Gunsmith for clip slots

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James84
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Gunsmith for clip slots

#1 Post by James84 »

Hi all, does anyone know a gunsmith who is able to cut clip slots in the bridge on a Remington 700 receiver?

https://www.longriflesinc.com/products/ ... optic-base
MistAgain
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#2 Post by MistAgain »

James84 wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2023 11:58 am Hi all, does anyone know a gunsmith who is able to cut clip slots in the bridge on a Remington 700 receiver?

https://www.longriflesinc.com/products/ ... optic-base
That looks like an expensive job .

And I suspect reproofing will be involved .

So is it really required ?
James84
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#3 Post by James84 »

MistAgain wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:22 pm So is it really required ?
Yes
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Alpha1
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#4 Post by Alpha1 »

200 dollars sounds like a good price to me for that amount of work. Whats the advantage of that type of modification.
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Graham M
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#5 Post by Graham M »

Would that not weaken the action considerably?????
Never argue with an idiot, he will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
James84
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#6 Post by James84 »

It does not impact the pressure-bearing areas (lugs, chamber etc.) and was a standard feature on older 700s and M40X rifles.

The clip slot serves 2 purposes - one is to enable the use of chargers/clips to load the magazine for rapid fire target matches (if the slots are cut with the charger grooves, much like on the charger bridge of a Lee Enfield, K98 etc.) and the second reason, which is the reason I need it done, is for the mounting of certain scope bases. With the need for charger loading removed, the USMC simply cut rectangular slots for mounting the scope bases.

I have a Unertl scope mount and am building a M40A1 clone/replica, so need the clip slots cut to mount the base on the receiver. These bases are made with lugs that slot into the clip slots, mechanically mating them to the receiver.

I need to do some research but it may well require proofing again, as it is altering a component part, albeit not in a pressure-sensitive area.
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Alpha1
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#7 Post by Alpha1 »

Interesting. let us know how you get on.
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#8 Post by James84 »

Will do. I fear this is something I may be doing myself with a dremel :squirrel:
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Graham M
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#9 Post by Graham M »

I think you can buy a couple of thousand grinding pads off the net ;) lol
Never argue with an idiot, he will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
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Re: Gunsmith for clip slots

#10 Post by James84 »

:D

Hacksaw, files and a dremel to polish. What could possibly go wrong
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