Hey Guys,
Just wanted to pass this info along. I have never been very interested in the Scout concept, but I know that alot of folks are.
The predecessor to the Winchester Model 70 was the Winchester model 54. No they are not as perfect as the Model 70, but they are still very nice rifles. I think they were made from 1925 to 1935.
Anyway, they came in both sporter and carbine models, in .30-06, and both rifles have the built in "stripper clip" cut in the rear of the receiver. The metal is very rugged.
The carbine has a 20 inch barrel, and a military style stock. The original configuration has a steel buttplate. The actions are as smooth as glass.
These rifles have never achieved the collectible status of the pre-64 Model 70s, and are pretty easy to find on gun boards. The carbines in pristine condition, of course, bear a collector's premium, but the ones that have been altered in any manner (stock cut for pad, extra d/t holes in receiver, safety lever changed out to a buehler safety, etc.), are in the $400 to $600 area. The sporter versions came with a really great factory-installed Lyman receiver sight, but the carbines did not. (The carbines do have the two holes in the side to install a receiver site.)
Just thought I would pass this info along. Were I to build a scout, this is where I would start. You could leave it in .30-06, or convert it to .308.
Regards, Mannyrock