18 March 2003, 17:00
hollowpointtRem 7400
Came across a Remington 7400 in new condition for a good price. 375.00 Tell me what you know about them. Had one twenty years ago and it jammed so I sold it. Have they improved since them?
18 March 2003, 17:25
stubblejumperI still would not trust one as a couple of friends have newer ones that jam regularly.
19 March 2003, 02:38
KevinNY2 problems with those guns
1 you get a crappy shotgun trigger
2 People end up planning the 2nd shot before the first one leaves the barrel
I have a friend I have hunted with that has one and I swear I am going to steal that gun of his and hand him a Ruger No. 1 to make him more careful
19 March 2003, 18:17
<Reloader 1>$375.00 for a new 7400 would be $350.00 to much in my opinion.But if you had to get one get one in a short action they do not jamb quite as often and keep it clean.My 2c
20 March 2003, 01:45
<bigcountry>I have one that I dealy love. Only jammed once and with 4064 powder. Just got to keep that gas valve clean and the action cleaned. I don't like the way point of impact changes while tightening the foreend screw but the gun has sentimental value. But if I didn't have one, I would go with the BAR.
20 March 2003, 05:19
mstarlingWow ... I hate to be the odd man out here ... but, I bought a used 7400 in .308 as a rifle I could carry in the local woods and not worry about if I slide half way down a hill side on it.
The 7400 has worked admirably well. It does not like Core-Lokt's, but first load with Noslers and BLC(2) and later with RL15 made the little rifle into a <1 MOA rifle.
Has never jammed. Has killed a couple of deer a year for three years now.
May not be your cup of tea, but the 7400 has been a great beater rifle for me.
20 March 2003, 05:39
jeffeossotomato stake...
works great, till they jam.. and remington WILL NOT work on them
great fun rifle, till it jams...
jeffe
I've had many of them, for a semi they look and handle quite well. With factory ammo I've never had a jam ! It' the guys that reload with the wrong powder and those that never clean them that have trouble. I see a lot of them at the gun club and no problems. But, one reason I traded them of was usually accuracy. If I can't hit a 1/2 gal milk jug at 300 yds consisttantly. There is not much you can do if you get a poor shooter. However my son has one that will shoot 3/4 groups all day long and has newver had a probloem. I watched him deck a huge buck at over 300 yds late one evening, neck shot. No nnot luck Ive seen him do this many times. As for me, I now shoot Browning BARS(browning does work on them and I'm only an hour away from their center in Arnold, Mo. I have gripes about them , too heavy. and the hump back: But I've never had a problem with one and the accuracy is usually very,very good. I now hunt deer with one of the lightweight models, still too damm heavy ! They are shooters at least the 1/2 I've owned were and so were those of my friends. We don't spray and pray, The first is usually you best one, but sometimes I will shoot 2 or 3 deer in a field at once. All you have to do is keep them clean and your home free ! The worst auto as far as function was the old Win. Model 100, but I sure love how they handle I've had dozens of them ! I don't now but every ponce in a while I will buy another just hoping it will work. They were the best looking and handeling deer rifle I've ever shouldered ! I sure wish I could get over the 100 bug. Saw a nice one the other day for only 250.00 Hummmmm!
22 March 2003, 00:43
John Y Cannuckhey, stubblejumper, we agreed on something!
Guess it must really be a piece of $hit.
22 March 2003, 05:43
12FLVSSMy father used one in 243 religiously for 15 years to take Georgia Whitetail, and said if you want it to shoot, to get a chamber brush and use it every time you clean. He also found out that if you "smack" a loaded mag into position, it would deform the feed lips after just a couple times and that would start causing jams. After a new clip and he started squeezing it in, no more jams.
Hope this helps,
Ruger#1