I bought a 75th aniversary M-70 last spring and quite like. I was in Epps yesterday and took a look at the O'Connor 270. The cost of the O'Connor is the same as the 75th but it is not nearly as nicely finished. The blueing is standard grade that you will find on any featherweight, it is not high lustre. It has a bit of scroll work of a sheeps head etc. on the bottom floor plate, nothing remarkable about it. Jacks signature is on the bottom of the trigger guard in silver, it really does nothing for or against the gun.
The wood is above average, but probably no better grade a wood than on the average super grade. The finish they used is supposed to look like an hand rubbed oil finish, but it definitely is not. It is some sort of a factory sprayed on medium lustre finish which has dried on the woods surface but left the pores of the wood unfilled. Looks cheap and amateurish, not befitting of a gun of this cost. The stock has good lines and design with a shadow line cheek piece and black forend tip. The checkering is fine line of about 22 pts per inch and nicely executed.
The gun feels good in the hand and seems to balance well. The stock design is a little slimmer, and over all the gun seems a little lighter in weight than the super grade and 75th. It feels very much like my featherweight in hand, and the featherweight is $1000. bucks cheaper. My opinion is, it is a nice gun, but definitely not worth the money there wanting for it. I was giving serious thought to having one, but I refuse to pay that kind of money for "Jack O'Connor's" signature on a trigger guard and I stock I would have to strip and refinish before using it.