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Anyone know about or have any experince with these barrels? Apaarently they have come up with a method similary to the Savage process for swaping barrels. Any info would be great thanks.
Not certain if you are asking specifically about Bergara, but Pac-nor and Criterion both have the same system. The concept seems to becoming more popular. IIRC, Criterion calls theirs a Remage or something similar. The only difficulty with a Rem. VS Savage I see, is to properly align the recoil lug on the Rem.
There are several inexpensive tools which will hold the recoil lug in the proper orientation.

This is kinda funny because I try to change my "nutted" Savage barrels to "nutless", ala Rem700.
LIke2shoot,

Thanks for the info didnt know that others were doing this as well. Was researching replacements barrels for a M-700 project and read about the Bergaras. Ill check out the other companys as well.


Any anyone used this method of rebarreling?

thanks
Everyone who's swapped a Savage or a Stevens barrel has used that method.

The nutted 700 works precisely like it does on a Savage.

It is a good system for headspacing which doesn't require machine time or skill.

I think these nutted barrels look like hell but they do make it easy to swap barrels for the person with no lathe.
Since I recycle a lot of Remington 700 barrels, I bought a Kleinendorst barrel tool from Brownells to keep the recoil lug properly aligned.

Brownells part # 488-004-700 for the factory specs recoil lug, they also have the make for Holland and Tubb recoil lugs.

Jeff
Shilen's new rifle and receiver is based on a 700 with the Savage nut. Their bolt also uses the Savage bolt head.
I bought one for a Remington 700 action. I was building a custom .22-250 A.I. with a Pac-Nor barrel that also uses the Pac-Nor Rem-nut, but delivery time was about five months, so I bought a Bergara stainless varmint contour in .22-250 just to try one. Bergara had one in stock and it arrived in less than a week.

The Bergara product works just as advertised. While the Pac-Nor uses a nut that accepts the Savage barrel nut wrench and thick aftermarket recoil lugs, the Bergara uses a smooth nut and only accepts the standard OEM recoil lug. You need a Rigid Strap Wrench (1" wide) to tighten the nut. I have Remington recoil lug positioning tools, and the action wrench that retains the OEM lug, so that's not a problem. I installed it using a set of headspace gauges in about fifteen minutes.

The barrel shot right at .5" for 10 shot groups at 100 yards. I am confident that if I spend more time developing a load this barrel is capable of better accuracy. If this one barrel is any indication of Bergara quality, they are a good deal.

[Linked Image]

Above: Top barrel is Pac-Nor with their Savage type grooved nut. The recoil lug is a .250" thick double pinned Gre-Tan lug. With pinned lugs a locator tool isn't needed. Also use of the Gre-Tan lug for stocks with bedding blocks, means they fit without inletting (this is a Bell&Carlson M-3 SKU 1000 stock)

Bottom barrel is a Bergara varmint contour in .22-250 Remington with the Bergara smooth nut. This barrel will only accept the standard .185" thick OEM recoil lug.



Originally Posted by nsaqam
There are several inexpensive tools which will hold the recoil lug in the proper orientation.

This is kinda funny because I try to change my "nutted" Savage barrels to "nutless", ala Rem700.


Brownell's sells a "Kliendorst lug locator" to locate the recoil lug on 700's.
I went Montana Barrel co. (IIRC) for mine. Super accurate. Had to buy the nut separate.
I bought the remington barrel nut from pacnor $72.00 that fit the savage wrench and threaded the remington barrels myself.
I have 12 extra remington barrels now of 12 different calibers.
Below is a pretty good thread about the Remage system and a few
photos on how it is done:

http://savageshooters.com/SavageForum/index.php/topic,42821.0.html
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