Now that's something you don't hear about very often , a CRF owner who went the push feed route!

I couldn't imagine what swayed you.
Theories about shortcomings or what is or isn't mean little in real life about how things are designed to operate, If you take two properly functioning actions, one CRF and the other a push feed they do not operate the same way, there are mechanical advantages to the CRF action....the fact of the matter is you cannot make a CRF rifle do certain things in real life no matter how much you tried because the system is designed to avoid them, one is double feeding, this is not the case with push feeds, that is real world performance that is solely based on the basic operating principles of a CRF action, weather Mauser, Winchester, Ruger, Sako 85, etc. etc. It's funny how in the last few years more and more companies are switching to the CRF action for all types of rifles, eg. Winchester went from CRF to push feed and now back to CRF again, Ruger began life as a push feed and now after so many years has gone to a CRF with the MKII actions, Sako went to the 85 which is CRF, Savage is now dabbling with CRF,McMillan now has a CRF action that is also available on the Tactical rifles, these are all major players in the firearms bussiness, clearly the shift is the other way, the market is shifting away from push feeds, too bad Remington is stuck with their three rings of steel! Their thinking for a lower cost alternative was great at a time when Winchester was pricing themselves out of the market with the Pre64 but not today, the 700 BDL Remmies are popping out at $900 and the Win. M70 Classic FTW is going for $800, there is something wrong with that picture!
IMHO
bigbull