My Dad has an early post 64 Winchester Model 70 in .375 H&H and it's fun to shoot and doesn't beat you up at all. The stock isn't fancy, the grain is more along the lines of a 2x4, but boy does that shoot well. He has an old steel tube Weaver 4 power scope on it and it will give between 1/2 and 3/4 in groups. In the past he's used Winchester 270 grain Power Points and Remington 270 grain Cor-Lok bullets and the odd thing is they have the same point of impact as my hand loads I make for it now with Hornady's 270 grain Spire Points and 65.0 grains of IMR 3031 with a Winchester Large Rifle primer. That's an old load but it accurate and there's no issues with it in his rifle so I never had a reason to change it.Over the years I shot two doe and a spike buck which had one inch spikes (which is a legal doe) that I never saw on it. Shooting that spike was an eye opening experience in that I caught it standing and shot it in the white spot on the neck and it literally flipped the deer over onto it's back. I saved the spikes and a few years ago I made necklaces for my daughters with them and a buckskin boot lace. The only draw back to that rifle is it's not one you want to walk with all day long because at the end of the day your shoulders look like you were born on a side of a mountain because your one shoulder is hanging lower than the other.