I picked up a CZ 527 Carbine in 7.62 x 39 and a CZ 550 FS (full Mannilicher stock, iron sights) in .308.
The 527 is exceptionally accurate, and the 5 round steel magazines are reasonably inexpensive, at around $40 a pop. The current magazine followers are engraved stipulating that the same magazine works for both 7.62 x 39 and 6.5 Grendel. I've used Wolf poly coated steel and Tula steel ammunition so far; the Wolf is better in my opinion, and I plan on using Hornady's Black SST cartridges for hunting.
I'm keeping the 527 with iron sights, with the thought it'll be a brush gun (i.e., used for targets closer than 100 yards), while the 550 I scoped with a Leupold 3 x 9 Variable, using Warne Quick Detachable medium height rings; I've had it professionally boresighted, but haven't had a chance to fire and zero it yet-I'll probably zero at 200 yards. It can also be a "get out of Dodge" TEOWAWKI rifle for my wife.
My 527 is a 2015 production gun; the current ones (I believe since 2017) come with a fiber-optic front sight.
Both rifles come not only with a very nice out of the box triggerpull of around 5-6 lbs, but with a set trigger option; when the rifle is cocked, you push forward on the trigger, and it'll go off with a 1-2 lb pull. Seriously.
The CZ's offer old-world quality steel and components. To me, they are the contemporary rifles to what William Ruger had in mind with his original 77 series of bolt action rifles; accurate, reliable, durable and an incredible value. I had one of the older Ruger M77s (a .308 RSI, with the full Mannilicher stock) back in the 1990s; I think the CZ's are better rifles.
Best, Jon