WVmike
Well-known member
Model 70 Extreme Tungsten | Bolt-Action Rifle | Winchester
www.winchesterguns.com
Anyone have one of these?
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No bottom metal, all mags. Depending on caliber they are either Seekins own sweet carbon fiber mags or PMAGS. My Manbun will be a PMAG while the PRC gets the cf.
As for the bolt mention, they do come coated and need a good clean and lube.....then end up slick as snot
Bergaras seem pretty heavy and I don't particularly like the stocks.
I really dislike the stock on CA ridgelines. There is a bunch of flex in the fore-end and they might as well have not put a grip on it as far away from the trigger as it is.
I'm a fan of tikkas but in 7RM a hand loader is going to be limited by COAL and slow twist rates in a tikka. Tikka stocks are pretty stiff as well but the grip needs some modification for me to be happy. More reliable and generally slicker action setup than m700 clones (Christensen, bergara, seekins). If they chamber a rifle in 7PRC this would be my choice.
Seekins - did a fantastic job on the stock (minus being a little short in LOP without easily inserted adapters). It has a grip that actually supports your firing hand and puts it in position to make good trigger presses. Will not limit your COAL for longer bullets in handloads. Somewhat heavy in PH2 configuration. I personally had poor accuracy with 2 300wm barrels but that was at least a couple years ago but i've not seen recent negative reports like were somewhat common with PH1's. Action is pretty heavy and 4 lugs seems overkill. That said, i paid to put an aftermarket barrel on mine rather than send it back for round 3. If going 7RM, this is the direction i'd probably go out of the 4 mentioned.
Savage - I think they do a pretty good job with stock ergos and a lot of them shoot well but I'll never settle for their rough janky actions. Seen some that have extraction/ejection issues and that is a known issue if you google. Saw a guy show up with one for a precision rifle class that had rattling loose pic rail and short head spacing that wouldn't chamber factory ammo. This sent the instructor into a rant about all the jacked up savages he sees.
Browning x-bolt - I've got a handful of custom rifles but find myself carrying a basic 300 wsm xbolt stainless stalker more than any other rifle. The thing shoots fantastic, is light and short enough to be nice to carry, and the stock fits me well for a sporter stock. Trigger is kind of mediocre and sloppy feeling. I dont like how thin the receiver is where the scope bases mount, they are prone to stripping threads there. I don't recommend these much but mine sure works well. For doing a lot of walking and holding the rifle, having the bottom metal flush like on the xbolts is nice.
My 7mm has been touch and go with the reloads that I have developed. The best group I have shot was a 3 shot group at 0.86 but it was with 150 gmx and 59.0 of IMR 4350. The eld-x the best group is not even close. I’m going to work with IMR 4831 and see if that does better. Also I’m getting a bonus from work this November and I have yet to purchase a premium rifle for myself. I would like to be able to pick up something that I normally wouldn’t be able to pick up on the regular basis. My financial manager “wife” doesn’t give me a long lease to purchase high quality things like I would like so this one time and probably for a long time I’d like to get a nice rifle.I'm not much of a gun snob, and I personally think that your Vanguard 7 mm RM would be an ideal rifle. Depending on how well your rifle shoots, I don't really see how you can improve on it with another brand.
I currently have 3 Vanguard rifles, one in .300 Weatherby, one in .308 Win., and a .223. I have pillar and glass bedded all of them, and modified their stocks to fit me, and made some other changes. The biggest drawback that I can see with any of them is their weight as they are all in the 9 1/2 to 10 pound range.
I re-stocked my .300 Wby in AA Fancy walnut, and other than no fancy inlays, I would put that stock up against any other Mark V stock that I've seen. It;s so nice that I hate to take it out in foul weather, but iot is my favorite elk rifle and I have taken it on a number of international hunts. This is why I have my 7 mm RM.
My Vanguards...
My first 7 mm RM was a pawn shop ADL that I borrowed from a friend for my first South African hunt. I later bought it then traded it for a stainless BDL that my pawn shop friend had. I've also taken it on a number or international hunts, and it is the only rifle that put any animals in the B&C record books for me.
Last summer I put my Rem 700 7 mm RM in a Vanguard Griptonite stock and my only mission now is to tweek it's long range accuracy.
I'm not much of a gun snob, and I personally think that your Vanguard 7 mm RM would be an ideal rifle. Depending on how well your rifle shoots, I don't really see how you can improve on it with another brand.
I currently have 3 Vanguard rifles, one in .300 Weatherby, one in .308 Win., and a .223. I have pillar and glass bedded all of them, and modified their stocks to fit me, and made some other changes. The biggest drawback that I can see with any of them is their weight as they are all in the 9 1/2 to 10 pound range.
I re-stocked my .300 Wby in AA Fancy walnut, and other than no fancy inlays, I would put that stock up against any other Mark V stock that I've seen. It;s so nice that I hate to take it out in foul weather, but iot is my favorite elk rifle and I have taken it on a number of international hunts. This is why I have my 7 mm RM.
My Vanguards...
My first 7 mm RM was a pawn shop ADL that I borrowed from a friend for my first South African hunt. I later bought it then traded it for a stainless BDL that my pawn shop friend had. I've also taken it on a number or international hunts, and it is the only rifle that put any animals in the B&C record books for me.
Last summer I put my Rem 700 7 mm RM in a Vanguard Griptonite stock and my only mission now is to tweek it's long range accuracy.
A good Smith can make that trigger work as well as any replacement. They have to know what they are doing though. mtmuleyI have a Remington 700 LSS in 7mm Rem. mag that I bought new. It is a shooter. I plan on losing the Trigger Assist that is on it, and getting a real trigger job soon, as the factory trigger is really stiff.
View attachment 260302
A good Smith can make that trigger work as well as any replacement. They have to know what they are doing though. mtmuley
Yep. We have a smith here that is the same way. That's why I don't have any aftermarket triggers. mtmuleyYes, we have a local guy that is a wizard with 700 triggers, and he only charges $30! He has done 2 of my neighbor's 700's, and also his son's 700. They are really nice. This guy is a gunsmith pretty much full time, as well as a Tool Maker by trade.
I bought a CA Ridgeline in a 7 mm Rem Mag a couple years ago. I am very happy with the accuracy and quality of the gun. I chose the the 7RM chamber to replace my old Ruger 7RM because I had tons of 7RM brass, but the old Ruger was not particularly accurate. Unfortunately most of my old brass would not chamber in the new CA Ridgeline even with full length resizing. I bought a special resizing collet that helped, a little, but the CA chamber is apparently much tighter than the old Ruger. I basically ended up buying all new brass, which chambers fine in the Ridgeline. It will also chamber reloaded brass that was shot in the Ridgeline, but i am still using the collet to help keep the new brass in shape so that it chambers smooth in the Ridgeline. I have since learned that belted magnums like the 7RM are somewhat notorious for stretching problems at the base because the belt block the dies. Many expert say the belted magnums are fundamentally flawed because they were designed to space of the belt rather tha; the shoulder. That is a bit beyond my expertise, but I did get schooled on the stretching problem. In hindsight, I wish that I would have got one of the newer PRC calibers, but I’m still very happy with the gun. A 7 PRC would be great and the 6.8 western would be another interesting caliber, but I don’t think CA sells that one.