I've owned both types. The problem with the push-feed actions, as I see it, isn't with the action at all. It's just that when Winchester committed suicide in 1964 they did so by making their guns look as ugly as possible. Look at a M70 made around 1965 or so, and you'll see bad wood-to-metal fit, creepy-looking "impressed checkering", blonde-colored stocks, and a whole lot of other styling ugliness. The barrels were good, though. As was the trigger, safety, and nothing really wrong with the action itself, as others have stated before. The pushfeed M70 I used to own was a lightweight, made in the mid '80's, and is now owned by one of my brothers. This classic-stocked gun shoots as well as any, and Bob the Buzzard, as we like to call him, generally drops a deer with one shot every season with that rifle. He also has shot some sub-one inch groups at 100 yards from a rest with it. I sold him that gun because I'm a lefty, and wanted a new stainless M70 lefty version. That one has controlled feed, and is now owned by my niece's husband. Right to the end, Winchester employed dumbos in their marketing dept. Their lefty models were all the full-size classic versions, and not the featherweight. Ethan's a big young rugged farm boy who favors that 10 pound with scope lefty. As for me, I scarfed up a nice 7mm08 M70 compact for my bolt gun needs. Just before Winchester went out of business. It's a right hand version but I can live with that. The first shot's the most important one anyway.