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1989 Remington 700 ABL

nhn2a

Private
Minuteman
Jan 20, 2024
3
1
Fayetteville, NC
I posted this also on the 700rifle forum but it doesn't seem like many people are using that forum anymore. I took in a Remington 700 in 30-06 last week in a trade and need some advice. I had originally planned to use it as a project gun when I agreed to the trade but then noticed it was older than I expected. The first indication it was old was the hard plastic buttpad/plate. After researching the barrel stamps and other features, I've concluded it is a ABL model manufactured in Dec 1989.

My friend who traded it with me bought it about 10 years ago from his previous hunting buddy who passed away. He hunted with it regularly as evident from the dings, scratches, and scuffs on the stock. However overall it doesn't look too bad considering the age. I'm really surprised and pleased by how nice the action and bolt are. Not quite as smooth as my Tikkas but dang near close.

I'm now trying to figure out what I should do with this rifle. I don't have any sentimental attachment to this gun but it feels wrong modifying an old rifle like this. I only hunt suppressed these days so if I keep it for hunting, I'd want a threaded barrel, a new recoil pad, and to refinish or replace the stock at a minimum.

So my questions are:
1) Is there any value in keeping this in its current condition from a collectors perspective or are these not really that collectable? It seems the going rate for these is around $500 so less than a new one anyway.
2) Would you recommend threading the current barrel?
3) For those that are familiar with these models, is there any way to see if the original safety recall was performed on the trigger?

I'll post photos below.
 

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No huge value in it and a fine candidate to build on.

You can keep it as is for some vintage awesomeness or you can build a dream long action off a receiver likely better than an RR.

You want to go halfway get some citrus strip and paint that stock with it than throw it in a plastic bag overnight.

Next day wipe all that softened RKB finish off and wipe the stock with layers and layers of hand rubbed oil.

You want to go deep dive true the action, throw a quality barrel on and get stock of choice.

As long as the trigger has not been messed with don’t worry about NBC fake news. Just don’t point the rifle at shit you don’t want to damage.
 
I have a '70s era ADL in 7rem mag. It is the most accurate rifle I have. The action is butter smooth. You might want to test it's accuracy before changing things. Be aware that it probably uses upward pressure at the foreend tip, which with my rifle, might be it's reason for good accuracy.
 
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Looks just like the 700 ADL I have in .30-06.

Only thing I have done to mine was modified to take a DBM in place of the floor plate.

It was the deer rifle my boys moved up to when they outgrew the Rem Mod 7 youth model in .243 I had them start out with. It has accounted for many muley's and a few whitetails.

Personally I would keep it as is and shoot it but it is your rifle to do as you see fit.
 
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Same rifle but in 270 win. I had the barrel threaded and refinished the stock with boiled linseed oil. I bought it in 1995 when I was 13.
20221217_150425.jpg
 
It is much softer shooting with the suppressor. Before adding the suppressor it was painful to shoot off a bench, it would wear my collar bone and shoulder out.
 
It is much softer shooting with the suppressor. Before adding the suppressor it was painful to shoot off a bench, it would wear my collar bone and shoulder out.

I can imagine. If I keep it, I'll probably put a limbsaver recoil pad on it and thread it for a suppressor. Should be nice to shoot after that. However I'm gonna shoot it in its current configuration to gauge it's accuracy before doing anything so I'm sure that session won't be a lot of fun.
 
I can imagine. If I keep it, I'll probably put a limbsaver recoil pad on it and thread it for a suppressor. Should be nice to shoot after that. However I'm gonna shoot it in its current configuration to gauge its accuracy before doing anything so I'm sure that session won't be a lot of fun.
Limbsaver slip on is a life saver and easiest route to taming it a bit. Much easier than grind to fit as well.

Personally, I don’t see any historic value in it, it’s about 50 years too new for me to consider it historic, so I’d have no problem making parts of it and building anew if you so desire.

I wouldn’t try to thread that little barrel though.