Remington 597
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The Remington 597 gained a bad reputation early when it was supplied with plastic magazines. Remington seems to make a good rifle, but they need to do an overhaul on the department that designs magazines. (Witness the 581, Nylon 77, etc magazines.
Remington did a design change on the magazines to a moulded metal one, then are now on a slight modification of that magazine with their Generation III magazine for the 597. Not sure if they are still doing it, but Remington used to exchange old design magazines for new ones on a one-for-one basis.
Remington lately changed the ends of the recoil springs to a bit larger area because people managed to get them jammed a bit when reassembling the rifle, thus causing friction that slowed down the operation of the bolt and caused FTF and FTE problems. This is not a fault of the rifle, but Operator error.
The biggest problem with the 597 today is the Nut behind the Buttplate. This error prone part does not read the Manual or does not comprehend what the Manual says, particularly when replacing the bolt guide rods. These two rods are held in by two set screws that the Manual says should be 10 INCH-POUNDS. 10 Inch-Pounds is about 8/10 of a FOOT-POUND. Over tightening these screws will bow the guide rods, which then rub on the bolt when it recoils, thus creating friction, slowing down the bolt, and resulting in all kinds of feeding problems. The simple solution is to tighten these screws in finger tight until they just contact the guide rod, then back off 1/4 turn.
Due to manufacturing tolerances, you sometimes get a tight one. About 200 rounds of mini-mags through it will smooth out the operation.
Being a person who has shot a lot of targets, I believe in a good trigger system. A semi-automatic rifle generally has a bit more tolerance in their trigger systems and are not as good as bolt action rifles. The addition of a Volquartsen hammer to the 597 will work wonders.
I'll take the 597 Remington.