Winchester model 70

There's a pre 64 in 30-06 at local gun shop here in Iowa that they are asking $1400 for. It's got an older scope on it didn't catch the brand. They know they are high, but I'm sure someone may eventually pay that for it.
 
Point is they ate used and you have no clue how many rounds have been shot through it. Only decent reason's I can find to get one is either they are inexpensive of you just like pre 64 mod 70's!
I can say for 100% fact this one has had less than 1k rounds through it...would be surprised if its had more than 500 through it since it was purchased in 1957.

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Stickley's were/are hand crafted works of art and represent a unique American art movement in Mission revival/Arts & Crafts, much like the model 70 in it's heyday.

The electrical system of the Jaguar was designed & manufactured by sadists, and the engine by specialists in overthinking. The rest of it is gorgeous.
Ehh idk have that kinda eye...to me its just a chair I sit my skinny ass in...lol
 
Chump change...in particular considering the quality of a pre-64 action.

Are you seriously going to start comparing a pre-64 action to an axis?

Ok...well, good luck with that.

I think you're missing the point Don was making. :)
 
I can say for 100% fact this one has had less than 1k rounds through it...would be surprised if its had more than 500 through it since it was purchased in 1957.

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About 8 rds a year. Guess you've had it all that time? Here's the hard part, if that rifle was worth $800 that Sheep would not be anymore dead than if it had been shot with a $300 rifle with the same shot! But I do understand guy's preference for rifles of one brand or another. Got a preference like that myself. I like mod 700's really well! The value of a rifle is what the owner put's on it but, if you need to sell it, don't be surprised if no one agrees with you. I have a 1903 Springfield sporterized by Paul Jaeger in 1945. Appraised in 1990 but I doubt I could get that figure for it. Doesn't bother me though. Got it from a very close friend when he died. Went years just shooting at target's now and then, worried about dinging up an expensive rifle. Then one day it hit me, what the hell, used it for an elk rifle. Sure glad I did. Brand new in 1945 my friend paid $500 for it. Get past the fact that Paul Jaeger did it and it's simply an old Springfield!
 
About 8 rds a year. Guess you've had it all that time? Here's the hard part, if that rifle was worth $800 that Sheep would not be anymore dead than if it had been shot with a $300 rifle with the same shot! But I do understand guy's preference for rifles of one brand or another. Got a preference like that myself. I like mod 700's really well! The value of a rifle is what the owner put's on it but, if you need to sell it, don't be surprised if no one agrees with you. I have a 1903 Springfield sporterized by Paul Jaeger in 1945. Appraised in 1990 but I doubt I could get that figure for it. Doesn't bother me though. Got it from a very close friend when he died. Went years just shooting at target's now and then, worried about dinging up an expensive rifle. Then one day it hit me, what the hell, used it for an elk rifle. Sure glad I did. Brand new in 1945 my friend paid $500 for it. Get past the fact that Paul Jaeger did it and it's simply an old Springfield!
Yes, my Dad's rifle that my Grandfather bought new in Missoula has never left the family and never will. Dad hasn't hunted with it for a number of years.

The last time it was fired, was by me. I shot it once to confirm zero fired it again later that year and killed a cow elk with it in Montana. That was 6-7 years ago. My Dad, Grandfather, and I have all killed elk, deer, pronghorn in Montana with it now.

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gunsinternational has this type of Winchester model 70 starting at $1175 and goes up from there. It has an amazing amount of these pre 64s for sale. By the way thanks for all the assistance and info.
 
If someone has to explain to a person the cool factor of a Pre 64 M 70, well you wouldn't understand it. I have 5 currently. Two from a hunting buddy of my Grampa's, one 270 built in 1951 bought by my Uncle, one 270 bought by my Dad in 1952 & my 300H&H rechambered to 300 Wby. They will be passed down to my Daughter when the time comes. Until then I will continue to hunt with each one as time permits.
Comparing the old m70's to other rifles is to me the same as comparing apples and oranges.
YMMV
Dan
 
Yes, my Dad's rifle that my Grandfather bought new in Missoula has never left the family and never will. Dad hasn't hunted with it for a number of years.

