Of course there is some benefit to age and use but the rifles of longer ago WERE built better, at least as far as fit and finish went. They actually proof fired rifles before they left the factory(still do in Europe). Today there is no proof firing of rifles. Ruger tests a few from each 'batch' but Remington doesn't. Part of the reason they did what more hand fitting was the tolerances they worked with were enough that they had to be fitted buy hand. Some models have been dropped because they were too difficult to manufacture even with our CNC machines and not be hand fitted, which is of course, cost prohibitive.. They M12 Winchester comes to mind. How else would you find a weapons maker polishing and bluing battle rifles such as the '03 Springfields? Were they truly better, not really. Metallurgy has come a long way as has technology but they weapons produced currently are better in all ways. They aren't as highly fitted and finished. You can visit a local used gun rack as see for yourself. Some of the legend is just that legend.. The pre-64 M70 for example.. Ever really looked at the checkering on one made after the war? If it's too well done its likely been 'restored'.. Most have many lines that converge?? Still it was a beautiful rifle and will not be recreated..just too costly.. Craftsmanship such as this is still around but most won't pay they tariff on such time invested.. The Dakota rifle springs to mind. They are even checkered correctly. Rifles such as this are really good investments.. They're value is not likely to go down and as our society changes is likely to rise, as craftsmanship becomes harder and harder to find. If you don't believe I have an example. The Remington Custom shop used to build a 22 long rifle on the 40X action. It had a target grade barrel in a lighter configuration, an adjustable match grade trigger and pretty wood, hand checkered. The were in the $1200 range and I 'couldn't afford that'. Of course they're not available today and the last one I saw for sale was in the $4,000-$5,000 range. Not a bad investment.. As for mausers I have seen Swedish M96's, made before the WW I that would shoot 3 shot groups under 1/2 inch. A friend boght one and couldn't believe it was worth the expense of sporteriznig. We added a scope and that's about all. At hunting camp they were shooting crows off a gut pile 300+ yards out.. It got boring! We completely re-worked that little rifle and it's still amazes the uneducated. Sorry for the rant, guess you touched a nerve.