I just picked up a 1980 M70 Winchester in 30-06 and notice that the barrel is not freefloating, should it be floated?
Every factory M70 that I've ever had except one had a forend pad like
a typical Remington or Weatherby. The one that didn't had a BOSS.
A quote from the current Winchester Model 70 advertising:
"Free-floating a barrel in the stock means no part of the forearm area touches the barrel. The slightest pressure from the forearm as it cradles the barrel can adversely influence accuracy. Try pulling a dollar bill under your current rifle's barrel. Does it slip all the way to the receiver without hangup? If not, you're missing the kind of accuracy that produces results in the field."
I remember adverts in the gun magazines back in the 60's showing the dollar bill sliding under the barrel in a Model 70.
He knows that... a converse philosophy is that a reactionary pressure pad can dramatically improve accuracy.
Been there and done that with these vintage of M-70's. They were good solid accurate rifles.
Actually my recollection of that era was quite different. The Model 70's were the first to free float their barrels. The Model 70 was considered a cheaper lower quality rifle at that time compared to the Remington 700, and most believed Winchester did it to make up for their poor quality control. Free floating a barrel is much easier and cheaper to do than custom fitting each barrel. In the end, Winchester was right. A good action and good free floated barrel is now the accepted road to accuracy.
I'm guessing this is a used rifle. I would torque the action screws and give it a good cleaning with a copper cleaner then try it. You could also shim your front screw with a piece of credit card or similar to temporarily float it and try a group. I did this wth a rem 700 once and it tightened up so i floated it permanently.I have shot it, 3" is the best I can get out of it at 100yds, 4 different brands of ammo and 3 different weights
What you are describing applies to the post /64 Model 70s, but not the pre 64s.