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November 14, 2011, 11:17 PM | #1 |
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Location: Ohio
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Remington 770 feeding issues
I'll start out by saying I know the 770 is a poorly made rifle. That being said, I have encountered one issue with the rifle that really does bother me. It has trouble cycling rounds from the detachable magazine. The tip of the bullet actually hits the lip at the end of the (feed ramp?) and becomes wedged between this and the bolt.
The problem gets worse with longer rounds. The attached picture has a snap cap (0 failures), Remington Core-Lokt 150 grain (1 failure in 20 rounds), American Eagle 150 grain (3 failures in 10 rounds), and Hornady 165 grain for comparison (didn't even try). It's hard to tell in the picture, but the American Eagle is slightly longer than the Remington round. I like shooting the AE though because after putting 20 rounds of the Remington all over the paper I got two sub MOA groups in the 10 rounds of AE. (just shooting at 100 yards indoors, I'm no sniper to be sure ). Any suggestions? Or am I stuck with loading a single round at a time until I can afford a real rifle? P.S. I guess I left this out, I'm shooting .30-06 |
November 14, 2011, 11:26 PM | #2 |
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I had the exact same problem with mine. Eventually decided to just feed them manually into the chamber one at a time. Mine was .308
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November 15, 2011, 12:12 AM | #3 |
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That's a nice setup you got there! I'm sure it's an accurate enough so you don't need to worry about the extra time between shots. (especially if you only use it at the range). Does that cheek pad work pretty well for you?
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November 15, 2011, 02:49 AM | #4 |
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Total shot in the dark here but how old is your 770? I remember hearing when they first went into production, there was a feeding issue caused by the magazine. Remington fixed the problem for future production after enough reports and I believe they let people send in the magazines to get beveled which fixed the problem. Even if you bought the rifle new recently, it could have been in the retailers stock for quite sometime so I wouldn't rule this out unless your magazine is already beveled. If you could post a pic of your magazine preferably removed from the gun and looking down at the top, I or someone else might be able to tell you if it looks like an afflicted mag.
Could be something totally unrelated but its all I can really think of. |
November 15, 2011, 03:08 AM | #5 |
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Before I send you on a wild goose chase and make you jump through hoops, a very reliable source tells me the beveling of the magazine was to fix the issue of the bolt not opening with an empty magazine inserted so I apologize for my last comment.
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November 15, 2011, 04:15 PM | #6 |
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Not to be sarcastic, but why would anyone spend a dime on the 770 is beyond me. I have seen almost as many of these rifles returned to the gun store as the Mossbergs. Working the bolt feels about as smooth as turning a pipe with a pipe wrench. I know how tight money can be, but I would have just been patient and saved a little bit more for a model 700.
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November 16, 2011, 01:37 AM | #7 | |
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July 16, 2013, 02:29 PM | #8 |
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Remington 770
My 770, chambered for 308, is on its way back to Remington, for the second time. the first time, the bolt wouldn't cycle. I had to tap it up and drop a rod down the barrel to tap the bolt back. When I received it back from repair, I shot four rounds and after the fourth round, the bold came apart, back of the bolt flew back over my shoulder and all the gas pressured back. Had I not been wearing eye protection, I don't know what would have happened. The bolt locked down again and after taping it up to recycle, and with a rod, taped the bolt back again, I found that the extractor was in two pieces. Such a shame. I've taken some nice animals with the 770, both Elk and Deer.
So, now I spent the extra $$ and have a Remington 700 on the way. Comes down to your safety. Inexpensive or reliable? |
July 16, 2013, 08:40 PM | #9 |
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I have one in 7mm mag. Never had any feeding issues of any kind. I mostly shoot hand loads though. I have heard of people finding a o-ring that fits tight around the mag to take the slop out and bring the mag down a few 1000ths. Never tried it myself.
If you want to make the 770 shoot you really need to float the barrel. Between hand loads and floating the barrel I've got my 770 down to 5/8's moa from about 11/2 moa stock with with factory ammo. Boomer Edit... Google "adjusting a remington trigger". I got my trigger down to 2.25 lbs. It was 7lbs stock.
