Remington 700 as a safari rifle anyone?

I have been two places with 120+ actual degree heat. Djibouti on the equator and the Mojave desert.

So, no one hunts in 120 degree heat. Most people have never even experienced 120 degree heat.

Yes in the 90's.

Kind of like -40. It is fashionable for jackasses to say they hunt elk in =40 in Montana.

Doesn't happen.

M700 m40 and m24 sniper rifles have killed thousands of people at 120+ degree heat in Iraq.

So the point is moot.
The Remington 700 that we can buy off the shelf has very little in common with the model 700 sniper rifles that are extensively modified and used by the US military as sniper rifles.
Back in’93 I was lucky enough to visit Quantico and have a play with military 700 sniper rifles. They had Remington on the action but that’s where the similarity finished.

I’ve had a 700 factory extractor fail in the field. Problem solved by fitting a Sako/M16 type extractor.

I had used model 700’s for a couple of decades with thousands of rounds shot through them without a problem….. and then one failed at the worst possible time.
 
Last edited:
The Remington 700 that we can buy off the shelf has very little in common with the model 700 sniper rifles that are extensively modified and used by the US military as sniper rifles.
Back in’93 I was lucky enough to visit Quantico and have a play with military 700 sniper rifles. They had Remington on the action but that’s where the similarity finished.

I’ve had a 700 factory extractor fail in the field. Problem solved by fitting a Sako/M16 type extractor.

I had used model 700’s for a couple of decades with thousands of rounds shot through them without a problem….. and then one failed at the worst possible time.
The us army ones are straight remington factory rifles just built to spec. The marines do build the m40s. But the bolt is not anything special.
 
For me, the solution is the AR15 style extractor that most of the modern clones now incorporate into their guns.. but.. even with the AR15 style extractor, youre still not looking at anything close to the rugged reliability of the Win 70 / Mauser style extraction system..


I love mine. Works great!

IMG_5321.jpeg


IMG_9290.jpeg

IMG_9287.jpeg
 
Things must have changed since’93.
They changed long before 93. In fact, there was never a change.

The M24’s delivered in 1988 (when the army adopted the M24) came straight from the Remington factory. ALL M24’s were produced under a single contract with follow on task orders over a period of 5 years, then a follow on contract was awarded to Remington for another 5 years.

In 2010 the army began the process of upgrading the M24. That was done internally by US Army armorers. But prior to that Remington was the only producer of the M24. The army never put a hand on the guns other than armorers level maintenance and repairs.

You are most likely thinking of the USMC M40, which is also a 700, but was completely built and spec’s by the USMC. The USMC simply bought components from Remington and paid leases on Remingtons patents..

The primary difference between the M24 and the M40 (other than the M40’s generally were higher quality builds) is the M40 is a short action receiver chambered for a short action cartridge.. where the army chose to go with a long action receiver, but have the rifles chambered for a short action cartridge…
 
They changed long before 93. In fact, there was never a change.

The M24’s delivered in 1988 (when the army adopted the M24) came straight from the Remington factory. ALL M24’s were produced under a single contract with follow on task orders over a period of 5 years, then a follow on contract was awarded to Remington for another 5 years.

In 2010 the army began the process of upgrading the M24. That was done internally by US Army armorers. But prior to that Remington was the only producer of the M24. The army never put a hand on the guns other than armorers level maintenance and repairs.
The upgrades still did not affect the bolt or extractor.
Things they did was rechamber the m24 from 308 to 300wm and a few other upgrades. But they never changed the internals.
 
The upgrades still did not affect the bolt or extractor.
Things they did was rechamber the m24 from 308 to 300wm and a few other upgrades. But they never changed the internals.
A bit more than that… but correct.. the bolt and extractors were not changed out… although the bolt face WAS machined.. the 308 bolt face wouldn’t work with the 300WM, so it was indeed worked on as part of the conversion process..

The M2010 also got a chassis rather than a traditional stock, an upgraded magazine system, improved optics, etc…

The M24 long action receiver made conversion to 300 wm easy.. where the USMC M40 short action receiver wouldn’t allow for a 300 WM conversion…
 
Last edited:
I can’t really speak for that caliber, but I have a custom shop 700 in 375 that has killed an absurd amount of dangerous game being used over the years by many friends and family.

@Hunter-Habib has the same rifle and has used it to great effect. I believe he has modified the extractor on his to an m-16 style extractor.
Read the chapter on 416 Remington in The Perfect Shot book. Not to be rude, but I don't trust the extractor or safety on the Remington and would never use one for DG. I would certainly suggest a CRF rifle with a safety that actually blocks the firing pin, Rem safety is just a trigger interupter. I have had to replace 2 or 3 extractors over the years.
 
mdwest and farmer_john

Well gentlemen, I’m certainly not an expert on the different branches of the US military or their weapons.

But I’m absolutely certain that in 1993 I spent a week shooting on the ranges at Quantico before attending Camp Perry. Whilst at Quantico I spent several hours being shown around a workshop/armoury on the base. As to if it was Army or Marine Corps I really don’t remember. However, back then I was a Remington tragic and was surprised by the amount of modifications that were made to “Remington 700 rifles “ by them. The staff there were only too happy to explain why and what modifications they made. I should also point out that there were also several Winchester Model 70’s there as well.

As to the Remington 700 modifications. These are what I clearly remember. Barrel was replaced, stock was replaced (actions were glued into the stock), charge clip slot milled into receiver (not for charger clip use but for supporting the scope base) front of action trued, bolt trued (can’t remember the exact term used) so that it was perfectly aligned to the barrel, bolt had an M16 style extractor fitted, trigger was modified, floor plate/trigger guard was replaced with a Winchester model 70 type.

At the end of that process the only thing that was recognisable as Remington was the engraving on the action. Those rifles were used as sniper rifles. A lot of rifles there were being serviced? after their return from Iraq MK1. They also had heaps of Barret 50 cal sniper rifles there too.

I was also pleasantly surprised by how many 1911’s and M14’s were there and obviously still in service.
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
63,578
Messages
1,398,896
Members
125,179
Latest member
DieterLang
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

Screenshot 2025-10-09 at 7.53.47 AM.png
A two minute video I made of our recent Safari. I think it turned out well
Speedster wrote on Sue Tidwell's profile.
Just received your book. It will be a Christmas present from my wife. Looking forward to read it.
ftothfadd wrote on EuroOptic's profile.
Jake, Sorry to bug you again. I was wondering if you could share a. couple actual pics of this crossbow with me?

Xpedition Archery USED Scrapeline390X Sniper Gray Crossbow XACW1001 - Light Wear - Needs Bolt/Arrow Guide Spring UA5689​

If it is in a decent shape, would you be willing to sell it for $100 shipped? IS it missing the retention spring that goes over the bolt?
Thank you Ferenc
Hie guys. Where can a 16 year old get a job at a hunting outfitter whilst the boy studies for lph . If anyone has anything WhatsApp me on [redacted]
Montana Gun Man wrote on John P.'s profile.
Good morning John, I just read your setup procedure for the northstar duplicator ator. I found it very hand and I did learn some things. I have the same machine and I am having a problem i can not figure out and was hoping you could shed some light on the subject.
 
Top