I looked at a Remington 700 VTR in 204 Ruger. It's the one with a green stock and a triange shaped barrel. It has the slotted ports on top of the barrel. With the noise of the 204, I can see a fireworks display and a sonic boom when you pull the trigger . I really like everything about the rifle except the ports and the price. Anyone own one of these. Is it really loud with the ports and do they group good. Thanks, Don
Don't own one personally, know folks who do. Several, in fact. The local shop seems to turn them over pretty well, so a lot of folks in my neck of the woods seem to be be taking a shine to them. I've had an opportunity to shoot probably a half-dozen fo them. I've seen the targets punched out with double that many more where I wasn't behind the trigger. Most have been .308's and .223's. All have been very impressive performers at the target range.
I think the price is fair and I like the ports and the way they're done. Nice for laying out prone, as you don't get so massive of a boofy dust cloud on discharge as you would without them. That is part of the point to them, I think. I also think the triangle barrel profile is innovative. You get stiffness, more surface area for cooling, and lighter weight than a round tube equally stiff. What's not to love there?
The stock fits me great. The newish X-Mark Pro trigger is pretty dang nice. All the VTR's I've handled reminded me that Remington really CAN produce a real sporting arm and not just the poo they pass off at big box stores in the form 870 Expresses. Fit, finish, and so forth all seem as good as anything Remington has turned out since Patton's 3rd Army defeated the Hun.
If I was a varmint shooter, I'd buy one in a heartbeat. I might anyhow, one day, just to have a range toy. If they rifled their .223 bores 1:9 or faster, I WOULD own one now.
And I wouldn't bat an eye at the price tag. This isn't 1980 or 1990 anymore, and the street price of these things is pretty fair when you compare it to the former going rate of the old BDL styled Varmint 700 and adjust that price to 2010 dollars. Basically, if you bought a rifle in 1987 and paid $300.00 for it then, the same rifle made the same way today SHOULD set you back over $600.00 in 2010 dollars. I'd rather pony up for a good gun than cheap out on a cheap one. The VTR is a VERY good gun.
This is coming from a guy who isn't a huge fan of Remington rifles, too. I've posted on here how they don't make anything I want to buy, etc. But having had the opportunity to shoot several VTRs has me singing a very different tune. This is one Remington rifle that I would buy and in fact, I probably will .
-JP