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The number one cause of death in the 20th century. 290,000,000 citizens were first disarmed and then murdered by their own governments. This number does not include those killed in war. We're from the government, we're here to help Last edited by Boomer58cal; July 16, 2013 at 09:03 PM. |
July 26, 2013, 03:14 AM | #10 |
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the magazine needs to wear in a bit
you need to pay attention to lubrication of the bolt. I THINK the design suffered when they removed the nylon insert sleeve from the original design. the cartridge. Dont you notice something difference about the remington cartrdige in that first photo that always cycled versus the ones that had issues? |
July 26, 2013, 04:43 AM | #11 |
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Could this just be a problem with the feed angle of the mag?
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July 27, 2013, 10:04 AM | #12 |
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The cheapest I've seen a new 700 go for in the last 10 months was $695, but I don't buy guns online. I've seen 770's for $249. If you're tight on money and still want to be a proud gun owning American I'd rather see you with a 770 than no gun at all.
I just don't get way everyone has to turn every thread that even mentions the 770 into a list of reason why you should have spent your last dime on 700 instead of buying a rifle you can afford. That's a good way to shy people away that are just getting into shooting sports just because they didn't buy a high end rifle. Not cool IMHO. Boomer
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The number one cause of death in the 20th century. 290,000,000 citizens were first disarmed and then murdered by their own governments. This number does not include those killed in war. We're from the government, we're here to help |
August 2, 2013, 08:26 PM | #13 |
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I had nothing but trouble with my 770 in 7mm mag. Had the worst feeling bolt on it i have ever worked on a bolt gun. After getting it back for the second time from Remington and still not fixed I had enough. I finally sold it and bought a savage axis. Love savage very dependable and accurate rifles.
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August 3, 2013, 05:21 AM | #14 | ||
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Quote:
Quote:
I have a buddy who won a M770 and uses it for a truck gun. He says he would never buy one even though his shoots well enough. He tried to trade it in on a different rifle but there wasn't a gun shop that would give him 20-25 cents on the dollar for it when it was NIB, so that's why it resides in his ranch truck.
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August 3, 2013, 05:45 AM | #15 |
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Sure you can get decent used rifles, but they arent easy to find. And as for the 700 adl package at walmart, good luck finding a store that has one. And dont try ordering a gun from them either.
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August 3, 2013, 06:48 AM | #16 |
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RR5 is from CO same as I am, most WalMart stores still carry firearms here. Plus he can be in Colorado Springs or Denver in about 30 minutes drive time if the rifle selection isn't that great in Douglas County. I can walk into most and pick up a rifle in one of the three cartridges I mentioned in a M700 ADL with cheap scope. I never meant to imply you could find one in your home state.
Decent used rifles are easy to find if you just look for them and educate yourself a little before you go. If you're looking for a specific used rifle you might have a tough time locating one. However finding a decent used Remington, Savage, Weatherby, or Winchester isn't all that difficult.
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January 10, 2016, 06:35 AM | #17 |
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Feed Me 300 win mag
Remington 770, 300 win mag, bolt sicking and feeding issues. Never knew there were issues about this weapon till I received one for a birthday present. First time on the range; fired tattoo of four rounds, round would not feed, had to hand feed each. Bolt stuck on ejection of fourth casing, the handle broke off in my hand. Called Remington, they had me send it to their smithy, who replace the bolt and nothing else was done. After receiving is back (almost 60 days) I spent a day polishing the bolt and receiver, so much for the bolt stick. The feeding issue was a bit more involved. Using a die grinder with a burr, I reshaped the feed ramp so that the bullet tip would slide up and not catch on the edge. This took most of the day as not wanting to remove to much. Feed issue resolved. Floated barrel, groups of 1.5 are currently being achieved.
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January 11, 2016, 01:52 PM | #18 |
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Never had a feeding issue with any of my center fire rifles, (1) Winchester lever rifle, (2) Ruger Hawkeye SS steel, (3) Winchester model 70 Featherweight classics. I have had my share of push feed rifles in my life but could never warm up to them, if the new push feed Ruger were free I would pass on it.. FWIW none of my rifles I currently own have ever given me any trouble, once the scope was mounted and zeroed I've done nothing but use them and then clean. Nuff said!! William
Last edited by William T. Watts; January 11, 2016 at 04:25 PM. |
January 12, 2016, 05:40 AM | #19 |
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im my area the new 770s are around 359.00 but the new remmy 783s run about 299.00 on sale . wth?
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January 12, 2016, 07:52 AM | #20 |
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grice in pa. had ruger american,s for 339.00 and TC venture rifles for 324.00 after rebate and rem sps for 499.00 after rebates and browning A-bolt3 hunter 499.00 in most hunting calibers, the sale just ended 12-31-15.. eastbank.
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