I am sure this gun has never been fired. Pretty wood stock. Like new. I am sure I have several boxes of ammo I picked up 2 years ago, that will come with.
FTF preferred. $800
FTF preferred. $800
I am sure this gun has never been fired. Pretty wood stock. Like new. I am sure I have several boxes of ammo I picked up 2 years ago, that will come with.
FTF preferred. $800
I understand it's new and not fired, but how old is that rifle?
Do you know when it was manufactured?
I looked it up years ago, and if I remember, the double RR meant it was made in the 1950s, if I remember correctly. I assumed I mis understood or searched incorrectly. The serial is visible in the picture
RR is pretty new, probably in the last 10 or so years.
Nice rifle.
Yup."RR" should denote November 1997 as to when the action was manufactured, and stamped. But Remington used the date codes on the barrels as to when the rifle was assembled at the factory. so the action could be older than than when it actually was assembled and boxed up for sale.
That is why I asked for the date code on the barrel. Should be a two letter code, telling month and year.
DOM means a matter of what the rifle is worth to me. Also determines what trigger the rifle is equipped with, and whether it will need to be replaced. Also, many of the those Remington rifles in the past ten to fifteen years, seem more prone to rust issues as well.Yup.
I don't particularly care for date codes as they have never pertained to anything I do (I'm not a clone guy) but I do know that a lot of folks like the slightly older actions. I true everything up myself anyway so any imperfections are of no consequence to me.
Is a .243 close to a .270? I have a 30.06 but would to caliper down a little.
.243 is to .308 brass what .270 is to 30.06 brass. All four, the parents and the offspring are great rounds and you really cannot go wrong with any of them. Hunting wise they can all pretty much* harvest anything in the USA.Is a .243 close to a .270? I have a 30.06 but would to caliper down a little.
Correct my good man! I glossed over that wee bit of extra case length for the sake of simplicity and the analogy, much like Dalton's or even the plum pudding atomic model can still be used to describe elemental interactions at a basic level (though it is incorrect when pressed a bit harder)Actually the .270 parent case is 30.03 (longer than 30.06).
Correct my good man! I glossed over that wee bit of extra case length for the sake of simplicity and the analogy, much like Dalton's or even the plum pudding atomic model can still be used to describe elemental interactions at a basic level (though it is incorrect when pressed a bit harder)
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Still up
Can we get the barrel date codes please?