The cost of a top thermal-imaging scope could easily exceed that of your day scope or rifle. At the high…
The Remington Model 700 SPS - a great little rifle with dependable accuracy and reliability
Would you like to speak to our readers? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our audience. Find out more.It is nice to see Remington getting a good foothold back in the UK again and one rifle that many enthusiasts have missed is its “go to” Model 700. Introduced in 1962, the design is still going strong and it has been copied as many times as the original Mauser 98 was.
The SPS — or Special Purpose Synthetic — is the basic version of the Model 700 with matte blued surfaces and synthetic stock.
It is available in many guises: Varmint, Tactical, Stainless or, as here, Compact Tactical. What you have is a strong, inherently accurate design in a short, compact, carbine-like rifle with stalker-friendly synthetic stock for a price of less than £1,000.
Available in .223 or .308 and .300 AAC Blackout rounds in 20in or 16.5in barrel lengths and threaded, I had the .223 version with the fast twist rifling of 1-in-9in. This meant I could use heavier weight .22 centrefire bullets for small species deer where legal.
The Model 700 SPS has five shot capacity in .223 Rem and a pretty decent trigger
Manufacturer: Remington
Model: 700 SPS
Action: Bolt action
Magazine: Five shot in .223
Calibre: .223 Remington, fast-twist rifling
Barrel length: 20in Varmint profile
Stock: Hogue synthetic
Trigger: X-Mark Pro
Weight: 6.75lb
Overall length: 39.5in
Price: £959
Importer: Raytrade, tel 01635 253344
Strong bolt design and lock-up contributes to the Remington Model 700’s impressive accuracy
You would expect the barrel on a carbine to be slim and light, but that is not the case here — this SPS has a short Varmint-profile barrel. It has a large-diameter muzzle of over 0.800in, quite straight tapered for rigidity, and is threaded with an 18mm/1 thread and protector.
Being only 20in long (16.5in available), you have a nice, short and sound moderator-friendly rifle ideal for the woods or lamping.
Being an SPS tactical barrel, instead of a traditional 1-in-12in or 1-in-14in rifling twist, this had a 1-in-9 twist rate. This allows the use of bullets heavier than 60-gr and up to 80-gr, permitting some good bullets designed for small species deer and longer-range fox loads to be used, rather than just lightweight Varmint-type projectiles, doubling the little gun’s usefulness.
The finish is a subdued black bluing that is non-reflective and ideal for hunting purposes. It is a little too austere but suits this type of rifle well — and no worries if you scratch it either.
I had two reasons to test this month’s rifle: first, fast twist .22 centrefires interest me in general and secondly, the new Pulsar Trail thermal sight would make for a great chance to outwit the foxes now looking for an easy meal around the pheasant pens. The one-piece Picatinny scope rail mount makes it easy to swap over scopes.
I fitted a Kahles Multizero and sighted at 100 yards to check accuracy from factory and reloads alike. Despite its fast twist barrel, I just had to see how the lighter bullets would fare. I had some Remington 50-gr Accutip bullets, which I have used well in Scotland on roe where legal. From this 20in barrel, they gave a nice 3,222fps velocity for 1,153ft/lb energy and 1in groups, for three shots.
Another good all-rounder is the new Geco factory load, again a good fox or small species legal round. Its 56-gr bullet achieved 3,155fps and 1,238ft/lb with consistent just sub-inch groups.
Next up were the reloads with a wider range of bullet weights: light for vermin, heavier for longer range and small species deer. Light 40-gr V-Max loads offer good speed and were fine in the fast-twist rifling barrel — sometimes a light bullet can come apart due to rotational speed. A load of 24.0 grains of Vit N120 powder, Federal Match primer, achieved a velocity of 3,421fps, 1,038ft/lb energy and 0.95in groups, which is very good.
With 23.0 grains of RL 10X powder, the 55-gr Sierra GameKing achieved 3,157fps and 1,218ft/lb energy with three shots into 0.75in.
Upping the bullet weights, I shot some 60-gr Nosler Partitions with a load of 24.0 grains of RL 15 powder for 2,823fps and 1,062ft/lb. The best heavier bullet was the 75-gr Sierra Hollow Point Boat Tail with Vit N540 powder and 24.25 grains achieved a velocity of 2,532fps for 1,068ft/lb and 0.95in groups.
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With keepers now out and about controlling vermin on their shoots, I fitted a new Pulsar thermal-imaging sight to the Remington SPS and sighted in at 100 yards with the 55-gr Sierra reload. The Geco 56-gr is a good choice if you do not reload.
Thermal imagers have transformed the way we look at the game fields and what lives within them. Some say it is cheating as no living — in other words, warm-bodied — object can avoid the penetrating gaze of the thermal detection. But if you need to shoot vermin for an employer, they are a godsend.
The Pulsar Trail XP38 offers
a superb level of detection and clarity at a price of £3,769.95.
Pricey, but it can detect a heat
source of a 1.7m-tall object out
to 1,476m.
I could attach and detach the Trail on its rail mount easily, so I used it as a handheld to spot game then remounted it on to the SPS to shoot.
One shoot had a fox problem and the remaining foxes were getting lamp-shy, so I took the Remington SPS out for a couple of evenings. With the Hogue synthetic stock you can rough handle this Remington and crawl about the hedgerows without fear of damage.
Using the Trail thermal as a handheld, I could see a fox walking down the hedgeline at 400 yards off. So I had to skirt around the farm buildings to get the wind correct, quartering so he would hopefully walk past me in an opening through the hawthorn.
With the Trail attached to the rifle, I sat and waited for 30 minutes. Nothing. So I relocated, and walked right into him. Off came the Trail and I managed to pick up another heat signature scouting the farmer’s ornamental duck pond.
From a prone position I crawled into range, assessed a safe backdrop and soon old Charlie, unable to penetrate the pens, came trotting into range at 60 yards, where the Remington’s mild report from the MAE muzzle can dropped him.
A great little rifle with dependable accuracy and reliability, this Remington acts in a dual role for small species deer as well as vermin with its barrel chambering. The short barrel is perfect for a hunting tool with moderator fitted, and when I saw the farmer the morning after my outing and told him I had shot the fox that had been harassing his ducks, he did not even know I had been there or taken the shot. Perfect.
Accuracy: It is a Remington, need I say more? 17/20
Handling: Lightweight and good handling 17/20
Trigger: Better than most 17/20
Stock: Simple design and very tactile 15/20
Value: Good dependability for the money 17/20
Score: 83/100