I'm on my 4th remage. I've had all my actions trued up but the barrel threads left alone. With one exception they have all been great. The one exception is actually the most accurate out of the bunch, but it was a new RR prefix action and has some primary extraction issues (apparently a lot the RR serial numbered actions struggle with this, and truing the face can make it more out of time).
Northland Shooters Supply is the way the go, the action wrench with the fixture to align the recoil lug is great. Well worth the slight one time cost to convert to their recoil lug.
Actually I take that back, I'm on my 5th remage barrel. 4th action, but I shot out the 6mm creedmoor and put another one on. It isn't even hardly broken in yet but seems to want to shoot.
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I put a little more thought into this and I'll add some things to think about. The whole reason I went down the remage road was that I am lucky enough to hunt predators for a living and started out with a love affair for hotrod flat shooting calibers, because at the time night hunting didn't have good rangefinding options. Now that thermal scopes have rangefinders built in I don't need that laser beam 22-250 or hotrod 6mm that will burn barrels.
If I was starting over, I might do things differently, especially with the ELD-VT bullets coming out. A 6.5 creedmoor with that bullet should have a lot more barrel life, so I might not need to worry about rebarrels as much, which takes away some of the appeal of the remage.
Personally at this point if I wasn't invested in the remage system I would look at Tikka actions....from what I hear they are plenty accurate, machined accurate enough to buy shouldered profits, and aftermarket support like stocks etc are getting more available all the time. If I only needed one rifle to cover my hunting I would just save up and buy a custom or semi custom exactly the way I wanted it. But in fairness, for my somewhat unusual circumstances and needs the remage system has treated me well with excellent practical accuracy and "saved" me some money. Not much, but some: )
Also, prefit barrels don't have to cost $750 bucks. The steel northland shooters supply barrels are around $350, plus $28 for the nut if you buy it at the same time as the first barrel. The NSS recoil lug is well worth buying the first time too, if you use their action wrench with the lug alignment jig, which I can't recommend enough. I used it for 2 barrels on the same rifle, and didn't need to rebed the lug in the stock.
Northland Shooters Supply is the way the go, the action wrench with the fixture to align the recoil lug is great. Well worth the slight one time cost to convert to their recoil lug.
Actually I take that back, I'm on my 5th remage barrel. 4th action, but I shot out the 6mm creedmoor and put another one on. It isn't even hardly broken in yet but seems to want to shoot.
Edit:
I put a little more thought into this and I'll add some things to think about. The whole reason I went down the remage road was that I am lucky enough to hunt predators for a living and started out with a love affair for hotrod flat shooting calibers, because at the time night hunting didn't have good rangefinding options. Now that thermal scopes have rangefinders built in I don't need that laser beam 22-250 or hotrod 6mm that will burn barrels.
If I was starting over, I might do things differently, especially with the ELD-VT bullets coming out. A 6.5 creedmoor with that bullet should have a lot more barrel life, so I might not need to worry about rebarrels as much, which takes away some of the appeal of the remage.
Personally at this point if I wasn't invested in the remage system I would look at Tikka actions....from what I hear they are plenty accurate, machined accurate enough to buy shouldered profits, and aftermarket support like stocks etc are getting more available all the time. If I only needed one rifle to cover my hunting I would just save up and buy a custom or semi custom exactly the way I wanted it. But in fairness, for my somewhat unusual circumstances and needs the remage system has treated me well with excellent practical accuracy and "saved" me some money. Not much, but some: )
Also, prefit barrels don't have to cost $750 bucks. The steel northland shooters supply barrels are around $350, plus $28 for the nut if you buy it at the same time as the first barrel. The NSS recoil lug is well worth buying the first time too, if you use their action wrench with the lug alignment jig, which I can't recommend enough. I used it for 2 barrels on the same rifle, and didn't need to rebed the lug in the stock.
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