I have two Remington Mountain rifle stocks that I finally decided I should sell. Both of the rifles are now bedded in McMillan and B&C stocks, and I've shot enough rounds through them that I don't see myself going back to the original stocks. These stocks were from the first generation of stainless mountain rifles that Remington made between 1992 and 1993. They only made them in four calibers (.25-06, .270, .280, and .30-06), so all of the stocks were ADL-style, long action, and had "LAMT 105510" stamped inside the stock.
I can't find a mark on one of the stocks, while the second stock shows definite use. The first two pictures show the unmolested stock. The third and fourth pics show the one that received less care. The last picture is from a brochure when Remington introduced the line in '92-93. I thought about trying to fix the stock with the shallow gouges, but ended up deciding it wasn't a big deal to me since they weren't nicely figured walnut. My plan was to sand the shallow gouges, fill them, and then paint the stock.
I would like to sell them together, and I'm asking $180.00 TYD in the lower 48. If I break them up, I will sell the unmarked one for $120.00, and the more used one for $80.00 TYD. I'll accept PayPal (add 3% for PP fees), money order, or personal check (with time to clear).
Last edited by drakecasey; 03/26/22. Reason: added to title
Since I wasn’t very clear on my desire to sell them together, the unmarked one is SPF to Craig717.
Bigswede: Sorry I didn’t include the weights. They are both within a tenth of an ounce of each other, and the marked one weighs 34.3 ounces on my scale. I'm also attaching a pic of a mar on the pistol grip checkering.
Having looked again at the stock that has more use, I'm not sure I would do much other than a light wet sand to the gouges. The stocks on one of my Kimber Montana's looks far worse than this one, and I guess that's why I have synthetic stocks for my elk hunting rigs.