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Sturm Ruger Firearms - General Info and History of Company

Sturm Ruger Firearms - General Info and History of Company

Sturm, Ruger and Company started out on the American East Coast, in Southport, Connecticut in1949, in the rented garage machine shop of Bill Ruger. At the time, Ruger was a firearms enthusiast, and had already taken an interest in inventing and tinkering. It was in that very garage where Ruger successfully duplicated two "Baby Nambu" pistols, after he had previously acquired a captured Japanese Nambu from a friend who was a U.S. Marine returning from the Pacific Theater after WWII ended in 1945. General Kijiro Nambu was a prolific arms designer, who was sometimes called, "the John Browning of Japan". Ruger successfully copied, and slightly varied, Nambu's design for the rear cocking device, as well as somewhat of the overall look and feel of the Nambu pistol. The result was one of the most popular .22 semi-automatic pistols ever to enter the US firearms market in 1949; the Ruger Standard Mark I. Later iterations included the Mark II and the Mark III. To this day, the Ruger Mark III is in the holsters and gun safes of more firearms enthusiasts and gun collectors than any other .22 pistol in existence.

Ruger is also a huge player in the .22 rimfire rifle market, with their enormously popular Ruger 10/22 carbine and 10/22 rifle. This gun is owned by the vast majority of hunters and outdoorsmen, as well as gun enthusiasts. It is on more gun racks, and in more gun safes that any other .22 rifle. Its wide appeal is because it is relatively inexpensive, well made, accurate, and it has an incredibly wide range of aftermarket accessories available for it.

Ruger is the country's fourth largest firearms producer, and the only one to make all types of firearms: rifles, pistols, shotguns and revolvers. Ruger produces bolt-action, semi-automatic, full-automatic, and single shot rifles, shotguns, semi-automatic pistols, and single-action and double-action revolvers of all sizes. It is safe to say that Ruger has all types of firearms covered. The company even makes a submachine gun, the little known 9mm Ruger MP9, which has sometimes been called an "improved Uzi".

Bill Ruger became embroiled in controversy when he publicly advocated the banning of magazines that can accommodate more than ten rounds. In what became known in gun circles as the infamous "Ruger letter" to the House and Senate on March 30, 1989, Bill Ruger supported "a simple, complete, and unequivocal ban on large capacity magazines", which caused an understandable uproar among outdoorsmen and gun enthusiasts. Ruger made additional comments in an interview with NBC's Tom Brokaw, saying, "no honest man needs more than 10 rounds in any gun", and "I never meant for simple civilians to have my 20 and 30 round magazines…". It has long been Ruger's policy to limit the sale of those types of magazines to military and law enforcement, although aftermarket equivalents freely abound. For instance, one cannot go to a gun show without seeing hundreds of high-capacity, aftermarket Ruger 10/22 magazines for sale.

Regardless of the controversy caused by the "Ruger letter", the firearms that the Ruger company produces are accurate, dependable, and 100% American made. They are carried and used by hunters, competitive shooters, plinkers, and law enforcement alike. They are known as guns that can be depended on to work reliably, shot after shot.

Ruger is also a huge player in the .22 rimfire rifle market, with their enormously popular Ruger 10/22 carbine and 10/22 rifle. This gun is owned by the vast majority of hunters and outdoorsmen, as well as gun enthusiasts. It is on more gun racks, and in more gun safes that any other .22 rifle.


This article has been written by an expert at Gun Source. Find more information about Ruger here.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


whats the value of a ruger p94?
a buddy of mine has a ruger p94 in .40 cal and im wanting to know whats a good buy/sell price for it? its the black/blued version. apparently when the gun was new it came with the hogue grip already on it and a diff rear sight that is a little bigger and resembles the glock rear sights with the white outlined square. as well already on it. it comes with original case, 2 factory 10 round mags, and speed loader, along with a 20 round promag mag and a nylon belt holster. the gun has very little wear near where you insert the mag and has about 500 rounds through it... so again my question is whats a good price for it? thanks for your help

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inexpensive .22 bolt action rifle? / bolt vs semi auto?
i have finally decided on a caliber rifle to get, a .22lr since in california i can hunt coyotes and down with a .22 and for now thats all im willing and able to handle in terms of butchering and what not.. anyways... im stuck between semi-auto and bolt action. for semi auto i would go with a ruger 10/22 do you guys have any suggestions for a inexpensive bolt .22? i would imagine a bolt action would be cheaper too? also.. any opinions on bolt vs semi auto? For me i like semi auto because -faster follow up shot in case .22 is cheap, if the range allows i can burst fire mag tends to be bigger? (im sure i can get extended mags for a bolt too though) likes about bolt action -forces me to be aware of my shot placement - i like working the action :) -i can load ammo right into the breach of a bolt action when i run out in the mag <--which i dont think matters, but its like working the action, i just like it. anyways, good bolt gun for cheap? and bolt vs semi auto? im on a tight budget, thats why im going with a .22 lr if i cannot humanely take an coyote, i'd rather keep the .22 and not take them, rather than upping the caliber (moe money).

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Should I trade my Ruger M77 .308 for a Ruger M77 .338?
Also, What out of pocket cost am I looking at going from a 2year old Ruger M77 into a new Ruger M77?

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