There is a 7400 synthetic for $549, 4days left, no bids.
You could send it to JES at www.35caliber.com and have it rebored to .35Whelen.
Runs $250.00 typically MORE accurate than an original barrel.
This would accomplish what you want cheaper than a factory.35Whelen. Then serocoat it yourself.
Usually simply disassembling the slide and its guide tube, greasing them properly and re-tighening everything will suffice and the rattle will be gone for months. If that fails, a silicone O-ring is a great substitute for a proprietary nylon bushing. Mine turned from a rattletrap into a quiet rifle with these simple fixes in a matter of minutes.A nylon bushing in the action tube could prevent this. Yes, if they come back Remington could have a winner in the “Amish assault rifle” with a little refinement.
Usually simply disassembling the slide and its guide tube, greasing them properly and re-tighening everything will suffice and the rattle will be gone for months. If that fails, a silicone O-ring is a great substitute for a proprietary nylon bushing. Mine turned from a rattletrap into a quiet rifle with these simple fixes in a matter of minutes.
If the O-ring likes to move around, clamp the guide tube into a lathe and (pressure) turn a groove on it. Unless you prefer to go medieval and hammer the guide indents deeper, which is a rather crude and temporary solution.Tried, and tried...... no joy.
If the O-ring likes to move around, clamp the guide tube into a lathe and (pressure) turn a groove on it. Unless you prefer to go medieval and hammer the guide indents deeper, which is a rather crude and temporary solution.
https://www.gunbroker.com/item/919604057 Here you go. Buy once, cry once. All the work you wish to do is already done and it's set up with decent glass
https://www.gunbroker.com/item/919604057 Here you go. Buy once, cry once. All the work you wish to do is already done and it's set up with decent glass
The cause of the rattling in my M7600 was the end cap on the action tube. It’s coarse threaded and staked in place. Operating the action a few times caused the staking to loosen and…the rattling started. After years of living with a floppy noisy rifle I removed the forend, backed out the end cap, applied locktite and reassembled. The forend no longer flops around and I’ve had a silent, more solid rifle for the last 20+ years.Tried, and tried...... no joy.
I have a 7600 in .35 Whelen. I found a replacement stock, which I had trimmed to give my 12.5" LOP. I then had a Williams peep sight mounted. I have a stack of mags, too. When the brown bear swarms come, I'll be ready.
John
Have you considered going more vintage? A 14 or 141 in .35 Rem is a slick rifle.
I have 14s in .25 Rem and .32 rem, no plans to let them go.
I'm kind of hung up on the 760-7600, plan is to mount a LPVO on either one and up the caliber to .338-.358, either .308 or .30-06 based case. I'd actually hate to mess with something with collector value.
Chances are they'll pass through KS on the way to GA, we should be able to see them a ways out, and will give you a heads up so you'll have time to get your mags loaded.