I have 2 Remington rifles. My first rifle was a 700 "Classic" in 8mm Mauser. Like someone else wrote here, this was a 5MOA rifle from the factory ! Trigger was 8lb. Read all about adjusting it, but the trigger springs had been changed after the lawsuit and it was impossible to get even a 3lb trigger and be safe. So I bought a Shilen trigger for less than $100 and it was perfect from the get go. All I had to do was transfer the safety lever from my old trigger.
Despite the new trigger, it was still at least a 3MOA rifle. I looked into pillar bedding the very nice looking stock, but I have never done this before, so I didn't want to mess it up. So I went with a laminated stock from Stockys. The new stock was cut for a heavy barrel so it was automatically free floated. It also had a good decelerator pad, the factory one had the plastic but pad, hard as rock. With the new stock, if I work really hard at it, it will shoot MOA. This was a gun that I paid $750 for used (although I believe the owner never shot it). The 8mm Mausers are pretty rare birds.
The second was a used 700 SPS varmint in 223 with the 26" 1:12 barrel (about 10lb). It came with an aluminum optics rail and a *** chinese mill dot scope on high rings ??? I stripped all that crap off and put on a steel warne rail, loctited to the receiver (which I do on all my rifles). Then Warne Maxima steel rings and my Nikon 3-14x42 Monarch scope. In that shape, first trip to the range, it shot 2-3MOA. The trigger was nice (I was surprised by that, but it may already have had a trigger job) but not accurate. So I removed the stock and found that the plastic stock was distorted and applying lateral pressure on the barrel, and of course it was not free floated.
A 3/4" hardwood dowel and some 40 grit belt sander paper and a couple of hours work had the barrel channel straight and clear of the barrel. The stock was distorted close to 1/8" so one side of the fore end came to a knife edge after the free floating, but I just left it that way. One has to free float by quite a bit, since the heavy barrel puts a lot of load on the fore end and it will bend slightly, so I clear by about 3/32, not by the dollar bill standard.
With that work, the rifle then shot 0.5MOA very reliably and has been my go to gun for Coyotes. However, with the 1:12 twist I have been limited to 55gr bullets and I have been shooting out to 350 yards where those bullets get blown around an awful amount so have been longing for "something better". Barrel replacement in a 700 is a relatively expensive business and it appears that one will never recover the investment, and after all the "tweaking" I decided on my next gun to see how things were with Savage.
So a couple of weeks ago, a Savage 10 Precision Carbine came up for sale (unfired) in 223 with a 1:9 twist, so I jumped on it. I did nothing to it except mount the optics rail and the Nikon Monarch 4-16x50 which had previously been on the 8mm Mauser. 1 magazine for sighting in at 25 yards yesterday (strong wind and falling snow at close to freezing temperatures). I didn't even have to apply any lateral correction to the scope, just dial in the elevation.
Then to 100Yds and first fired 4 shots of 55gr Hornady TAP ammo. 1st shot was 4.5" high, so dialed that down, next 3 were in less than 1/2". Then loaded up some 75gr HPBT Match ammo to see how that went.
Do I need to say more ? Getting any Remington I have bought to this point has always taken work. With the Savage it just works.
I have not had a 308 rifle and have just bought a TC Icon in that caliber so will report my findings once I have it. Just the fact that it has a receiver integral optics rail saves me $100 compared to a Remington or Savage. I don't know what is up with TC, it seems like they have stopped production of the Icon since no store has had any in stock in 308 since last year in November and they have even dried up on Gunbroker. The one I bought has a bad scratch on the wooden stock, but I will either fit a synthetic stock or paint it anyway since my rifles are not safe queens.