Well, I'd like to weigh in on this question of Remington quality.
I've bought eight Remingtons over the last ten years. Of those four have had serious issues. I'll explain.
I bought a 700 BDL in 243 win. That's been a great rifle. No problems whatsoever. Similarly I bought an Express mag 870 last year that to the best of my knowledge has no problems. (I haven't shot it a lot though, so I kind of wonder what's in store.) Similarly I have an 1100 and 11-87 that haven't given me any trouble.
Now to the ugly. In early 2000 I bought an express super mag. It would shoot 2.75" and 3" shells no problem. But whenever you fired a 3.5" shell it would jam in the chamber so badly that you had do pull the barrel off to get it back out. Apparently the chamber wasn't cut properly. I sold that one to a buddy who only wanted to shoot 3" shells out of it.
Then I bought an 870P. That one would eject shells, but the shell in the mag tube would not enter the receiver. So the gun was an expensive single shot. I took it to a Remington shop and it's been fine since they fixed it. The guy there said they had machined the receiver incorrectly.
Then a while back I splurged and ordered a Wingmaster 28ga. When I went to the store to pick it up I found that there were gouges in the metal all the way through the finish. Similarly the wood on the foreend looked as if someone had been gouging away at it with a chisel. I told the store owner that I was sorry, but that they would have to order a different one. No way am I paying $800+ for something like that. I'd really love to hear how that one ever got out of the factory for that matter. The second one he got for me appears to be quite nice, though I haven't fired it that much yet.
Then a few weeks ago I ordered a 700xcr in 375H&H. I took it home, cleaned the barrel and cycled the action a few times. In doing so the bolt handle popped right off in my hand. Now bear in mind that this rifle had never had a round chambered (by me at least) let alone having ever been fired. So this wasn't a stuck bolt due to a hot reload or anything like that. The handle simply popped off.
And now begins my experience with Remington's customer support. Naturally I went back to the store I bought it from the next day (bolt handle in hand) and we called Remington's customer support. The guy there said that they would UPS me a box to return the rifle to them in and that it would take about three weeks to get fixed. I wasn't really happy about that, but whatever. A week went by and I hadn't seen a box (and UPS takes only two days max from NY to VT). So I called them. The woman I spoke with said they hadn't shipped the box for whatever reason and that she would get it right out. The next day I got a UPS shipping label but no box. Two days later (still no box) I got fed up and went back to the gun store and pulled a shipping box out of their trash. Then I sent it off. Now here I am two weeks into the point from which they told me it would take three weeks. I called Remington for an update. The guy I spoke with said it would take two weeks for it to even get out of their receiving department and that the whole thing would probably take six more weeks. I reminded him that I had been told it would take three weeks and that by my count that left them with one more week to get it fixed and back to me. He was about as helpful as a rock.
I told them to just send it back to me and I'd simply return it. Apparently they can't be bothered to send someone down to receiving and dig it out for me. Too much work for them I suppose.
So now I'm just kind of in limbo. I shelled out over $800 for this thing, and now I have no rifle, I'm out my money, and my confidence that Remington will be competent enough to fix this thing at all is diminishing towards zero.
I love the classic Remington designs. But the current Remington Arms Co. seems to have serious problems both with quality control and with customer support. I don't think I'll be feeling the need to buy anything else from them until they get their act together.
Ben