[ EPU Foyer ] [ Lab and Grill ] [ Bonus Theater!! ] [ Rhetorical Questions ] [ CSRANTronix ] [ GNDN ] [ Subterranean Vault ] [ Discussion Forum ] [ Gun of the Week ]

Eyrie Productions, Unlimited

Subject: "Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics"     Previous Topic | Next Topic
Printer-friendly copy    
Conferences Gun of the Week Topic #26
Reading Topic #26, reply 0
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
22375 posts
Feb-21-16, 08:03 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
"Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics"
 
   This week's Gun of the Week is not one gun but rather a family of them, about which we have heard before: the long-running line of .22 rimfire semiautomatic pistols from Sturm, Ruger & Company.

Pictured above is a Ruger Standard pistol, retroactively redubbed the Mark I after the company launched the improved Mark II version in 1982. The Standard was available in several configurations, of which the one shown above was the original flavor, in blued steel with a 4-inch barrel. When I was taught to shoot by my grandfather in the early '80s, round about the same time the Mk II was coming onto the market, a Ruger Standard very like the one shown above was one of the three handguns he owned, and so was my first introduction to semiautomatic handgun shooting.

One thing I should note right off the bat is that, despite the mostly coincidental resemblance of both the gun and the name, this firearm has nothing to do with the famous Luger pistol of Germany.

Let's start with the name, which is entirely coincidental. A Luger is called a Luger because it was designed and patented by a man named Georg von Luger (1849-1923), an Austrian-born firearms designer who spent most of his career in Germany. He developed what was officially known as the Parabellum pistol out of the earlier Borchardt pistol, developed by Hugo Borchardt. (This is probably information best elaborated on in another post.) The Ruger, on the other hand, is the work of American inventor William B. "Bill" Ruger (1916-2002).

Mechanically, the Luger and Ruger are very different, despite their similar silhouettes. For comparison, here is a 1990s reproduction of a 1908 Luger:

Again, this gun and its history deserve to be their own Gun of the Week entry sometime, for for our purposes, what's most important is that the Luger is a toggle-action pistol; that is, the action functions not with a slide or linear bolt like most conventional semiautomatics, but rather by a mechanical linkage with a joint in the middle of it, which pulls the bolt back in the process of folding upward.

The Ruger family of semiautomatics functions in a more conventional way, with a bolt enclosed in the cylindrical rear part of the receiver. Because it fires the low-pressure .22 LR rimfire cartridge, it can operate in a simple straight-blowback manner; it doesn't need anything as elaborate as a Luger's toggle lock. Apart from the grip angle and general shape, they're not very similar at all.

However, sharp-eyed Gun of the Week habitués may already have noticed that there is also a distinct similarity to another notable pre-1940s firearm, one which we have seen before.

I mentioned in a previous post that the Browning Hi-Power was kind of a signpost marking the transition between the age of the Lone Gunsmith and the more collaborative modern "company research" style of firearms development. The Ruger Standard is an exception. As far as is known—and I admit, the Ruger company kind of has a vested interest in promoting this as part of its corporate folklore, but it seems to be the consensus across all accounts I've seen—Bill Ruger developed the Standard on his own, in the old-fashioned "man in his garage" style that used to be the way all firearms design got done.

What that man was doing in his garage brings us back to the other marked similarity in the Ruger Standard, which, unlike its resemblance to the Luger, is not coincidental. When he started on the path that would eventually lead him to what became the Ruger Standard, what Bill Ruger was actually trying to do in his garage workshop...

... was copy a Nambu.

Well, sort of. He actually had copied a Nambu by that point, albeit not the Type 14 shown; what he was working with was actually a pair of Baby Nambus (the smaller 7.65mm version sold to Japanese officers) brought back by someone from the Pacific Theater after World War II. In the process of developing that copy, with an eye toward marketing it in the US (since the original patents had expired, and postwar Japan was not exactly in a position to be enforcing its patent laws on American inventors anyway), he kept fiddling with the design and tweaking things about it, and before he was finished he had developed an almost entirely new firearm, one based on a smaller, less demanding cartridge and mechanically simpler overall.

