was turned down. If this was done, either moving the position of the plunger ejector, or adding a second one, would be necessary to maintain the correct angle of ejection.
Does this reflect theory or reality? The reason I ask is that for a long time now, custom rifle builders have installed SAKO and AR-15 style extractors on M-700 bolts, without the need of modifying the position of the plunger in order to maintain a suitable angle of ejection. You might be on to something though if the Remington Custom Shop folks positioned of the new extractor so as not to line up the bolt lug recess in the receiver, when the bolt handle was turned down. If this was done, either moving the position of the plunger ejector, or adding a second one, would be necessary to maintain the correct angle of ejection.
Does this reflect theory or reality? The reason I ask is that for a long time now, custom rifle builders have installed SAKO and AR-15 style extractors on M-700 bolts, without the need of modifying the position of the plunger in order to maintain a suitable angle of ejection.
Are they still going to make 40x rifles?
I hope so. A personal favorite. - dan
They seem to have abandoned the three rings of steel. Actually, the three rings of steel turned out to not be of any benefit. See, Remington was trying to protect their customers from accidents where they fired an overloaded cartridge or the wrong cartridge. It just never occurred to them that the real danger was that their customers would shoot each other.
There's always the wankers out there that have little knowledge of careful loading methods combined with stratospheric performance ideas they had



























