
Seriously, how did a thread on 'which gun to buy' become such a trainwreck. Even if the 700 is the greatest or worst gun ever it doesnt deserve this much of the thread.
Mauser claw is recognized as mauser. Everyone and their mother making mauser style actions because they good. Lee Enfield is recognized for rear locking bolt cocking on close. Recognized - no argument, anyone else doing it that way - not really. Recognized as has nothing to do with good or bad or rights on doing things.
New thread - no I don't want to figure out who believes in what. All I care is that you made an extraordinary claim about Rem 700 action being "safest ever designed with huge advantage". New people reading the thread might believe that because they don't know any better and no one else objects. But this claim is wrong.
Rem 700 has no "huge advantage" over Browning X-bolt, Tikka, Vanguard 2 by getting extractor inside the bolt. This advantage nowhere to be seen. As we now know for fact world of engineers and companies made no use of it in last 48 years. Moreover out of the box Rem 700 will be worst quality compared to the other 3.
Will it matter to an average user? Probably not. Will it be a problem - not likely. Can you gunsmith Rem700 to be a shining star - yes, with money you can gunsmith a 100 years old surplus, not a problem.
Is Rem 700 safest ever with a huge advantage IN ANYTHING - absolutely not.
So let me get this straight, on the one hand we have:
- A company which specifically makes and effort to make cheapest bolt and comes up with a design of Rem 700. (We know that for a fact because they didn't approve 5.5 cent extra cost on a trigger - 100% safety issue)
- A company files a patent on that design which expires 50 years ago for anyone to use, but no one does
- Huge number of Rem 700 are refitted with outside extractor. Huge number of aftermarket custom made Rem700 actions are made with outside extractors.
So in 50 years no one saw a value of that apart from cheaper to make boltface.
On the other hand we have anecdotal evidence of a Rem 700 which was fired with a wrong cartridge all together and didn't blow up. You attribute that one occurrence to the inherit huge advantage of Rem 700 action while you didn't even do the same experiment with any other rifle, but YOU THINK they will do worse.
And in order for argument to continue you can only accept me personally taking a rifle and blowing it up with a wrong ammunition? Are you serious?
Anyway, what makes you think that extractor will fly anywhere at the first place? You THINK it will? Lets watch barrel obstruction tests:
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Do you see ANY extractors flying anywhere? Couple of rifles exploded to bits (Rem 700 is one of them ironically) - I don't see any extractors flying.
A-bolt totally explodes - bolt to receiver as we see practically intact:
http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/A-Bolt-disaster-660x406.jpg
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Savage blows up - bolt is holding just fine:
http://s273.photobucket.com/user/marshalette/media/gun%20stuff/muzzle4jpg.jpg.html
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But its all bs because you saw a Rem 700 chambered in 7mm rem mag ( 3,200 ft x lbf energy ) firing .303 Brit ( 2,630 ft x lbf energy = 20% less ) and it was fine. ONCE. And you never did it again with anything else, but you THINK it proves that Rem700 has a DESIGN advantage over all other 2 lugs.
Again, are you seriously presenting that as an argument for you position?
Well, this thread has gone on considerably longer than I thought it would. And either because of or in spite of (not sure which) I still am considering a Rem 700 in the mix.
So I will add this pic to see if any opinions change. These are the pics of the exact models I'm looking at and a price comparison (without actually posting the prices available to me for a new, in the box, rifle). While I realize there are countless options in some of these models, due to availability and caliber choice, this is what I have got to work with - so not interested in say a Model 700 BDL etc - if the model isn't in the pic, it's not within my consideration.
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OP those all look like decent choices, I think you will do fine with any of those.
personally not a Browning fan, but for not a good enough reason to slag them.
To the back and forth Remington banter: I would say wrong thread but not bad fellas. As much as some are jumping on their wagons, I think they are both making valid points and if I was having a garage beer with these guys I would be having a great time!
Everyone has the BEST rifle and BEST car and BEST boots. To each their own.
enjoy your new rifle OP!
I'm going to have to express some disbelief on the whole ' Which brand' theory of questioning. As a guess 90 % of the answers are championing their personal favorite, and expressing a narrow point of veiw.
I think I'm in the 10% minority but in case you think I'm not, if I was championing any rifle it would be the Tikka T3 Lite. Which I have in .270WSM and is as stated is one super accurate, smooth action 'out of the box' rifle with a fine user adjustable trigger.
And this is not just my opinion but that of a friend of mine that was a member of Canada's Bisley team and was coach to a woman trying out for Canada's Olympic Woman's Biathlon team. So he knows a thing or two about guns.
But the OP stated at the outset that he wasn't interested in a Tikka so I didn't fly the Tikka flag... till now.
Actually, despite all the back and forth I have gained some valuable information here.
...(and actually, I plan on picking up a Browning BLR pistol grip after this next rifle and kinda want that to be either a 270 Win or 270 WSM and not really looking to duplicate the caliber).
So I do appreciate the responses that have at least tried to address my original question, even if they were just a testimonial to your love of your own rifles - that info is still "very valuable" - if it has worked well for "you", provided I like the ergonomics of that model it should likewise work well for "me".
I am not a "newbie" to rifles, shooting, or hunting - just been working with some "very old" equipment and not familiar with much of anything that has been built in the past 50 years.
True, but the OP hasn't mentioned anything outside the realm on USA.
I'll just say this.
Have any Browning X-bolt, Weatherby, and Savage haters bombarded your thread?
The way it stands Remington has some skeletons in the closet. If someone is going to spend the time and energy hating on Remington 700s there must be a reason. Even Mauser vs. Enfield threads show a common complacency towards favoured actions. And those arguments can get heated.
Personally I would stay away from a modern 700. A 700 built in the 60s, 70s, and 80s are a different breed and I personally would have no issue picking one up. But I'm vested in Mauser 98s, so that won't happen any time soon
As others have said. Handle them, and if you get a chance shoot them. Then make a decision for yourself.
(don't buy a 700)




























