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The Range
Rifle & Shotgun Discussion
Remington 742 Woodmaster 30-06
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<blockquote data-quote="fubarjohnnyr" data-source="post: 2813493" data-attributes="member: 25570"><p>Apologies for the length of this post before-hand, as this little project started out as a simple "check the zero of the scope" from a friend who presented the gun to me along with 2 boxes of Winchester 165gr ammunition. What has transpired since then has led me down a rabbit hole filled with multiple surprises and a legacy of issues inherent with this gun that I wasn't aware of prior to laying hands on the 742. I welcome any suggestions or experience from you guys concerning this gun.</p><p></p><p><u>Outing #1</u></p><p></p><p>Target set up at 100yds, first chambering from a magazine of 4 rounds resulted from bolt not going into full battery. Cleared, reloaded, and re-actioned; 4 rounds successfully fired. Shots were not to point-of-aim, grouping (loosely termed) was approximately 8 inches primarily stringed in vertical fashion. 4 more rounds loaded, last shot resulted in a stuck case in the chamber with a chunk missing from the case rim ripped out by the extractor. Those rounds wandered around on paper in a 10 inch spray. Packed it up, headed to the house.</p><p></p><p>Research phase ensues with Google taking me to a whole world of Remington 740/742 problems, issues, history, fixes, and eventual permanent failure in this design series. This particular gun was produced in Oct of 1979, and I do believe it to be a relatively low count shooter due to the internal bolt rails appearing unscathed. I did <strong><u>completely</u></strong> disassemble the rifle, clean all components, lube and reassemble. The chamber walls were filthy, ended up honing it with abrasive compound and polished it out with brasso. This did fix sticking case issue in the subsequent outing. Scope and rings remounted and tightened down. </p><p></p><p><u>Outing #2</u></p><p></p><p>20 rounds fired, case extraction and ejection without issue. Around 1 shot in 6 results in the bolt failing to pick up a fresh round from the magazine. Accuracy is horrid, cold barrel impacts start high with subsequent impacts moving down 10 inches before forming a consistent 6 inch group. Ruled out possible scope issue by mounting another, same wild printing. Packed it up, headed to the house.</p><p></p><p>I did order two replacement parts from observations made during the disassembly. The action spring was corroded and possibly weakened in certain sections near the gas block, and the bolt handle retaining pin was buggered up to the point it can be drifted out from the bottom which from my reading it shouldn't due to it being a tapered pin. Those parts are on the way.</p><p></p><p>The quandary here is whether this gun is ultimately worth the time, money, and effort to mess with. The pigheaded part of my brain wants to 'fix' it, and the logical side says just go buy a $300 dollar entry level bolt gun that will shoot circles around this one.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fubarjohnnyr, post: 2813493, member: 25570"] Apologies for the length of this post before-hand, as this little project started out as a simple "check the zero of the scope" from a friend who presented the gun to me along with 2 boxes of Winchester 165gr ammunition. What has transpired since then has led me down a rabbit hole filled with multiple surprises and a legacy of issues inherent with this gun that I wasn't aware of prior to laying hands on the 742. I welcome any suggestions or experience from you guys concerning this gun. [U]Outing #1[/U] Target set up at 100yds, first chambering from a magazine of 4 rounds resulted from bolt not going into full battery. Cleared, reloaded, and re-actioned; 4 rounds successfully fired. Shots were not to point-of-aim, grouping (loosely termed) was approximately 8 inches primarily stringed in vertical fashion. 4 more rounds loaded, last shot resulted in a stuck case in the chamber with a chunk missing from the case rim ripped out by the extractor. Those rounds wandered around on paper in a 10 inch spray. Packed it up, headed to the house. Research phase ensues with Google taking me to a whole world of Remington 740/742 problems, issues, history, fixes, and eventual permanent failure in this design series. This particular gun was produced in Oct of 1979, and I do believe it to be a relatively low count shooter due to the internal bolt rails appearing unscathed. I did [B][U]completely[/U][/B] disassemble the rifle, clean all components, lube and reassemble. The chamber walls were filthy, ended up honing it with abrasive compound and polished it out with brasso. This did fix sticking case issue in the subsequent outing. Scope and rings remounted and tightened down. [U]Outing #2[/U] 20 rounds fired, case extraction and ejection without issue. Around 1 shot in 6 results in the bolt failing to pick up a fresh round from the magazine. Accuracy is horrid, cold barrel impacts start high with subsequent impacts moving down 10 inches before forming a consistent 6 inch group. Ruled out possible scope issue by mounting another, same wild printing. Packed it up, headed to the house. I did order two replacement parts from observations made during the disassembly. The action spring was corroded and possibly weakened in certain sections near the gas block, and the bolt handle retaining pin was buggered up to the point it can be drifted out from the bottom which from my reading it shouldn't due to it being a tapered pin. Those parts are on the way. The quandary here is whether this gun is ultimately worth the time, money, and effort to mess with. The pigheaded part of my brain wants to 'fix' it, and the logical side says just go buy a $300 dollar entry level bolt gun that will shoot circles around this one. [/QUOTE]
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