I am still stuck in the reality of a rifle as a tool primarily and an art form secondarily. You can throw a lot of money at something and end up with a very pretty claw hammer.
After looking at lots and lots, and owning a few, of custom and factory and semi-custom guns, I've come to the conclusion that no matter how attractive a tool is it
must function properly. I'm also a big fan of a particular era of Win Model 70 rifles. Save for the pillar bedding or basic bedding that may be done after the fact, a factory rifle should be correctly designed and fully functional from the get go. It seems, IMO, that the Win 70, from the '92 rebirth of the CRF until the 2006 closure of the New Haven plant, has all the right stuff. It has the excellent improvement of the anti-bind bolt design. That change had already been done during the post 64, push feed era. It also has the best hunting rifle trigger ever designed, IMO. That trigger was retained in all Model 70s, from the original Model 70 right through all the New Haven rifles until the closing in 2006.
I have had three 375s in the past but haven't had one for a few years and started suffering withdrawal. So I began perusing the better LGSs and Gunbroker. About 2 weeks ago found a candidate on GB. It was a Win 70, Super Express model in 375 HH. Pics seemed to show it was either never fired or for certain handled very little. Hmmm? Unusual for a rifle made between 1994 and 1998. I could see no issues and it was under 1000.00. I also picked up a candidate scope from evlbay, a Leupold M8 4x28 for under 200. Add dual dovetail mounts for under 50 and done.
The rifle arrived in good shape and actually looked better than the pics. Check for function and- What!? Won't eject. Looked at the standing ejector and it is flush with the bolt face at full rear bolt travel. Yikes. Take it apart and the ejector looks fine, hasn't been trimmed or modified and is even coded correctly but it is about 1/4" too short. What!? Poke around my junk box and find one of correct length, install it and plink, plink, plink! Perfect ejection. Some possibility that the incorrect ejector as installed at the factory, an $8 piece on evlbay, was the reason the gun had been sitting, possibly un-shot since 1998 or earlier. And may have accounted for the nice price tag. For simple repairs like that, I'll take the discount every time. That's an hour to change the ejector and an hour to mount the scope. An hour at the range. I would not hesitate to take this rifle DG hunting tomorrow.
Mounted the scope, loaded some 270 and 300 gr loads and headed to the range. Bore sighted by adjusting the X hairs to center of bull with the bull viewed in bore center at 50 yards. Put the 1st shot about 3 inches left of bull. Adjusted scope and next shot within 1/2" of center of bull. Shot 6 more rounds watching for function, accuracy potential, potential scope problems, pin strike, head spacing issues, feeding issues or other oddities.
None. I measured the trigger pull- crisp, right a 3 1/2 lbs. The cycling and feed were flawless and super smooth as was expected for this model and era. Also interesting, with the same medium load of 4895 bulk pull down, the 300 gr Hornady RN whatevers and the Barnes 270 TSXs shot to exactly the same POI.
Here's the culprit ejector and rifle ready to go