700PSS Availability
This question surfaces often. Remington sells PSS's only to LE distributers or suppliers. They in turn are independent businessmen who can sell to whom they choose. You dealer could get one from Hoplite. Remington (so far, and hopefully not in their plans) has not limited them to letterhead purchases. The current VS and PSS use the SAME barrelled action in .308. In .223, the PSS is 1-9" and the VS is 1-12" twists. Only the stock is different. Very early Police rifles used a wood stock and 24" barrel and some, very, very rare (almost mythical) PSS had the legendary 24" Rock 5R barrels.
I have a .308 which I love. Very accurate. Have had it for 2 years. It will keep 40 rounds in under an hour into under 1 inch. From an ice cold to hot barrel and no point of impact change. I just traded a Remington 700 LTR in .223 for a .223 PSS last weekend. Just waiting on the scope rings from Sinclair.
Do NOT buy the removable mag version! Remington discontinued them in the PSS series due to unreliable feeding.
These heavy barreled rifles (PSS or VS) do NOT come with iron sights. However, older Model 700s (pre-1981) had the receivers tapped on the left side for a good peep sight. 700's pre-1982 also had the bolt lock feature some attribute to being "unsafe." (See other long rant thread on this) An older .308 Varmint could be fitted with the HS Precision PSS stock (which is relieved for a peep as the military specifies iron backups) and presto! a 24" barreled PSS. There are match sight manufacturers who make front sights that clamp on the barrel. On a newer PSS, if using Weaver or Picatinny bases, there are emergency rear peep sights that can mount on that type of base.
Lastly, for the Savage fans, take a look at the Savage 110 or 10FP Tactical. Rough trigger, passable pillar bedded stock, but darn accurate at aroung $400.
FN also is selliing the Winchester Model 70-actioned Tactical. It has a chrome lined bore. Sacrilege to accuracy shooters, but they are supposed to be decent. I, however would get the Remington. The US Military and many benchrest shooters start with Model 700 actions.