By 1949, so the story goes, he had a completed prototype for what we now know as the Standard, and he showed it to his friend Alex Sturm, who was not an inventor but did know a thing or two about money. Sturm was impressed, and the two formed a partnership to manufacture and market Ruger's .22 pistol, which is why the company is called Sturm, Ruger and Company. Sturm was also apparently a keen student of heraldry: he designed the company logo, a crest featuring a stylized red eagle that looks, to the modern eye, rather eerily like the symbol of the Rebel Alliance.

Sturm unexpectedly died in 1951 at the age of 28, before things really took off for Sturm, Ruger and Company; but evidently his financial policies were sound, because in his absence the company and its reasonably priced, well-made product rapidly became and remained successful. Contrary to the usual stereotype of relations between the second-billed engineer and his company's top-billed money man, Ruger seems to have been fond of Sturm and upset by his loss, because he immediately changed the logo, as it appeared on the medallions affixed to the product, from red to mourning black, and it stayed that way for decades.

Over the three decades it was in production, the Mk I became available in a wide range of configurations: it could be had with a number of different-length barrels, with fixed or adjustable sights, with special adjustable target triggers, and just before production ended, a short run were made in stanless steel.

The Standard/Mk I is a simple and reliable piece of equipment with few bad habits. All Ruger semiautos are a huge pain in the ass to disassemble—you have to manipulate a lever built into the backstrap of the grip, which really cannot be done without tools. Despite not being part of a recoil-operated action, the barrel and bolt housing are removable, though they too are a huge hassle to get apart, since they fit so tightly and do not move during operation. In a shooting context, though, the only really annoying things about the Mk I are the lack of a bolt stop (which means it doesn't stay open after the last round is fired, so one tends to discover it's empty by dry firing it) and the fact that the button used to compress the magazine follower spring during loading will really chew up your thumb. (This is not a problem unique to the Ruger; Lugers and Nambus, among others, also have this "feature".)

(As an aside, you can choose to hold the bolt open on the Mk I, by pulling it open and then setting the safety; but it doesn't stay open automatically. Also, I should note that the safety only works if the action is cocked, and it can't be cocked without cycling the action, so no re-striking dud cartridges. Not that that ever works with rimfire anyway.)

In 1982, Ruger replaced the Standard with the Mk II, which was externally identical and available in the same range of configurations, plus the addition of stainless steel as a regular finish choice (where only a few stainless Mk Is were made as a limited edition). Magazine capacity increased from 9 rounds to 10 (although thanks to an engineering change made when the dies were replaced in 1971, Mk II magazines work fine in Mk I pistols made after that change), and they added an automatic bolt stop so it would stay open after the last round. Unlike the Nambu, it doesn't slam shut again as soon as you pull the empty magazine, so you can load a fresh one and then drop the bolt to charge the chamber, as in most modern semiautos.

The one I've got is a target model, which features a heavy 5.5-inch "bull barrel" and the more elaborate adjustable sights.

With the bolt open you can clearly see the influence the Nambu had on this pistol's design:

As compared with:

The Ruger has a side ejection port as opposed to ejecting out of the top like its Japanese "uncle", but you will not find many other pistols with that cylindrical bolt thing going on.

Another difference is that the Baby Nambu has a side-mounted magazine release button, whereas in his final design, Ruger went with an older-fashioned heel release.

Heel-release magazines can be a hassle, but the catch on Rugers is nice and big, and has operated without a problem on all the various ones I've used over the years.

Comparing the Mk I Standard and Mk II Targets, we can see that their frames are visually identical (in fact, this particular Mk I was made after 1971, so they're mechanically pretty much identical too).

From above, the difference in the sights becomes obvious. The Target model's are larger and fancier. In my experience, though, there's nothing wrong with the accuracy of the non-target versions; they're just less adaptable to changing conditions on the range (which is not an issue if you're, say, indoors).

Unsurprisingly, the markings on the side of the Mk I say nothing about "Mk I", since it was only dubbed that retroactive to the introduction of the Mk II.

The Mk II, on the other hand, proudly states its iterated status.

