This one offers the pointy bullet option as well and will handle surprisingly heavy loads.Remington chambered the .35 rem in the 760 as well.
There has also been a small number of the Remington 7600 rifles (and possibly carbines) chambered for the 35 Remington and the Savage Model 170 and 170C was chambered for it as well.
The most recent manufacture of 7600s in 35 Remington were special ordered by Grice Wholesale (Grice Gun Shop's) in the USA...these folks have had Remington produce various small runs of "oddball" chamberings for them over the years...the .25-06, 7mm-08, 35 Remington are just a few examples.
Never did.Didn't they also do a special run of 7600s in .358 Win?
Remington refers to them on their website as special runs. However I have NEVER seen one reference or official word published by Remington anywhere to the fact that they made 35 Whelen 7600 carbines - as we know they have in small numbers.The most recent manufacture of 7600s in 35 Remington were special ordered by Grice Wholesale (Grice Gun Shop's) in the USA...these folks have had Remington produce various small runs of "oddball" chamberings for them over the years...the .25-06, 7mm-08, 35 Remington are just a few examples.
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Remington refers to them on their website as special runs. However I have NEVER seen one reference or official word published by Remington anywhere to the fact that they made 35 Whelen 7600 carbines - as we know they have in small numbers.
Pretty sure u are wrong on that. Be interested in actual proof to show me wrong as I have an unhealthy interest in such information. Lived thru those days with my ear to the 35 Whelen rail and I loved the carbines better than rifles. First 35 Whelen carbine I heard of was wood stocked in about 2006 maybe (forget year exactly right now) - bought it and another synthetic stocked carbine a few years later.There was one year, I believe, between 1987 and 1994???
Pretty sure u are wrong on that. Be interested in actual proof to show me wrong as I have an unhealthy interest in such information. Lived thru those days with my ear to the 35 Whelen rail and I loved the carbines better than rifles. First 35 Whelen carbine I heard of was wood stocked in about 2006 maybe (forget year exactly right now) - bought it and another synthetic stocked carbine a few years later.
However the story about these 21st century carbines as european orders may have merit. All that is still a bit mysterious to me however and doesn't change the fact they are/were unpublished runs it seems (made 2002, 2004, and 2009 and more?) - with a few floaters left behind for lucky N. Americans.
For more exact info see this page - my entry near the bottom - http://www.24hourcampfire.com/ubbthreads/ubbthreads.php/topics/4799313/4
At a quick glance that 170 of Mad dogs sure looks similar to the 760 and 7600s. Who copied who?




























