I personally wouldn't buy a modern remington rifle. Need too much work to be accurate as a Tikka is out of the box. At that point, you should have just bought the Tikka.If possible, i would like to work up to shoot a mile with this particular rifle. what I don't want to see happen is spend time and money on a rifle reloading and accessories only to fall short of my goal and have to invest in a whole other rifle and caliber to reach it.
This is my 1000yd+ rifle
You all have totally sold me on Tikka, in fact I might get the 6.5 down the road.
Would you consider a used never fired Rem 700 5R in 300 win mag with timey trigger for $750 a more reasonable option that I could upgrade as desired?
As for the caliber, I totally get what you're saying, but it's an absolute physical beating and a small fortune to shoot most of the 1-mile calibers, compared to a 6.5. It's not the most popular long-range caliber for no reason.
Yes, you can potentially get to a mile with the 6.5, but you have to hot rod it a ton to do so. And anytime you start pushing the limits of a caliber, you're going to run into barriers that most shooters of that caliber don't experience.
Finally, when you say 1000+, that's different than saying a mile. Like I said, a normal 6.5 will get you to 1300-1400 pretty easily. To get to a mile is a different game.
One other option that would be still affordable to shoot and easy recoil-wise is a 7-08 AI. Maybe the best ballistic short action caliber around in terms of performance for the money/recoil. It will outperform the 6.5 at long ranges.
But if you're really set on a mile with this gun, then most of the advice here may be moot. We're trying to steer you to something to learn on and then upgrade to 300/338/etc. down the road, because that's the most logical, affordable path. If you really want to be able to shoot a mile for certain with this gun, then there's no way I'd buy a 6.5, and the calibers you're going to may well push you into other actions. Be ready to pay for the choice in recoil and ammo cost though, because it's a huge jump from the 6.5.