Remington vs sf ll users

Dsmer4ever

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Looking at picking up one of these for coyote hunting in 223 or 220 swift. I got to handle one a few days ago and really liked the fell and finish.
Just wondering how they perform, they worth the $1200+ price tag?
I like the HS stock on it, that probably helps add to the price.
Anyone have any experience with these rifles? Suggestions on which cartridge to go with, I already have a Browning Eclipse in 22-250 just looking for something new to play with.
Thanks
Dan
 
Hi Dan I have vssf ii in .223 it shoots very well. Had it out to the range this morning and it out shot my friends $2500 cooper with my $1000 remington. The rife can shoot better than me. I'm trying to enter my rifle shoots .5 club, but the loose screw behind the trigger is having a hard time.
 
I have one in 220 Swift, HS stock, topped with a Zeiss Rapid-Z Varmint. Rifle and scope cost me just over $3000.

Firstly, the rifle is a laser beam, holes touching each other at 200 yards. Recoil is fairly sharp for a 22, even with the big stock and heavy barrel. It surprised me at first, but is minor for how far I can reach out to coyotes.

If you handload or are a competitive shooter, the Swift is your best bet. If not, the 22-250 has more load diversity, evenmoreso if you go with the 223 Remington.

I've been very impressed with my scope as well; I recommend you research it as well. It works exactly as advertised.

Hi Dan I have vssf ii in .223 it shoots very well. Had it out to the range this morning and it out shot my friends $2500 cooper with my $1000 remington. The rife can shoot better than me. I'm trying to enter my rifle shoots .5 club, but the loose screw behind the trigger is having a hard time.

The above post brings out a potentially depressing situation. It's frustrating having a rifle that shoots better than you ever will. A workmate who learned to shoot in the USMC asked if he could try it, and he put two shots in the same crater as the first one (we were using a surplus spec blind as a target). I don't think I'll ever be able to hold still enough to do that myself.
 
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How does the higher end Remington compare to the lower end? I had a sps dm in 30.06, just didn't like it at all, keep it for a little under a year and traded it for a TC.
I noticed the finished of the vssf seemed a lot better than the sps I had, I just remember it feeling kind of sloppy to me. It turned me off of the Remington line until I got to handle the vssf.
I'm just getting in to reloading, that's why I wanted to go with something a little different. I haven't seen too many 220 swifts around.
 
You're not getting a top-notch Weatherby or Mauser, but I would say it's night and day. Mine is smooth and neat without the rattle and play of the SPS or 770. It's still got the long bolt throw and side-tang safety like every other 700, but it's silky smooth.

Out of the box accuracy is the real draw IMHO, and the Swift has great potential when custom loaded for a 26" barrel.
 
Looking at picking up one of these for coyote hunting in 223 or 220 swift. I got to handle one a few days ago and really liked the fell and finish.
Just wondering how they perform, they worth the $1200+ price tag?
I like the HS stock on it, that probably helps add to the price.
Anyone have any experience with these rifles? Suggestions on which cartridge to go with, I already have a Browning Eclipse in 22-250 just looking for something new to play with.
Thanks
Dan

I would buy a tikka heavy barrel varming for a grand or have one built for not much more then a stock sfii. I would not spend $1200 on a stock remington.
 
I would buy a tikka heavy barrel varmint for a grand or have one built for not much more then a stock sfii. I would not spend $1200 on a stock remington.

Most of this. Wish I would never have sold my Tikka M595 .22-250Rem. Just from past experience, I would definitely have a .22-250Rem built off a Rem 700 action before buying a VSSFII.
 
Couple of Remington haters chiming in here.
Ignore them.
I have owned the VSSF in 220 Swift, and know the potential is very good.

Mine would shoot consistently around 1¼" at 200 meters,
and would surprise me with a group under 1" @ 200 often enough
to make me smile.
Regards, Eagleye.
 
I've been reading a lot of reviews over the last few days and haven't really heard any bad comments or reviews in regards to the rifle. I just wanted to hear some personal experience from the members here.
 
I have an older VS in 220 Swift topped with a big Leupold.

Kills gophers far far away!

But sad to say, it's no Weatherby or Mauser. ;)
 
Couple of Remington haters chiming in here.
Ignore them.
I have owned the VSSF in 220 Swift, and know the potential is very good.

Mine would shoot consistently around 1¼" at 200 meters,
and would surprise me with a group under 1" @ 200 often enough
to make me smile.
Regards, Eagleye.

I'm not a Remington hater. I've had 8 of them over the years and am having a gun built on a 700 short action as we speak. I'm saying for $200 less you can buy a tikka that has better qc, machining, barrel etc. or buy a $400 700 short action and build one for a bit more than $1200. You can do better for your money than giving $1200 of it to Remington for a stock gun. That's what I'm saying.
 
I'm not a Remington hater. I've had 8 of them over the years and am having a gun built on a 700 short action as we speak. I'm saying for $200 less you can buy a tikka that has better qc, machining, barrel etc. or buy a $400 700 short action and build one for a bit more than $1200. You can do better for your money than giving $1200 of it to Remington for a stock gun. That's what I'm saying.

What kman said. x2.
 
If you look at it objectively like kman300 said you would be silly not to get the Remington. The bare stainless action alone would be $650 new and the stock on the EE is going to $325 plus shipping. If you like the stock and would buy HS-precision, then the barrel and all the gunsmithing to put it all together is only $200. I would say that is excellent value. Also, with the Remington you don't have a Tupperware stock like on the tikka's. My $0.02, but hey, I'm a rem fan.
 
If you look at it objectively like kman300 said you would be silly not to get the Remington. The bare stainless action alone would be $650 new and the stock on the EE is going to $325 plus shipping. If you like the stock and would buy HS-precision, then the barrel and all the gunsmithing to put it all together is only $200. I would say that is excellent value. Also, with the Remington you don't have a Tupperware stock like on the tikka's. My $0.02, but hey, I'm a rem fan.

Just buying the rifle seems like a good deal if performs as everyone says it should. I considered building a rifle but I do not already have a action. As soon as I start thinking of building a rifle from nothing I just want to go to a custom action, I really like the Stiller predator. Cost of a used rem short action probably around $500? Then what about having it blueprinted? What's another $500 then it's a full custom Rig? But then were talking about a $2500 rifle compared to a $1200 rifle.
How far ahead am I coming? I have no experience here. I tend to over do things sometimes when less often works fine.
Thanks
Dan
 
I'm not a Remington hater. I've had 8 of them over the years and am having a gun built on a 700 short action as we speak. I'm saying for $200 less you can buy a tikka that has better qc, machining, barrel etc. or buy a $400 700 short action and build one for a bit more than $1200. You can do better for your money than giving $1200 of it to Remington for a stock gun. That's what I'm saying.


OK, I take that statement back. But having several custom built rifles myself, I do not think you can build a decent custom for much less than $2k, which still makes that VSSF a decent deal
But I agree that if you want the ultimate Swift, find a short 700 action, and build to your heart's content. Just don't expect to do it for $1.2K
As far as Tikka goes, I have little use for them personally. Had a real sour one, and no satisfactory service.
Regards, Eagleye.
 
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