The last time it was fired, was by me. I shot it once to confirm zero fired it again later that year and killed a cow elk with it in Montana. That was 6-7 years ago. My Dad, Grandfather, and I have all killed elk, deer, pronghorn in Montana with it now.

DSC00089.JPG

That is amazing Buzz. I hope that someday my grandkids can say the same things about the rifles I hand down. In 20 years I would love to be sitting on a prairie dog town in Wyoming and tell my grand kids after they flip a dog end over end ( my oldest child is 13), " You know your great uncle Rich used this same 22 hornet back in 1941 in Wyoming on prairie dogs, and I used it in 2014 to do the same thing."
 
gunsinternational has this type of Winchester model 70 starting at $1175 and goes up from there. It has an amazing amount of these pre 64s for sale. By the way thanks for all the assistance and info.
And amazingly, some idiot took a 300H&H (among the most sought after pre64 calibers)and threaded the barrel for a suppressor.
 
Winchester offered more than 20 recoil pads ( special order) and the Pachmayr white line was available in either a 1 1/8" or 1 3/16" version for $2.50 extra :)

This is where the lineage and collection of pre 64's gets really muddy. With the amount of recoil pads offered, and all of them were also offered as aftermarket additions by say a gunsmith down the street. With the premium paid for " special order" pre 64's it is very easy to say it was a special order. Now having the proof ( original box, build sheet, letter from Winchester, original tags) is another story. Could this rifle in this thread be original??? Maybe... Maybe not. My opinion is it isn't without proof. I have been collecting pre 64's for almost 20 years now and have a couple rare ones. Every once in a while you hear the old story of " my brothers best friends uncle has a friend down the street with a rare special order pre 64.... but doesn't have any proof"... In my eyes than it doesn't have proof at all.

google box " selling dads old guns".. read the winchester collectors blurbs. That guy took a bunch of pre 64s and fabricated boxes, tags, Cody letters, etc... One guy even called him out because he recognized the serial number of a rifle that he had sold that was NOT new in box and used well and now this guy had it in pristine condition and new in box with tags and a Cody letter.
I should have qualified my statement on pads, yes you could order a pad from the custom shop, and sometimes a distributor would get a run made with pads, usually a standard featherweight came without pad. The number of model 70's that "fell off the truck" at the New Haven plant resulted in some variants that were never recorded. Living there for 25 years I got used to buying pre 64's for $300-400 and stripping them for actions to build custom rifles, the custom shop guys pointed out the new actions were made to closer CNC tolerances versus the variance in most pre 64 actions. I did not do that to a 7x57 and a super grade 257 Roberts that I came across and glad I kept them all original as the prices on these now is pretty high among collectors. I did shoot several whitetails with them though, just not in the rain!
 
I have never understood the idea that pre 64's are worth so much. To buy into that I'd think you also buy into the idea that todays rifles are not well made! I have a Mod 70 that was made about 2006 and I would not trade it for a Mod 70 from pre 64 that might have several thousand bullet's down the barrel. I have a couple Mossberg Patriots I also would not trade for any pre 64 Mod 70. If the Mod 70 was some rare caliber, might buy it but I really don't think any gun, pre 64 mod 70 included, is worth any more than you'd be willing to pay for it! So if you think your getting a good deal buying a pre 64 with maybe several thousand bullet's down the barrel rather than a new Savage in the same cartridge for $500 less, buy the pre 64. Otherwise get the new Savage with no bullet's down the barrel for $500 less!
I was spoiled living near Winchester for 25 years, bought 20 or so usually for well less than $500, stripped most of them for actions to build custom rifles, the only ones I paid up for were a standard grade 7 MM Mauser and a 257 Bob in super grade that I left alone and those two cost well below $1,000. Current prices seem to be a little high with very common calibers selling for $1,000 plus or minus based on condition.The new CNC machined ones are much better to work with as they are already about as close in tolerance as you can make them. I have several Dakota arms Model 76 (fancy Model 70 clones) from first year they were produced and while very nice, they were not really worth 2X a model pre 64 Model 70's i was buying at the same time, and at current prices ($5,000 up) I think they are way overpriced. Then again whatever floats your boat, my recent rifle purchase was a Bergara in 308 to shoot long range games with, shot 1/2 inch 5 shot groups out of the box with match ammo.
 

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