I've been shooting a Howa in .308 in highpower silhouette this year. I'm going to rebarrel it to .260 for next season to reduce recoil and wind drift, but so far it's been great. It came with a walnut Boyd's stock which I pillar bedded. For sights it wears Leupold dual dovetail rings and bases that I machined a 25 minute taper into and line bored, and a old Leupold 20X scope. With Black Hills 175 grain match it would group in the .2's at 100 yards and .3's at 200 on a calm day. After at least 3000 rounds, it will still keep Sierra 175 Matchkings in a coffee cup size group at 500M if I do my part off the bench. The stock has been replaced with a Bell and Carlson Medalist Weatherby style one which is better suited to offhand shooting. I milled .030" off the front of the trigger, drilled it 1/16", and fitted a dowel pin into the face. This allowed me to surface grind the pin to exactly the point where I have imperceptable creep on the trigger but the safety still works. I am required to run the trigger at 2 lbs during registered matches, but it can easily go to 8 oz. and still not slam fire. The trigger with its blocking safety is definately a drawback compared to a Remington, but can be worked around. So far I haven't found any other drawbacks except maybe that you have to make a smaller bore guide, since the bolt's smaller than a Remington and a normal guide won't fit.