Winchester Model 70

The Winchester Model 70 is the most influential American bolt-action rifle ever made — the design that set the standard for controlled round feed, three-position safety, and pre-64 collector value. Produced continuously since 1936, the current Model 70 is manufactured by FN Herstal in Columbia, South Carolina and maintains the original action design that made it the "Rifleman's Rifle." Every current Model 70 includes a controlled round feed action, three-position safety, and MOA accuracy guarantee.

Read our full Winchester Model 70 Buying Guide ↓

Winchester Model 70 Buying Guide

Model 70 Lineup: Featherweight, Sporter, Extreme Weather & Super Grade

The Model 70 Featherweight is the classic hunting configuration — a trim, traditional profile with Grade I walnut stock, checkering, and the controlled round feed action in a weight-forward balance well-suited to carry hunting. Available in calibers from .22-250 to .375 H&H, it is the Model 70 for hunters who value traditional aesthetics and proven performance. The Extreme Weather SS uses a Bell & Carlson composite stock and stainless steel barreled action for maximum weather resistance in harsh field conditions. The Super Grade is the premium showpiece — Grade IV/V walnut, Pachmayr Decelerator pad, and jeweled bolt for shooters who want the finest production Model 70 available. The Sporter provides a middle ground between the Featherweight and Super Grade — a practical hunting rifle with slightly more wood and finish refinement than the Featherweight entry.

Controlled Round Feed: Why It Matters

Controlled round feed (CRF) is the defining mechanical feature of the Model 70. In a CRF action, the extractor grabs the cartridge rim immediately as it begins to strip from the magazine — the round is controlled from the moment it leaves the magazine until it's extracted from the chamber. This prevents double-feeds and provides more positive extraction of stuck cases. In a push-feed action (most modern bolt-actions), the round is pushed into the chamber and the extractor snaps over the rim afterward. CRF provides more reliable function in awkward shooting positions and is the preferred design for dangerous game hunting where a malfunction can be fatal. For most American hunters, both systems are equally reliable in practice — the CRF advantage is most meaningful in extreme conditions.

Winchester Model 70 vs. Remington 700: The Classic Debate

The Model 70 and Remington 700 are the two most compared American bolt-action rifles of the 20th century. The Remington 700 uses a push-feed action with a round receiver that provides better bedding consistency — it became the platform of choice for custom rifle builders and military snipers due to the aftermarket support. The Model 70 CRF action is considered more reliable in adverse conditions and has a stronger following among hunters who pursue dangerous game. In practice, both are excellent hunting rifles. The 700's enormous aftermarket (stocks, triggers, custom barrels) gives it an edge for precision rifle building. The Model 70's CRF action and traditional aesthetics give it an edge for hunters who want a proven, conventional bolt rifle. Current Model 70 production quality is excellent; late-era Remington 700s (Remington's bankruptcy period) had quality control issues that have since been addressed under RemArms production.

The Three-Position Safety

The Model 70's three-position safety is one of its most practical features. Position 1 (rear): bolt locked, trigger blocked — safe for carrying a loaded rifle in the field. Position 2 (middle): bolt unlocked, trigger blocked — allows unloading the chamber without firing. Position 3 (forward): bolt unlocked, trigger live — ready to fire. This three-position system is more useful in the field than a simple two-position safety, allowing a hunter to safely work the bolt to unload the chamber without disengaging the trigger block. Many hunters who have used the Model 70 for years consider the three-position safety a meaningful practical advantage over two-position designs.

Model 70 Caliber Selection

The Model 70 covers the full spectrum of American hunting calibers. The classics — .30-06 Springfield, .270 Winchester, .308 Win — cover North American deer and elk hunting comprehensively. .243 Win and .22-250 cover varmints and light deer. .300 Win Mag steps up for larger elk and bear at distance. .375 H&H and .416 Rem Mag handle the largest dangerous game. For most American hunters, the .30-06 or .308 Win Model 70 Featherweight is the natural choice — proven, affordable to shoot, with the widest selection of factory loads. For western hunters who want a flatter trajectory, .270 Win or 6.5 Creedmoor (available in current production) are excellent options.

Trigger: Model 70 MOA Trigger System

Current production Model 70s use Winchester's MOA Trigger System — a user-adjustable trigger that can be set between 3 and 5 lbs pull weight without gunsmithing tools. The adjustment screw is accessible through the trigger guard. This is a meaningful practical feature for hunters who want a lighter trigger for precision work without sending the rifle to a gunsmith. The MOA Trigger System replaced the earlier M.O.A. trigger with improved pull quality and a crisper break — current production triggers are one of the better factory rifle triggers available at the price point.

Pre-64 vs. Post-64 vs. Current Production

The original Model 70 (1936–1963) used a Mauser-style CRF action and is considered the finest production bolt-action of its era — pre-64 examples are genuine collector items. In 1964, Winchester cut costs by switching to a push-feed action, which was widely criticized. In 1992, Winchester returned to CRF with an improved design. Current Model 70s (produced by FN Herstal since 2007) use the 1992 CRF action with modern refinements — quality is excellent and current rifles compare favorably to any production bolt-action at their price point. For collectors, pre-64 rifles in original condition command significant premiums; for hunters, current production offers the same action principles with modern materials and manufacturing consistency.

Shop Winchester Model 70 at Impact Guns

Browse the full Winchester Model 70 lineup at Impact Guns. For Winchester lever-action rifles, see our Winchester brand page. For comparable bolt-action hunting rifles, see the Tikka T3x and Remington 700. For ammunition, see our .308 Win and .30-06 ammo pages. For hunting rifles broadly, see our hunting rifles page.