I hesitated to answer your question, at first, because it took a while to think of something positive to say. This is my impression of the
Browning rifle, for what it is worth.
It is a production rifle, and as such is worth every penny they cost. The rifle has better heft than any of the usual production rifles, they work fairly well, and are usually as accurate as the shooter can hold it.
But they are a production rifle, and so have little in the way of the finesse that a hand made product might have. To keep the cost at a level that is affordable to those who would purchase a production rifle, they use slack sanders in the stock finishing department, evidenced by the lack of sculptured cheek piece, and lock panels. In a similar fashion, the inletting is 'drop-in' again needing no hands-on workers to do precise inletting. The lock is a modern innovation, and not an improvement over the historic double leaf spring. It works, after a fashion, but doesn't have the same feel. Of all of the Browning's weaknesses, the lock is my pet peeve.
I'm going to quit while I'm behind.