Short Review and Range Report - Semi-custom Rem .223

Tomochan

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
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Location
The Cariboo, BC
Last year at the Kamloops Frosty Farky F-Class match fellow CGN'ers C3pppo and Longshot persuaded Mrs Tomochan to shoot day two of the match. Though she had only shot a few times and never past 100m she agreed to 'have a go'. Using my ATRS Defiance and FGMM ammo she shot 66/75 and 69/75 and got the shooting bug which necessitated me getting her a rifle of her own. I had a Remington SPS in .223 which provided the donor action and Sean at North Shore Barrels (NSB) spun on a new match grade barrel, installed a Jewel trigger, replaced an ugly tactical bolt knob with a better one, trued the action and cerakoted the metalwork. Upon the rifle's return I dropped it into a spare AICS 2.0, put on a Harris 6-9 S-type bipod and mounted a NF NXS 8-32x56.

While NSB had a number of barrels in stock I really wanted the fattest barrel that the AICS could accomodate and so the work took a bit longer than expected since the barrel had to be sourced but eventually the barrel I selected arrived - a Broughton 5c 1:7 twist that looks more like an axle than a rifle barrel and is 1.2" at the muzzle - and I must say I do like it. Makes for a heavy ( just over 18 Lbs total weight ) rig but this is a range not a walking gun.

Of course the Jewel triggers are always a joy to use and represent a huge improvement over the stock factory trigger but a little fitting is required to ensure that the safety works in the AICS and that is a small job with a Dremmel tool that is on my to-do list.

NSB appear to have done a very nice job and the finishing looks excellent. Sean kept me fully informed of progress which is something I appreciated as while I know that delays can ( will ) occur in a rifle build I'd much rather be informed than being kept in the dark about what's happening or not happening.

While my use of this rifle will likely be limited to load development I'm really happy that what I pictured in my mind when deciding to have the SPS remodeled worked out and I'm also pleased to be able to report that so far the rifle shows great promise - producing groups just outside an inch at 300 yards with Berger 80g VLD's over 24.4g of Varget. I will be experimenting further with some other bullets/loads but I think another genuine half-MOA rifle has been added to the collection.

Here are some pics for you to enjoy

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And, of course, the day that started it all :)

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Looks Great Tomochan! Sean built a very accurate 260 for me. I really like the straight 1.2" contour barrel. It just looks perfect.

Two questions:

1) what height rings are you using?
2) is the recoil lug oem or oversized? If oversized did you have to mill the lug recess?
 
Last year at the Kamloops Frosty Farky F-Class match fellow CGN'ers C3pppo and Longshot persuaded Mrs Tomochan to shoot day two of the match. Though she had only shot a few times and never past 100m she agreed to 'have a go'. Using my ATRS Defiance and FGMM ammo she shot 66/75 and 69/75 and got the shooting bug which necessitated me getting her a rifle of her own. I had a Remington SPS in .223 which provided the donor action and Sean at North Shore Barrels (NSB) spun on a new match grade barrel, installed a Jewel trigger, replaced an ugly tactical bolt knob with a better one, trued the action and cerakoted the metalwork. Upon the rifle's return I dropped it into a spare AICS 2.0, put on a Harris 6-9 S-type bipod and mounted a NF NXS 8-32x56.

While NSB had a number of barrels in stock I really wanted the fattest barrel that the AICS could accomodate and so the work took a bit longer than expected since the barrel had to be sourced but eventually the barrel I selected arrived - a Broughton 5c 1:7 twist that looks more like an axle than a rifle barrel and is 1.2" at the muzzle - and I must say I do like it. Makes for a heavy ( just over 18 Lbs total weight ) rig but this is a range not a walking gun.

Of course the Jewel triggers are always a joy to use and represent a huge improvement over the stock factory trigger but a little fitting is required to ensure that the safety works in the AICS and that is a small job with a Dremmel tool that is on my to-do list.

NSB appear to have done a very nice job and the finishing looks excellent. Sean kept me fully informed of progress which is something I appreciated as while I know that delays can ( will ) occur in a rifle build I'd much rather be informed than being kept in the dark about what's happening or not happening.

While my use of this rifle will likely be limited to load development I'm really happy that what I pictured in my mind when deciding to have the SPS remodeled worked out and I'm also pleased to be able to report that so far the rifle shows great promise - producing groups just outside an inch at 300 yards with Berger 80g VLD's over 24.4g of Varget. I will be experimenting further with some other bullets/loads but I think another genuine half-MOA rifle has been added to the collection.

Lol you know, just a few I have laying around.... ;)

You sir need to donate some of those ;) just kidding. Stunning rifle to a already amazing collection. Dare I ask what you do to afford these beasts??? I'm very jealous!!!!!

Kind regards

Matt
 
Rifle looks great, bull barrels & AICS are a great combo. I'm deciding right now whether to build a custom from sean, in the midst of figuring everything out, glad to see more quality work from NSB.
 
That looks like a great build and I see that it was recommended to someone in another thread building a new precision rifle. Could you lay out the rough cost to build this up from the original Remington SPS. Thanks in advance.
 
That looks like a great build and I see that it was recommended to someone in another thread building a new precision rifle. Could you lay out the rough cost to build this up from the original Remington SPS. Thanks in advance.

The beauty of doing a build is that you can choose, within reason, how much to spend. A full custom with custom action can run, for a repeater, to $5K or more. It can also be done much more cheaply if you choose. Once you have the donor action - in this case a Rem 700 - you can estimate spending the following on components: Barrel $3-600; Trigger $125-300; Stock $2-700 so assuming the donor cost you $700 the finished price (excluding gunsmith charges) will run you between $1300-2200 depending upon what components you want. Add in bolt knob and rail and rings and then you are ready to spend another $1-3000 on glass :)
 
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