Hello everyone.
I have a question, could anyone tell me if Remington chamberd the 308 Norma in the 700 BDL rifles and approximately what years?
Thanks KZ 870.
The design premise, as I have read, was to clean out completely a military 30-06 chamber - then re-do the bolt face / extractor - likely millions of war surplus 30-06 out and about for very cheap after WWII. So if you have seen a Rem 700 in 308 Norma - likely could have been done up like that? Originally a 30-06, now a 308 Norma??


Thanks for sharing guys I appreciate, I have a 308 Norma. Its a parker hale. The Remington 700 was a dream lol. Thanks again guys for all the information.
Hello everyone.
I have a question, could anyone tell me if Remington chamberd the 308 Norma in the 700 BDL rifles and approximately what years?
Thanks KZ 870.
The 308 Norma hayday was in the 50's, the 700 didn't come into being until the 60's. Your theory is possible, but more likely that would have been more likely just one of us gun nuts wanting to play with a different or more powerful cartridge. - dan
Think this is incorrect as was potash miner. The introduction of the 2.5" magnum family had nothing to do with cleaning up a 30 cal bore. The Model 700 combined with the most popular 2.5" magnum, 7mm rem mag, made both the caliber and model 700.
People simply started wildcatting the new case, into the most popular bore in North America. Noone did a 30 2.5" despite 338wm, 264wm, 458wm. That bore was popular because there had just been two world wars fought against cartridges using metric designations. Nothing sold with a metric designation before 7mm rem mag, can you imagine a 264 creedmore today.
When someone got around to legitimizing the 30/338 it was a small foreign company Norma. The brass, and reamers were available without any rifles manufactured. Rifles came out, were custom and expensive, then rare and expensive when small numbers of rifles like Husqvarna and Schultz and Larson came out. In a very few years, 1958 to 1962/3, rifles costing 1/3 308nm manufacturers were available in 7mm rem mag/M700 and 300 win mag/M70. The end.
The 308nm "cleans up" a 30-06, sometimes, as a coincidence not design. Great cartridge, reloaded it gets to the lower range of factory 300win mag performance. Basically a 300wsm ballistic clone, actually predecessor. Few rifles were manufactured for it, I doubt anyone makes a rifle in this caliber now. Most rifles you find in 308nm will be rebarreled in it, late 50's - early 60's high quality European imports, and full on custom rifles. So does the 308nm end up in quality rifles because it's a great caliber, or is it a great caliber so it ends up in a quality rifle. A subtle difference.
A few things I discovered in the three I've owned. Factory ammo is rare and expensive. Factory headstamped brass is also rare and expensive, however it can be easily formed from its 2.5" cousins the 7mm rem mag, and 338wm. Mine all liked 180gr partitions pushed at or near max, but shot anything 165-180gr very well. Slow to very slow powders. Those quality rifles handle the pressures easily, shoot accurately, and encourage experimentation/play.




























