I think my favorite .222 700VS is shot out...what would you build?

29aholic

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Minuteman
Mar 1, 2010
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Southwest MO
So this particular Varmint Special was built in 1974. I can NOT get it to shoot with any of my old standby pet loads, about .75 to 1 MOA at best.
Granted that is probably fine for varmints, but I am used to these guns shooting way better and I am fairly bummed.

SO, what would you do with it given the bolt face? I am tempted to go back with the triple deuce. I have also thought of 222 mag. as I am set up for that caliber.
I have no desire to go .223/5.56

Thoughts??
 
Why change you've had it for forty years you must really like it. You already have every thing for that round. Why not rebarrel it and bring it back to life. I've never had a 222 but always wanted to shoot one if I had that bolt face that's the round i would go with.
 
Why change you've had it for forty years you must really like it. You already have every thing for that round. Why not rebarrel it and bring it back to life. I've never had a 222 but always wanted to shoot one if I had that bolt face that's the round i would go with.

That's what I am thinking. We are both in MO if you are close to West Central come on over and shoot it
 
I have a Rem 700 BDL VS Deluxe that I bought new back in the early '80s. I love that rifle. Mine still has plenty of barrel life left (only about 1200 rounds through it) and still looks almost new.

If I do eventually need to re-barrel, I would stay with 222 Rem. 223s are a dime a dozen. You don't see very many triple deuces any more. With Lapua brass readily available, the 222 is still one of the best varmint/target rifles out there.
 
If you don't go back with .222 since you were already set-up for loading that round, I favor the 22-250. I had one built last year and it has been amazing for varmint hunting. Only stretched it out to 400 yards but had the maiden voyage first round hit and subsequent 4 follow-ups. 100% kill ratio so far this year one still shots.
I wouldn't recommend it if you are planning to shoot high volume each year though.
 
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Just get it re barreled in 222 with a 1/12 twist. Why change since you love the round so much? Different is cool... and that is a killer round! Used to have a contender pistol in that caliber. It was a serious shooter. To play devils advocate, 223 is everything the 222 is and more. Dies are a1 shot deal, brass is dirt cheap
 
If its still in good outer condition sell it on Gunpoker and help buy a custom rifle with the proceeds... I sold a Seven on there and was emailed a couple of times about the bore which was disclosed but the ultimate winner didn't care what the bore looked like. He was after the outer looks of the gun and what it was. Consider this that I have sold this year on there.

222 Remington 700 ADL $750
222 Remington 7 first year produced $8ish
222 Remington 700 Varmint Special $1600 earlier this year. It was like new though.

I would have been on the Rebarrel bandwagon if it wasn't for that.
 
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Rebarrel boss!

If you love that round then stay on it... otherwise go 22-250 for some fun.

What ranges are you looking to shoot and what is the purpose? That would most likely determine your twist ratio.
 
I have the same rifle, inherited when my Eldest Brother passed. I think you are in a uniquely ideal position.

The Deuce is ingrained in me from my teens. I would rebarrel it with a 1:9" twist 24" premium barrel; so I could continue to enjoy this ideal chambering, and still get to walk a little bit onto the wild side with longer bullets. I strongly prefer a Lothar-Walther stainless barrel with LW-50 steel. Fortunately, the current barrel is still at a relatively low round count.

I discontinued my affair with the .22-250 because I didn't like the accompanying rapid/excessive barrel heating; but I just may go back soon.

Greg
 
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I am thinking stay with 222, but spin a little faster twist barrel on it, maybe along the lines of 1:9.5

I agree with this option given you favor this cartridge, have all the loading accessories, and you can try a different twist. Plus you get to compare a the new barrel to the old. I'm +1 on this idea. Just research what exact twist rate you will want or need. A little faster than you need is better than a little slower than you need.