Texas Star
US Veteran
We have a topic on pre-'64 Model 70 Winchester rifles. As much as I admire them, there are other fine rifles.
I think the M-70 is as perfect a factory rifle as is made today, and worthy of respect in its own right. Actually, after Winchester and USRAC woke up after the 1964-68 debacle, the M-70 has beeen a good rifle.
And it has had the Mauser '98 extractor since 1992, if memory serves. Overall quality is well beyond the later pre-'64's, which were sometimes rushed through production as costs mounted. My Featherweight .270 is one of the best made factory rifles that I've seen. And I've owned a Sako and a Mannlicher-Schoenauer.
The present M-70 has a bolt guide and runs very smoothly when broken in. I've seen post-'68 M-70's that ran like they had hand-honed actions. (That bolt guide was added in 1968.)
I lack a digital camera. Can some of you post pics of these fine rifles?
T-Star
I think the M-70 is as perfect a factory rifle as is made today, and worthy of respect in its own right. Actually, after Winchester and USRAC woke up after the 1964-68 debacle, the M-70 has beeen a good rifle.
And it has had the Mauser '98 extractor since 1992, if memory serves. Overall quality is well beyond the later pre-'64's, which were sometimes rushed through production as costs mounted. My Featherweight .270 is one of the best made factory rifles that I've seen. And I've owned a Sako and a Mannlicher-Schoenauer.
The present M-70 has a bolt guide and runs very smoothly when broken in. I've seen post-'68 M-70's that ran like they had hand-honed actions. (That bolt guide was added in 1968.)
I lack a digital camera. Can some of you post pics of these fine rifles?
T-Star