Putting my Rem700 on a diet

Plus it can be easily downloaded for his daughter to use as well, especially if they both have a short LOP

120 noslers don’t have much recoil to them even in full house loadings

~7.5 lbs would be doable in factory configuration with his vortex and talleys I imagine. For general target shooting is there anything better than a 7mm rem mag?

Great brass goblin cartridge too; tons of it in range buckets at rifle sight in season, at least in the Peace and Alberta
 
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You can lead a horse to water…

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You’re best bang for your buck would be a self finished wildcat w/ flip flop pad, a set of talleys and a smaller leupold. 7-08 is just plain awesome, and the rest of your gun is already dialed in. You will lose more than a pound, and more importantly avoid the rear heavy balance that your B&C stock and short barrel likely causes.

I have a major hard on for light rifles, because I do longer backpack trips and every ounce counts…..but there is a lot to what buckmastr is saying. I think 7 lbs is right where I start to lose shootability, particularly offhand. It’s all about being realistic about your intentions with the rifle and the dollars/ounce ratio.



SO your saying my Tikka T3X SS Ultra Lite 7-08 with wildcat stock Scoped at 103 oz is TOO Lite for YOU ?? :p;) RJ
 
Go with a Wildcat Stock SA stock, about 20oz finished for a SA,

alloy bottom metal (if you want a floor plate) or you could go Blind magazine but the alloy bottom metal is only a few ounces

Switch to Talley Lightweights holding your scope
 
As an alternate to hanging your keys from the sling swivel you can toss an 11 oz bipod and 9 cartridges on your ultralight
 
Thanks RJ. The price is the reason I haven't pulled the trigger on one. I think I will just buy one anyway, they are nice and the time these shaky hands have left on this earth are precious lol. BTW.... I'm probably not much older than you! :p
 
Thanks RJ. The price is the reason I haven't pulled the trigger on one. I think I will just buy one anyway, they are nice and the time these shaky hands have left on this earth are precious lol. BTW.... I'm probably not much older than you! :p

Jezz Weatherby Fan just sold a NEW one at the chillywack gun show for $350.00 NO wonder the GUY threw down the CASH and ran ! LOL RJ
 
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^ Ive considered one of those but I’m concerned about change in poi for longer shots using the bipod and ruck as a rest. I guess you could sight in with the bipod and see if it’s fine for field positions at closer range.

Jeff Cooper would scoff at me but if I have a good line of sight I usually go prone and use sling or if time allows it ruck for all my shots at big game even at ~100 yards. I have also pulled out my dry bag and used it as a rear rest and pack for the front. A few done kneeling, standing offhand and standing or kneeling resting or supported by a tree as well but prone is a preference when possible. Maybe even a couple of the hood of my truck (don’t tell slimbo).

You can also loop your trekking poles around each other and rest on the cradle created by the loops; think I learned that move from this board; maybe from ol’ mountain slim himself :dancingbanana: I don’t usually carry them though I do enough mountain climbing at work and seek out relatively flat ground for hunting when possible.
 
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It’s ok I’m guilty of hunting from a truck too. Heck, one time I even shot my work truck with a 270. Good thing it wasn’t a 7mm or I’d have had to walk home.

^ Ive considered one of those but I’m concerned about change in poi for longer shots using the bipod and ruck as a rest. I guess you could sight in with the bipod and see if it’s fine for field positions at closer range.

Jeff Cooper would scoff at me but if I have a good line of sight I usually go prone and use sling or if time allows it ruck for all my shots at big game even at ~100 yards. I have also pulled out my dry bag and used it as a rear rest and pack for the front. A few done kneeling, standing offhand and standing or kneeling resting or supported by a tree as well but prone is a preference when possible. Maybe even a couple of the hood of my truck (don’t tell slimbo).

You can also loop your trekking poles around each other and rest on the cradle created by the loops; think I learned that move from this board; maybe from ol’ mountain slim himself :dancingbanana: I don’t usually carry them though I do enough mountain climbing at work and seek out relatively flat ground for hunting when possible.
 
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