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Thread: What's it worth?

  1. #1
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    What's it worth?

    I just picked up a like-new Remington 700 chambered in .223 on trade. It has a 26" bull barrel, free floated Hogue stock, and a small (6") Harris bi-pod on it. Also came with Remington scope rings. It appears unfired. I also got the original Camo polymer stock and hardware with it, and a nice sling, but no name on it.

    What's it worth as it sits in today's market? I'm hoping I didn't get burned on it...

    Thanks for any input...

    Bobby
    Fact of life:

    Although the EAGLE may soar proudly through the skies, it is very rare for the Weasel to be sucked into a jet engine.

  2. #2
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    Well a new one probably sells in the $600-$625 range without the Hogue stock, bipod or rings. So if looks unfired and you did better than that I'd say you did pretty good. The other stuff is probably adds up to a couple hundred-ish
    Quote Originally Posted by d90king
    Play stupid games, win stupid prizes...

  3. #3
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    Can buy that rifle for less than $600 all day around here. The addition of a bipod helps its value a bit. The hogue stock is junk, so they are in great supply.

    New, never fired, yeah its worth about $650 with the bipod depending on what model it is.
    Greg Dykstra
    Primal Rights, Inc.

  4. #4
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    That's good news... Thanks! For what I have in it, I'm tempted to keep it and build it a bit... If it was in .308 I wouldn't hesitate to keep it...

    Thanks guys!

    Bobby
    Fact of life:

    Although the EAGLE may soar proudly through the skies, it is very rare for the Weasel to be sucked into a jet engine.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bobert0989 View Post
    That's good news... Thanks! For what I have in it, I'm tempted to keep it and build it a bit... If it was in .308 I wouldn't hesitate to keep it...

    Thanks guys!

    Bobby
    Rebarrel it. Thread on whatever you want. Call up manners and get a proper stock for it while you are at it.
    Greg Dykstra
    Primal Rights, Inc.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by orkan View Post
    Rebarrel it. Thread on whatever you want. Call up manners and get a proper stock for it while you are at it.
    I'm fairly ignorant to bolt-guns, but can I have this rifle rebarreled in .308 using the same action? If so, what would that amount of work cost me? I'd prefer a barrel around 20" for a .308, and maybe threaded?

    Also, what is an inexpensive but decent stock with adjustable cheek-weld and LOP? I like the McMillan stocks, but again, I'm fairly ignorant to precision-rifle building... And don't want to end up spending more converting this one than it would cost to buy a new one...

    Thanks again,

    Bobby
    Fact of life:

    Although the EAGLE may soar proudly through the skies, it is very rare for the Weasel to be sucked into a jet engine.

  7. #7
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    You can open the bolt face and put on a new barrel, and thats a fine option if you were going to build a custom gun anyway. But not worth it if a factory barrel is fine by you.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bobert0989 View Post
    can I have this rifle rebarreled in .308 using the same action?
    Yes, you can.

    Cost would depend upon what you wanted done, and who did it. You could get a remington take-off from someone for around $75-$100. You could have a smith spin it on for around the same.

    Then you may as well get a PTG bolt.

    You'll be into a bit of money, but not much. If you wanted to go the custom barrel route, then you'll be looking at about $500-$750 for the barrel depending on the pedigree of barrel and what your smith charges for chambering/crowning/threading.

    Cost goes up if you want to true the action, and bed it in your choice of stock.

    For stocks, in order of my opinion on quality:
    Bell & Carlson
    HS Precision
    mcmillan
    manners - Better service and shorter wait times than mcmillan, with better product in my opinion.

    There are chassis out there as well, in no particular order:
    AICS
    XLR
    Mcree
    and many many others.
    Last edited by orkan; 04-28-12 at 12:55.
    Greg Dykstra
    Primal Rights, Inc.

  9. #9
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    What do you want to do with it? Building or smithing on it may not be as cost or time efficient as simply selling or trading it on what you want/need.
    2012 National Zumba Endurance Champion
    الدهون القاع الفتيات لك جعل العالم هزاز جولة الذهاب

  10. #10
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    I've just always wanted a good, straight-shooting .308 bolt-gun. I don't really have the terrain here in central KY for extremely long shooting, and wouldn't expect to need anything beyond 300 yards. Most shots around here for me would fall in the 150-200 yard range, actually.

    I'd like a setup not too heavy to drag into a tree stand and hunt with, but want it to look nice as well. If I want to drag it out west and shoot with some buddies, I want it to perform. I'd be fine with a take-off barrel I think, as long as it will hold sub-3" groups. If it will do that, it will kill a deer... I'm not a huge fan of the Hogue stock, but it is free-floated. The original SPS stock was not. I have it as well, but I do like a free-floated barrel. For a typical hunting rifle, all I currently use have wood stocks. Is there any company that produces nice aftermarket wooden stocks?

    And how short of a barrel can I go with on a .308 and maintain accuracy as needed? 18"... 20"? What profile if I went with a Remington take-off?

    Thanks for all the help, I really like learning about new guns and platforms. I can build an AR ground-up now, mostly thanks to the experienced help from members on this forum. Four years ago, I had no clue that an upper and a lower could be taken apart, lol.

    Much appreciated,

    Bobby
    Fact of life:

    Although the EAGLE may soar proudly through the skies, it is very rare for the Weasel to be sucked into a jet engine.

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