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Posted By: kenster99 Remington 722 BDL - 06/11/20
A buddy of mine has one he is thinking of selling. 244 caliber, made in 1958. Absolutely beautiful condition and wood. probably 98%. Any ideas on value?
Posted By: hikerbum Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/11/20
$500
Posted By: Jericho Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/11/20
Not trying to hijack this thread but several years ago I stumbled across a 721BDL in 30-06 and it was a very good looking rifle. I had never knew the BDL version was offered in 721s and 722s and out of curiosity I called a local gun shop and inquired on them. The guy on the phone talked to me like I was a complete idiot and told me that in all of his years in the firearm business he had never seen or heard of a BDL version and therefore they did not exist. Since then I have handled at least 2 more BDL versions over the years. I traded off the 721BDL, but I wish I would have kept it.
Posted By: boliep Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/11/20

You will probably need to reload with that particular cartridge. That era Remington were very nice rifles.
Posted By: JRK Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
Might need to reload anyway, but 244=6mm right, just early with slower twist? Educate me, I thought that the 725 was the deluxe version of the 722 (or 721 cant remember long and short...)?
Posted By: navlav8r Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
I have six; three 722’s (short actions) and three 721’s (long action). Some aren’t marked BDL or anything to denote they’re an upgraded model but the BDL’s have upgraded wood and checkering. Some may even have “BDL” hand engraved with an vibratory pencil right behind the model number on the receiver. I would say more like $750-800 and I’ve paid more than that for mine depending on condition, etc.

The 725 came in both short and long actions. It was similar to the 721/722 but with a different safety resembling the 1917 and different stock profile, checkering, a 700 type rear sight and a hooded front sight. It was intended to be an upgrade for the 721/722 line.
Posted By: deflave Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20


I'd say $500 is very much a friend price and that navl8avr's prices are more in line with what a Remington nut would pay.

The 6mm under the 244 banner is a cool piece of rifle nerd history. I'd try and get it.
Posted By: southtexas Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
Learn something every day. I always thought that the ADL/BDL monikers began with the M700 in 1962.
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
Thanks guys, I have paid 500.00 for standard clean 722 in 257 Roberts. This one is much higher grade. Hope to post pics soon.
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
And this one is marked BDL on the barrel.
Posted By: super T Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
If it matters at all, .244 will likely have a 12" twist.
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
it is 1 in 12. Doesn't matter, more of an investment gun. Its beautiful.
Posted By: bushrat Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
Have never seen a BDL 721 or 722, wasn't aware that they made such a model. Have seen lots of 721's and 722's and fancier grade 725's but the stock on those didn't resemble a BDL stock. Have seen many 721's and 722's which have been restocked with BDL stocks and factory model 700 floorplates/magazines, an easy cheap conversion. Also very common to use Model 700 take off barrels to replace old shot out 721/722 barrels which also allows avoiding having to inlet the forend channel on the newer BDL stock to accomodate the 721/722 rear sight boss bulge in the barrel. This is what I suspect the OP has.
Posted By: butchlambert1 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
According to John Lacy's Remington book, there were some 721-722 BDLs. I have Mike Walker's personal deer rifle. It is a 722 in 257 Roberts. It is not marked BDL and has no checkering. Mine was made in 1948.
Posted By: VarmintGuy Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
Kenster99: If as you described "I" would pay somewhat more than $500.00 for it - maybe as high as $700.00.
This is a rare Rifle (model, configuration & caliber).
I say GO FOR IT!
If I may go off on a tangent - the Rifle you are questioning about reminds me of a Rifle I bought and sold - in record time!
I was out to the west coast visiting my Mother in about 1999 and I went to the nearby gunshop (on Sunset Avenue between the Renton Highlands and Issaquah, Washington) - I had gone into the store and found a MINT condition Remington 700 in caliber 244 Remington (this was an "ADL" type 722) and as I was walking out of the store with the Rifle a "gun-trader" I knew drove up and saw me getting into my car.
He started a conversation with me and in short order I sold him the 244 Remington Rifle I had just bought a moment before!
As I recall I made a 100 dollar bill on the deal - and again, as I recall, the purchase price I paid was $350.00 and the selling price by me was $450.00.
Best of luck to you in dealing with your friend.
Hold into the wind
VarmintGuy
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
I cant get it for 700.00. I was with him when he bought it, I had purchased a Remington 725 from the same gent, in 280 caliber. Original with beautiful wood. Sold it for 1200.00 on here 3 yrs ago . This 722 BDL is as nice or nicer. Check out my 725 on 3-23-17. I will probably be posting this for him.
Thanks
Posted By: BLR358WIN Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/12/20
I just sold a 722 B in 222(was stamped B on receiver) I paid 500 and sold it for 675. Gorgeous wood, I believe factory checkering. Only flaw was someone redrilled sling mounts for some reason. A few years ago I picked up a prestine 725 in 280. I paid way under a 1000. Glad to hear I made a wise investment in the 280, she shoots lights out even with her iron sights. No scope ever mounted. I also acquired a prestine 722 in 244 for 675. It will ONLY group bullets under 90 grains. Remington really made some fine rifles back in the day. And Im a Winchester man!
Posted By: lundtroller Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
Kenster,

