I saw one just like it at a LGS a few days ago and they were asking $300 for it! mine is in better shape. My gun now resides in my garage shop and if need be it has a plastic bottle with some ammo taped to the sling. I always hated the look of the Remington Bolt handles on these guns. In one of my early Home Gunsmithing projects I altered the bolt handle. That's how I knew I got the same gun back. It was $15, the she decided I needed a sling on it which cost her another $20 to have a gunsmith install. My Mother bought me that gun for my 12th birthday. I later bought the same gun back at a local gun show 8-10 years later. I had it for about 6 years and traded it in on a Mauser. My only Remington rifle is a 514 single shot. There are four Aspies in that photo! All good shots. I actually bought the 511 with my son in mind. It now it is of special sentiment to me (Denver shot his first hare with it at a good distance two days later). I was a silllywet champ with it when I was much younger. It must have had thousands of rounds through it. Yup, that Sportmaster really shoots well. That's his mother (my niece) behind us shooting the out of us! That's not a bad thing - she is a very good shot! We were shooting beer cans at about 80yds and she was getting bored so she started shooting the cans on the rim to make them fly in the air! So I started shooting the bottom of the cans through the top opening - and I was standing (I actually got a few like that). I'm the guy in a hat coaching a youngster with a rifle I shortened for him. Here it is with my late son, Denver shooting it. I also found the muzzle was badly worn so I chopped off the tip of the barrel. The baffles weren't perfectly aligned so I remade it. See photos for details of actual part(s) you will receive. Then I made a suppressor for it which really screwed with the accuracy. Remington Model 512 Sportmaster Parts Lot Carrier Stop Pins Springs Screws -B72 Removed from a Remington 512 Sportmaster rifle. The 512 was accurate out to 100 yds (91m) but at 100m (109yds) the groups were opening up exponentially. These rifles have such a good balance and feel. The 512 is a 15 shot tubular magazine rifle with a long barrel. It wasn't in too bad of shape, the stock needed some cleaning up. More recently I picked up a 511 Scoremaster with a five shot box magazine in nice condition which I have never fired. Another one, this one is a Remington 512 Sportmaster (the second one I have done). You will blow through box after box of ammunition without even noticing during a day of plinking.I got those old and beat up 512 Sportmaster from my late uncle many years ago which I repaired and mounted a scope on. With a tubular magazine holding a diverse number of rounds depending on the ammo you are running, the Sportmaster 512 is a fun little mid-century rifle. With the high magazine capacity and the accuracy of a lengthy barrel and the bolt-action, the 512 Sportmaster is a great choice for routing pests from your property or spending a Sunday afternoon knocking down tin cans. The Sportmaster 512 has a one-piece smooth hardwood pistol grip stock which handsomely compliments the blued steel components. The 512-X line featured a 24 barrel having a thinner diameter than its predicessor, an improved front and rear sight and a grooved receiver for scope mounting. A 24-inch blued steel barrel is adorned with an adjustable rear sight and a blade front sight. Remington then re-introduced it again in 1964, but as the model 512-X Sportmaster. The Remington Sportmaster 512 is a bolt-action rifle able to handle 22 Short, 22 Long, or 22 LR. You will blow through box after box of ammunition without even noticing during a day of plinking.