I have owned probably 125 Remingtons, starting with the old 721/722/725's and then 700's. For my bucks, they are hard to beat, but tastes vary, and some hate them as much as I love them. Usually very accurate or easy to make so, I prefer the "Classic" stock design and the mountain rifle design is next. Never cared much for the BDL since it never felt just "right" in my hands. I owned one Semiauto, an old 740, that worked ok, but was fussy about clean. Not a reloaders dream either. Sold it off in 1965, and never looked at another Semiauto centerfire rifle. I know, I know, there are probably some fairly decent designs out there, but they leave me cold. Please don't send any single spaced 5 page letters telling me the error of my ways. LOL.

I still prefer beautiful wood and deep blue over any other combination, but recognize the advantage of stainless/synthetic in bad weather, so I have a Remmy like that also (only one though!) It is one of the most accurate AND cosmopolitan rifles I have ever owned. Chambered in 30-06, it averaged .74 moa for the last 25 - 3 shot groups fired out of it. This included 150, 165, 168, 180 and 200 grain bullets (no Match bullets, mostly Partitions)
That is one of the reasons I keep buying Remington 700's. The last new one I purchased, a Classic in 8x57 regularly shoots around 3/4" with loads it likes, sometimes it surprises me and 3 will cluster into ½" My Classic in 300 Savage is THE most accurate hunting weight rifle I have ever seen, with a recent 3-shot group measuring .040" Center to center. That's the kind of stuff that many have found about the 700, and the word gets out. Has quality slipped a bit recently? Probably, but I had a well known gunsmith rebarrel a 721 a couple of years ago, and he said it had receiver to barrel threads that were absolutely terrible (not straight), so there has always been a few rifles that missed the boat when it came to quality control. The fact is, the bad ones are not only Remingtons, but also ___________ (just type in any rifle name here) I just hope the new Remington owner conglomerate does not screw things up royally. Regards, Eagleye