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Joking aside, the US military has used 5-rd stripper clips since the turn of the 20th century. Attached pic are various US 7.62 NATO ammo circa 1958 (M59), to Vietnam era (1968), to a recent bandoleer that utilized M80 ammo. The 30-06 stripper clips were about the same except they have 2 small bumps or 'nubs' on the side and the later ones seem to have only one small 'nub.' I looked it up, and the first use of the modern 5-rd charger clip was on Paul Mauser's rifles from the 1890s. At the turn of the 20th century all military bolt action rifles from the major powers used clip slots to allow a soldier to quickly load (and re-load) 5-rds into their rifle, which matters in combat... (US, UK, Germany, Japan, Russia, etc all had clip guides on their infantry rifles).I'm just waiting for somebody to come out with the box of mil spec stripper clips designed just for the USMC M40, lol. Seriously, no other modern rifle has gone through so much speculation than the so-so original USMC M40/700. Do any of you even own an SKS.
From the American Rifleman article Remington 700 first 50 years.
A magazine charging notch in the front of the Model 721 receiver bridge was carried over to the design of the Model 700 receiver, but it was eliminated in 1966.
The REMINGTON MODEL 720 has the detailed clip slot as used on the 40X centerfires.
The October 1967 manual refers to the Remington sniper rifle as the M700, whereas the August 1969 manual refers to the same rifle as an M40. So, somewhere within this 2 year span the nomenclature changed. This also means that the very first Marine snipers to use the M40 were referring to the rifle as an M700 or something similar. Quick side note, decades later this also happened with the Mk13 Mod 0.
If anyone has a copy of FMFM 1-3B that was published between October 1967 and August 1969, please post it here. If such a publication exists, it would help narrow down when this name change occurred.
The 1967 and 1968 First Drafts of FMFM 1-3B (Proposed) showed the Winchester M70, and the Remington M700 (designated M40 in the final, 1969 version). The finished 1969 version shows only the M40, and the 1981 version shows only the M40A1. I don't believe there was a version between those two.
Back on the OP question ... as was said, not all clip slotting was done by Remington for sniper rifles. There was once a considerable commercial market for clip-slotted target rifles for shooting "across the course" back in the post-WW2 thru the 90s. AI mags and associated DBMs didn't exist and folks like Mo DeFina were making their own with M16 and M14 magazines but they were SCARCE and expensive mods.Wondering if there was any connection between the single shot 40X (early 1960's vintage) and models issued/used by Uncle Sam?
The stocks on these old beasts were a bit heavy, with barrel contact screws, t-slotted rail on the underside, and a relief cut on the comb to clear the striker....
At some point it was fitted with a newer (action was polished blue) "Remington" marked barrel in .308 with a parked finish...
I got this Rifle a decade ago in a trade and regtetted it until I shot the best .30 cal group of my life with it....know what they say about book covers
Just a reminder, Lake City was still producing generous amounts of -06 into the 70s and Frankford Arsenal stopped in 1961. The last M72 was 1967. Carlos was shooting an -06 Model 70 in Vietnam using M72.the 30-06 ammo, which was also obsolete with the adoption of the M14 in 1957.
Yep, that's correct, lots of M72 was certainly in the supply system during Vietnam and well into the 1970s, and it was used by Hathcock and others.Just a reminder, Lake City was still producing generous amounts of -06 into the 70s and Frankford Arsenal stopped in 1961. The last M72 was 1967. Carlos was shooting an -06 Model 70 in Vietnam using M72.
I have a 7.62 Nato chambered 40-XB made in 67 that is slotted40-XB repeaters were made in many calibers, only the .308 receivers were factory-slotted for clips.
This is incorrect. I have a 40XB repeater in 6mm that is clip slotted.