Unlike single-shot .22s like the Hawes Favorite mentioned in a previous article, Ruger automatics only work with .22 Long Rifle cartridges. This is an artifact of their semiauto operating systems; the earlier, shorter .22 cartridges don't generate enough pressure to operate the action, and they're the wrong length to fit in the magazine. You could probably load a .22 Long or .22 Short cartridge manually, fire it, and then extract it manually, but why would you want to?

Ruger have long made a point of touting the safety of their products, and of promoting a safety culture in the shooters of those products—since long before it was "cool" to do so, as it happens. The barrel inscription on my Mk II is typical of the breed.

They mean it, too. I could write to them tomorrow asking for a manual for my grandfather's 1960s-vintage Mark I and they would send me one. It would have a big disclaimer on the front cover that it does not describe a current product, but they would still send me one.

This is actually my second Mk II; I bought the first when I lived in California, but then sold it again when I moved back East, because I wasn't specifically attached to that one, and I figured buying another after the move would be easier and probably cheaper than bothering with the paperwork and shipping that were required to move the rest of my collection back with me. And then I didn't get around to that buying-another part until a few weeks ago. But I digress. :)

The Mark II was in production from 1982 until 2005, three years after William Ruger's death. When the company replaced it with the Mark III, it became fairly obvious that what they had done in Ruger's absence was sit down with some lawyers and workshop ways of making the flagship product cost more to no useful purpose, and that's what they went with. Basically, they added two features that play well with people who don't know how guns work, one of which is unuseful and makes the gun slightly worse, the other of which is actively counterproductive.

The first of the two is a magazine safety, which is a feature that had a brief vogue with military sidearms in the 1930s (you may recall that the Browning Hi-Power has one because the French Army demanded it, and then the French Army, uh, didn't buy Browning Hi-Powers, so thanks, guys), but which is really not practically useful in any measurable way. Basically, what a magazine safety does is prevent the pistol from being fired if it doesn't have a fully seated magazine in it. Which, well... why? Is it a safety feature? Not really, unless you're taking the view that your shooters are likely to be in less than full control of their weapons while loading and unloading, which is a pretty sketchy thing to assume. All it really does is make the trigger a bit worse, because now it has to do two things (actuate the mechanism that checks to see if there's a magazine, then fire the gun if there is one) instead of just one (fire the dang gun).

The other really kind of gets my goat with an intensity out of all proportion to how consequential it is. They added a Loaded Chamber Indicator, which is to say, a little flag that pokes out if there's a round in the chamber to tell you there's a round in the chamber. Which seems reasonable enough on its face, except that anyone with even rudimentary firearms training shouldn't need it. If you have an LCI and pay any attention to it at all, that means you're relying on a mechanical gadget to tell you whether there's a round chambered instead of opening the damn action and looking, which is what you should always do if in doubt. So adding a widget to keep track of that for you, in my opinion, actually encourages neglect of safe practice. Nice work, guys!

They also switched from a heel magazine release to a thumb button on the side, which seems frankly unnecessary and accomplishes little other than to make Mk III magazines incompatible with previous models and vice versa. Were people really clamoring for the ability to do hot tactical magazine swaps on their .22 rimfire target pistols? I'm skeptical.

So anyway, that's why when I decided I needed one of these in my life again, I hunted around until I found a good used Mark II. :)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top

  Subject     Author     Message Date     ID  
Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics [View All] Gryphonadmin Feb-21-16 TOP
   I Know Engineers, They Love to Change Things Gryphonadmin Mar-17-17 1
      RE: I Know Engineers, They Love to Change Things MoonEyes Mar-19-17 5
          RE: I Know Engineers, They Love to Change Things Gryphonadmin Mar-19-17 6
              RE: I Know Engineers, They Love to Change Things MoonEyes Mar-20-17 7
   RE: Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics JFerio Mar-18-17 2
      RE: Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics Gryphonadmin Mar-18-17 3
          RE: Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics JFerio Mar-18-17 4
          RE: Gun of the Week: Ruger .22 automatics Gryphonadmin Mar-22-17 8


Conferences | Topics | Previous Topic | Next Topic

[ YUM ] [ BIG ] [ ??!? ] [ RANT ] [ GNDN ] [ STORE ] [ FORUM ] GOTW ] [ VAULT ]

version 3.3 © 2001
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited
Benjamin D. Hutchins
E P U (Colour)