That’s good info! I got this out of an estate.A very nice Model 70 Marksman. Not super rare, but rare to see a fifty-year-old rifle in such nice condition. With good ammunition, they can be quite accurate.
In the early '70's, they had an iron sight BR class in Alberta. My dad shot a five-shot group of around 1/2 moa as I recall. He fired a Model 70 Marksman in 308.
I worked in a shop with some serious high power shooters (one of them being George Farquharson, the father of "F" class) I worked on a lot of Model 70's like that one as a result. WH
In Your opinion is it Winchesters version of a 40x kinda/sorta?It is really difficult for me to give a value on any rifle. This is because I am a cheapskate, I have not purchased a rifle for at least 25 years, and I base values on what I see in my 1972 Gun Digest. I suppose, in today’s devalued pesos, about 1500 dollars. This may or may not reflect the real value since that is outside my area of expertise (if I even have one). WH
It is exactly that. In the same vein as the 40X rangemaster. Many fullbore shooters much preferred the Winchester over the Remington. The feeling was that the flat bottom provided a better bed, and the receiver was more rigid. The tubular Remington receiver was suspected of twisting in the stock when it was fired. due to torque reaction. This, it was claimed, was especially so when fired from a tight sling position. I can'y say that I totally bought into this, but I couldn't refute it either.I
In Your opinion is it Winchesters version of a 40x kinda/sorta?
Is the F in Farquharson where the term "F" class came from?A very nice Model 70 Marksman. Not super rare, but rare to see a fifty-year-old rifle in such nice condition. With good ammunition, they can be quite accurate.
In the early '70's, they had an iron sight BR class in Alberta. My dad shot a five-shot group of around 1/2 moa as I recall. He fired a Model 70 Marksman in 308.
I worked in a shop with some serious high power shooters (one of them being George Farquharson, the father of "F" class) I worked on a lot of Model 70's like that one as a result. WH
I would not alter the rifle as it represents a period in Winchesters production and a unique option for M70s. A Marksman model.Does anyone still shoot these in any organized competition? Is there a market, I don’t shoot it anymore, I don’t want to outfit it in a chassis and make a bunch of changes. Maybe I’ll base it around a 40x of the era on the classifieds.
I totally agree. Price is in the eyes of the beholder!I don’t think I’d sell it for $550, I guess it’s the age old question. What’s it worth? Whatever someone will pay. Thanks though, I’m learning more about what it is.
Maybe I’ll just put it in a chassis. That won’t permanently change anything.The advent of allowing optics on highpower match rifles made clipslotted repeaters obsolete for xtc rifles. If the stock works for you they can still be reasonable prone guns.
While I agree with Bob about not modifying it , you could buy ptg la aics dbm and some accurate mag .308 specific long action mags if you really wanted to campaign it again xtc but with optics...

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