I have a minty 722 .244 that I paid $475 or $500 for 20 years ago! It is a great rifle and shoots bug holes with 85gr Nosler partitions. I have taken whitetails, mulies, antelope, and even a large cow elk over the years. The performance has been impressive. Mine is just a standard grade. The 244's seem to have lagged the 257 Roberts in price over the years but seem to be catching up with minty specimens bringing a premium these days.

I bought a 722 in .222 with a factory checkered stock that had no special designation on the metal but the barrel channel was marked "722A". IIRC, it had a lower serial # and was an earlier one. It sounds like some of the others with stampings on the barrel or receiver may have been later versions. In my reading, I was under the impression the A's had checkered wood, whereas the B's had checkered "deluxe" wood. I'm not sure when they went on to the ADL/BDL designations.

I would be curious to know if the one you are looking at has the barrel boss for the rear sight and a 26" barrel which all the earlier .244's had. I believe they made a few at the end which were 24" barrels w/o the boss. Those MAY be the ones that had the ADL/BDL designations. I have a 722 .222 Rem Magnum (Standard) that is in that later barrel configuration. I know the 722 .222 Rem Mag is a fairly rare configuration as it is, but your .244 BDL with the 24" barrel, if that is what it is, would be pretty darn rare as well. I'm not sure but that might even have the faster twist barrel as well which would make it even better!!!

You might be looking at something worth more like $1000? Who really knows these days! Looking forward to pics!

lundtroller
Posted By: 3dtestify Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
Ken has shown me this rifle & its rare and quite beautiful. Date code is March of 1957 and has the receiver marked Model 722 BDL. Only 53 were made that year. It has a checkered red/brown stained walnut stock with a nice medium straight grain complemented by fiddleback throughout. Barrel is 24 “ with barrel sight boss and 1”-12” twist. Remington changed to a 1”-10” twist in 1960.

As Ken stated, it is every bit as nice as the gorgeous Remington 725/280 he sold a couple years ago. Believe me, its worth considerably more than the laughable $500 quote.
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
We shot the rifle yesterday,best was a 3/4" 3 shot at 100 yds. Only tried a couple loads with 85 grain bullets. Couple of corrections on this, has a rubber pad added. (crap!) also one of 53 made in 1957, not 58.
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
Posted By: gunzo Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
Cool. I was wondering if it would have the 26" barrel like the 722's in 222 Rem,. And it appears it does. I kinda have a soft spot for 21/22 series. Good guns.

For grins, or several unknowns for some. Try to find an older gun traders guide off E-B or something. With all the interest in pre 64 Winchesters, Remingtons of that era are overlooked, & rarely seen. 721's, 722's, 725's, even big bores like the 725 Kodiak. Higher grade 1158's, B,C,D, & even E grade 1100's & 870's.
Of all the gun shops & shows I've been to over the last half century & I've seen few of the 50's Remington offerings myself.
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
I will take a dozen for $500.00 !
Posted By: southtexas Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/15/20
Beautiful rifle. Congrats!
Posted By: lundtroller Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/16/20
Definitely has the high grade wood!!! Beautiful.
Does it really have the 24" barrel or is it 26"? I would have guessed 26" on that one. Perhaps it was rare enough or more of a custom order where you could get whatever barrel length you wanted.
Regarless, very nice!
Posted By: kenster99 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/16/20
Its a 26" barrel.
Posted By: VarmintGuy Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/16/20
Kenster99: I am just thrilled that your nifty old Remington is shooting so well.
I am happy for you.
Enjoy and please keep us advised.
Hold into the wind
VarmintGuy
Posted By: 1911a1 Re: Remington 722 BDL - 06/16/20
That is a nice rifle. Cool factor for being marked 244 remington.

My son has a late production 721 in 270 win that my Dad bought used, gave to my younger brother who then passed down to my son. That rifle has a higher straighter comb than the earlier 721s and has a 22" barrel without the boss. with screw on sights and what appears to be a sweated on front ramp.
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