Originally Posted By: Bear Is the 740 a pump?
Nope... that would be the 760, 740 is semi-auto.
And, Wikipedia tells us...
Originally Posted By: Wikipedia
Remington Model 740
Type
Rifle
Place of origin
United States
Production history
Designer
Remington R&D [1]
Manufacturer
Remington Arms
Produced
1955–1960 [1]
Number built
251,398 [1]
Specifications
Weight
7.5 lb (3.4 kg)[2]
Length
42.5 in (108 cm)[2]
Barrel length
22 in (56 cm)[2]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cartridge
.244 Remington
.280 Remington
.308 Winchester
.30-06 Springfield[1]
Action
Semi-automatic
Feed system
4-round magazine[1]
Sights
White metal bead ramp front
Step-adjustable semi-buckhorn rear[2]
The Remington Model 740 was a semi-automatic rifle manufactured by Remington Arms between 1955 and 1960.[1] The rifle had a 22-inch barrel and a four-round magazine.[1] The original calibers were 30-06 and .308, but calibers .244 and .280 were made available subsequently. The blued metal barreled action was mounted in a walnut stock. This model was succeeded by the Remington Model 742 in 1960 and the Remington Model 7400 in 1980
Have never owned a 740, can't say that I've ever seen but one or two 740s. I do own an early 70s vintage 742 Carbine in 30-06. And, it's as reliable and rugged as the day is long.
Back in my teens, which was about 40 years ago, we bear hunted the swamps of North Florida, and one of the guys owned 2 late 60s early 70s vintage 742s. These guns were drug through the swamps, crawling most of the time, as they're to thick to walk in most places. They were rattled around under truck seats, so more dirt. And, the entire family was a tad on the lazy side, so they never really got cleaned. Maybe a blast with the air hose, or the water hose, and a shot of WD 40. More often than not, pull the magazine, hold the bolt open and blow in it real good a time or two, after shaking the bigger chunks out of course. And, in 5 - 6 years that we bear hunted together, I know of only 1 fail to feed/fail to fire on either of those weapons.
At the same time, we had another gentleman that spent more on a Browning Semi-Auto in 30-06, than the first guy had paid for both 742s. Cleaned it after every trip to the woods, carried it to and from the woods in a zipped up soft case behind the seat of the pickup. And, it would jam about every third trip, if not every other trip, and for a short while there EVERY TRIP into the swamp.
And, that is exactly why I own a Remington 742, and not a Browning semi-auto!
I've heard rumors to the effect that they were having a lot problems with them, which I didn't buy at the time, still don't, and that they weren't worth anything, which I didn't buy at the time, still don't. But, that was out of a gunshop owner that thought he was going to buy mine for $100, until I politely told him, "No... Ain't happenin' dude. This one works flawlessly and I'm not giving it away." It still works flawlessly 7 - 8 years later. Someone forgot to tell mine to break down, and honestly I'm glad he pissed me off, and I refused to sell it.
To the best of my knowledge, the 740 and the 742 were the same action, basically just cosmetic changes. I want to say there were some changes on the 7400 which followed the 742, that they had some issues with, (weak magazine springs or something as best I recall), and it was followed up by the 7500. Which was again, basically a redesigned stock configuration.
All in all, the action has remained relatively the same from the 740 of the 1950s to the current model 7500s. Which I have one of those that's 5 - 6 years old now, (in .243) and it hasn't impressed me nearly as much as my 742.
If you found a 740 that appears to be in reasonable shape, for a fair price, I wouldn't hesitate a minute to buy it. Might ask to take it out and run a few rounds through it if possible, but if it works, they really are a sweet shootin old gun, and quite reliable.
*** For the record, I did have problems with mine hanging up when I first bought it, (used mid-90s), but that had nothing to do with the action. There were issues we've never been able to explain in the neck area of the chamber; found another case like it here on the forum not long ago. Still isn't explained, but one more surfaced here shortly thereafter. Had mine fixed, and it has never given me any grief since. The other case reportedly resurfaced after several hundred rounds, which I probably haven't put that many through mine yet.
The action itself was strong enough to rip the extractors through the base of the casing when it hung up. Slam it closed again, and get it to lock on the case again, and it would pull it out. Every time!