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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 18, 2005
Location: On the Santa Fe Trail
Posts: 7,981
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Rem 788, is it wrong
To want to rebarrel a rifle that shoots great?
I have a Remington 788 in .30-30 Winchester, and on a good day if I'm doing my part it thinks it's a varmint rifle! At 100 yards I'm often getting the first three rounds under 1/2 inch and touching, rarely have 5 shots go over an inch with just about any 150 grain ammunition or hand loads. 160 grain FTX or 170 grain bullets usually stay under 1.25" for five. I've also had good results with 125 grain BT bullets and 130 grain TTSX, having a bolt action .30-30 really opens up your options. So here's my why I think I should rebarrel. The rifle is in good shape, stock has been bedded and refinished. Other than that the rifle is original, the original sights were removed when I got the rifle but I have them. So my thinking is have a custom 18" barrel installed that duplicates the factory contour but threaded to use my suppressor and use a faster twist, and take advantage of some of the new subsonic bullets. For some reason I'm having a hard time just cutting down and threading the original barrel. It would save me a ton of money if I just did it, $100 vs. $7-800. I just hate the thought of not having the option to restore it back to close to original.
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 13, 2006
Posts: 8,102
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Its your rifle,your money and your priorities. Your ideas.
You don't need my approval. I might do things different than you but thats OK for both of us. Cutting the barrel may have an effect on accuracy. (Better or worse) An option : If the goal is a suppressed 30 cal rifle for heavier bullets..... And if your rebarrel cost is $700 to $800 The 300 BLK was designed to be a subsonic, heavy bullet ,30 cal suppressed cartridge. I might keep the Rem 788 as is and build a 300 BLK AR. But you do you. Last edited by HiBC; November 8, 2022 at 04:59 PM. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: October 25, 2001
Location: Alabama
Posts: 18,130
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Using the factory barrel could limit how heavy a subsonic you could shoot. I don't know if it is 12" like a Winchester or 10" like most other .30s.
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#4 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: November 18, 2005
Location: On the Santa Fe Trail
Posts: 7,981
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Quote:
Quote:
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#5 |
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Join Date: June 11, 2007
Posts: 2,143
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taylorce1, Got question do you have original 3rd magazine?
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#6 |
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Join Date: June 24, 2008
Posts: 2,564
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If you have an original 788 in 30-30 and it shoots that well, IMO it would be nuts to monkey with it.
But at the end of the day, it's your gun.
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#7 |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
Posts: 10,932
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You have a 30-30 that shoots great--and you want to muck with it? You probably jinxed it just by posting that here!!
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#8 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: November 18, 2005
Location: On the Santa Fe Trail
Posts: 7,981
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Quote:
CPC MFG 788 magazine Quote:
![]() I need to fix my previous post error, the 175 grain Sub-X will work with my current twist. I don't think the 190 grain will stabalize. Plus there are a lot more specialized subsonic bullets out there that I could try.
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#9 |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
Posts: 27,185
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Consider this, once you cut or alter the original barrel, you can't go back. If the change leaves is shooting like crap when it shot well before, you're not only stuck, its entirely YOUR fault.
If you replace the barrel, then dink around with that one, you should still be able to go back to about what you had, by having the original barrel re-installed, HOWEVER, if you do that, there is still no guarantee it will shoot as good as it did before. It should, but it might not. You've got a long out of production budget grade .30-30 bolt gun (not very common) and it shoots really well, as is. I suggest, if it ain't broke, don't fix it! Get something else for your subsonic /suppressed toy. I think, in the long run, doing that will make you happier, even if it means a few more $ right now.
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All else being equal (and it almost never is) bigger bullets tend to work better. |
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#10 | |
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Join Date: November 18, 2005
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Quote:
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#11 |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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Your real issue is you want to buy another rifle--just do it!
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#12 | |
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Join Date: November 18, 2005
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Quote:
A couple years back we did a big bore deer hunt, smallest cartridge allowed was a 9.3X62. The rest were .375 Ruger, .375 H&H, .400 Whelen, and .416 Remington Mag. Last year was AR-15 hunt but no .223. So we had 6X45, .25-45, .277 Wolverine X2, and I used a .300 BLK AR pistol. We just have fun letting the kids hunt, with the old guys taking targets of opportunities with stuff we rarely use.
