Upgrade or sell my current do all rifle.

I just finished a pretty similar endeavor if it's helpful:
Thread 'Winchester Model 70 - My First Customized Rifle'

In my case the safety design and other features of the model 70 were desirable enough to be worth the hassle of upgrading and I wasn't willing to switch to. 700 clone or a tikka. But I'd call it a passion project moreso than practical.

The .270 suppressed is definitely still somewhat snappy from a recoil perspective (for me at least, compared to .243) but the suppressor does make a big difference.

If i'd seen one of these at the time I started I may have picked it up instead and chopped the barrel back https://www.gunbroker.com/item/1133940913
 
I have a 6.5cm in a tikka super lite that is a dream to shoot. I’m a little skeptical to use it on elk, but deer sized game and smaller it’s perfect.
 
And this is why restaurants have menus. I have the same rifle with B&C stock (Gen 2?) and it's my go-to hunting rifle. It isn't perfect but it's close enough for me. The Stockys VF for the M70 is on sale for sub-$500. That should get some great ergonomics. Thread the barrel as is or cut and thread it and add a can.
I have the gen 1 stock and I hate it. It’s a club.

Sell it outright, get this:


and pay off your bow.

or grab a Stockys for the M70 now on black friday sale
Man that’s a great price on a stock. Are these pretty nice?

Lots of great replies. I think I’ve decided to just keep the rifle and restock it. Then do a custom in the future. I will have to decide on caliber then (low recoil vs elk caliber).
 
NEVER sell a M70. Especially one that’s a shooter. Other rifles can be replaced. M70’s cannot. Put a new stock on it, bed it and thread the barrel.
I won't sell mine because my wife got it for me for Christmas one year. I got it off the used rack at Cabela's for $600 in 2019. MSRP at the time was $600. I figured, even if I had to rebarrel it, I'd come out ahead but it shoots more than adequately for a hunting rifle.
 
NEVER sell a M70. Especially one that’s a shooter. Other rifles can be replaced. M70’s cannot. Put a new stock on it, bed it and thread the barrel.

This makes me want to buy an M70 just to sell it.

But there is nothing quite like an old M70. My brother has a M54 in .270 that is a real beauty.
 
You may consider stockys carbon fiber stocks or a rokstock. I have a factory second carbon fiber stockys that is 29 oz on one of my model 70 s. Good stock. Not nearly as beefy as the bell and Carlson stocks on those extreme weathers .
 
Ill be in the minority here and just say it. Keep the M70. Get a Stockys VG2 have a competent gunsmith put a barrel on it in whatever cartridge you choose.

The M70 is what the custom action world should have cloned all along. M70s are leaps and bounds better than any R700 ever produced, but because the military used M700s thats where we are today.

IMO tied with a Tikka the M70 is the best factory action ever mass produced. If its a dedicated hunting rifle, I would prefer a hinged floor plate over a magazine anyway.

I have a long action M70 in .308 that I am just keeping until I am ready to build my do all hunting rifle off of.
 
I’d keep the M70 and invest in the McMillan. Sell the Bell & Carlson for a couple hundred to offset the cost.
 
I have the gen 1 stock and I hate it. It’s a club.


Man that’s a great price on a stock. Are these pretty nice?

Lots of great replies. I think I’ve decided to just keep the rifle and restock it. Then do a custom in the future. I will have to decide on caliber then (low recoil vs elk caliber).
This Stockys replaced a McMillan on this rifle, and I am never looking back.

If I could find a Stainless Extreme Weather in 270 I would build up its twin. For the sale price the Stockys are a no brainer. If you want to switch up the caliber 6mm creed to 280 ai the options are quite expansive.
 

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