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#13 | |
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Join Date: December 8, 2017
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Quote:
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#14 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 18, 2020
Posts: 197
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One of the harder to find 788's out there and it shoots good.
This has regret written all over it, but it is yours. |
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#15 |
Senior Member
Join Date: January 7, 2008
Posts: 3,190
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Yes, it's not only wrong but could be an indication that you should talk to a shrink about it.
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#16 |
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Join Date: November 26, 2012
Location: Concord NH
Posts: 974
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taylorce1, Just been reading your post, I have to join with the a few of the other members, if it aint broke leave it the hell alone
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#17 |
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Join Date: March 28, 1999
Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 3,691
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From what I understand, the Remington 788 in 30-30 is somewhat of a collector's item. It would be a shame to alter one in my humble opinion. I have a Winchester M54 in 30-30 that looks as if it was rode hard and put away wet. The bore is as shiny and a new silver dime and the rifling quite sharp. I'm not much of a shot with a receiver sight bit when friends and I had our little shoot offs where the loser pays for lunch that I paid for very few lunches. As a group we shot cast bullets only and most shoots were offhand at 25 yards,10 shots for score. There were other shoots ai 50 and 100 yards but mostly us half blind old timers shot at 25 yards. IIRC, the youngest guy in our group was 62.most have passed on to a better place and at 84, I may be the last shooter from the group above ground.
![]() ![]() Paul B.
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#18 |
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Join Date: October 9, 2009
Location: North Alabama
Posts: 7,954
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788-.30/30
I've never even seen a 788 in .30-30!
By posting the question, the OP asked for it.......I would not touch that old school, rare bolt rifle and would go so far as to label such an act a travesty. Yeah, it's his and he sure will do as he pleases as his his pleasure, ...but there will be no more 788's and few in 30-30 to begin with. If it shoots good, why dork with it? Go buy a budget contemporary bolt rifle for your project. |
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#19 |
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Join Date: October 25, 2001
Location: Alabama
Posts: 18,130
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Want to see mine?
(Bamaranger and I are semi-local, sometimes shooting, sometimes lunching.) |
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#20 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 9, 2009
Location: North Alabama
Posts: 7,954
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what I have seen
About a decade ago, I saw a 788 in Corinth (Trading Post) chambered in .44 mag........that would be another rare one.
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#21 |
Junior Member
Join Date: January 26, 2023
Posts: 1
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I love me some 788's. First new rifle I owned was a 788 .22-250 bought at the Base Exchange in Bedford, Mass on a 2nd looey's salary in '68 or '69. Shoots dime sized groups at 100 yd. Cost new $88 and change as I recall.
Bought another new 788 in PA after I got out of the military. It was 6mm Rem and not as accurate as the .22-250. 3/4" groups were fairly common; sub-MOA reliably. Cost new was $110. Decided to clean out all the copper fouling and groups at 100 yd opened to 1.25". Bought a used 788 carbine in IN in the 90s. Caliber was .308 Win. and someone had tried to glass bed the action in the wood stock. They did a poor job. Put it in a drop-in plastic Ramline stock (remember them?) and got it shooting. It was picky. Nothing did very well (1.5"@100yd) until it got to 125gr. Handloads. Then it perked right up. If you kept the barrel cool, it came close to the .22-250's precision. Cost used: $250. Handy little thing. Still have 'em all. Sadly, no .30-30s or 44 mags. Saw 'em at gun shows going for not too much, but laughed at the calibers. The greater fool, I. The moral of this 788 tale is; If you have one that shoots, don't mess with it. |
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#22 |
Senior Member
Join Date: April 20, 2009
Location: Helena, AL
Posts: 4,357
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I bought a 260 Rem barrel to replace the 308 and been sitting in the Safe for 3 years.
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#23 |
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Join Date: November 30, 2012
Location: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Posts: 1,639
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I have learned one thing in the last 50 years hunting , shooting , reloading and altering guns .
When you get your hands on a good shooter ... like you say your 788 30-30 is ... Don't go acting the fool and screw it up ... I see REGRET written all over this story . Keep that rifle just like it is and SHOOT it and enjoy the Tack Driving accuracy . DO NOT rebarrel , cut down the existing barrel or add no flash supressor sub-sonic do-dah's or BS ... You got a shooter ... Shoot it ! Shooters don't come around very often so don't screw it up . Gary |
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