- Messages
- 37
- Reactions
- 85
Ruger P-Series and old Smith autos ie. 59, 39, 69 etc
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The Ruger Security Six.
When they were worn out in the USA, our police in Northern Ireland - the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC)* - got them as issue carry and home security firearms. They NEVER let anyone down who needed to use them over the 20+ years they were in service. A late acquaintance of mine used his one morning at around 1am when a head he didn't know came through the kitchen window while he was there making a brew of tea. The head had followed and arm and hand, and the hand had a Browning pistol in it - the P35.
He leaned over, very quietly, stuck the barrel of his nice shiny Ruger Security Six in the nearest ear, and let loose a 158gr JSP from a distance of minus one inch - it was already inside the BG's ear.
Unsurprisingly, it worked as advertised, and the BG sagged where he was.
No second shot was necessary.
The pistol, still in his hand, had been stolen a couple of years previously from one of two off-duty police officers, murdered while they were fishing. It had also been used at least four times since in ditch executions, where the person accused of upsetting the IRA in some way had been abducted, tortured with drills and hole-saws, soldering irons - the usual thing - and then stripped to his underwear, forced to his or her knees and shot in a ditch for the SF to find. The BG might have been the trigger-puller - who knows? But he never did anything like it again.
You'll be pleased to hear that the RUC 'home and leisure fund' paid for the refurbishment of the kitchen, which was pretty much trashed by the flying brains and bones, let alone the bullet.
* Renamed Police Service Northern Ireland in 1999 - PSNI.
I have a gp100 and I would state it is the best revolver I ever laid hands on. I have gotten to play with dozens of different revolvers including the infamous python. I'd take my ruger.The Ruger Security Six.
When they were worn out in the USA, our police in Northern Ireland - the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC)* - got them as issue carry and home security firearms. They NEVER let anyone down who needed to use them over the 20+ years they were in service. A late acquaintance of mine used his one morning at around 1am when a head he didn't know came through the kitchen window while he was there making a brew of tea. The head had followed and arm and hand, and the hand had a Browning pistol in it - the P35.
He leaned over, very quietly, stuck the barrel of his nice shiny Ruger Security Six in the nearest ear, and let loose a 158gr JSP from a distance of minus one inch - it was already inside the BG's ear.
Unsurprisingly, it worked as advertised, and the BG sagged where he was.
No second shot was necessary.
The pistol, still in his hand, had been stolen a couple of years previously from one of two off-duty police officers, murdered while they were fishing. It had also been used at least four times since in ditch executions, where the person accused of upsetting the IRA in some way had been abducted, tortured with drills and hole-saws, soldering irons - the usual thing - and then stripped to his underwear, forced to his or her knees and shot in a ditch for the SF to find. The BG might have been the trigger-puller - who knows? But he never did anything like it again.
You'll be pleased to hear that the RUC 'home and leisure fund' paid for the refurbishment of the kitchen, which was pretty much trashed by the flying brains and bones, let alone the bullet.
* Renamed Police Service Northern Ireland in 1999 - PSNI.
I love my Stevens in .38 specialSingle shot .22 Rifles...
Here I am talking of the Stevens Favorites and Model 15 series , the Winchester 67 and 68 , Remington's 510 , Mossberg 25 and others of that ilk....
They can be the most humble of rifle....but a lot of fun to shoot.
I have owned many , taught folks how to shoot with one...won many a : "Betcha can't hit that" kinda shot , got some meat for the camp....
I still own a few.
Simple to use as well as easy and safe for new and old shooters alike.
Many hours can swiftly pass , while shooting at discarded shot shells , stray bits of clay birds and the like...
I understand that their popularity has waned over the years...and most folks just yawn at them.
Dismissing them as next to useless and not a "serious" rifle for any purpose.
One of the many reasons why I like them , is that they are a "fun" rifle to shoot...
Back when I was introduced to firearms...many folks had a firearms , just because they were fun to own and shoot...I like that notion... a lot.
The "Ain't much to 'em" attitude ...can also mean that ain't much to break or go wrong with them....
Plus they are easy to clean and maintain.
Many are also surprising accurate.
With most of them....you can shoot .22 Short , Long or LR which is handy when ammo comes up wanting on the shelves.
I understand that these rifles , like my muzzle loaders are often over looked or underrated...
But if the rifle hits the target where you want it to....it may not matter if that hit came from a rifle that holds one shot or many....
Andy
I have a 357 Redhawk 8 shot and it is nice, but not as nice as my gp100.Re: Ruger Security / Speed Six's.
Every time I see a thread dealing with double action .357's there's at least 10 guys who have spin a yarn of one type or another about the long lamented Ruger double actions.
"Underrated"? Not to them. Still seems like a popular sidearm.
I understand the Redhawk is the direct descendant and the GP100 is the "modern" version.
-----------------
Re: Single Shot .22 rifles.
Seems there's been quite the uptick in their popularity in recent years.
I blame the "survivalist" crowd for this.
Same guys who put the Break action single shot shotgun back on the map and heralded the Armscor M200 as the greatest handgun in the history of mankind.
You make a great point about simple, "fun-to-shoot" guns. I think as we get older, we seem appreciate that fact more and more.
I've been thinking about a Keystone Crickett with the "Adult" stock (see? Keystone's found there's enough interest to add an adult sized stock to their tiny little bolt action), or maybe an old Stevens 125.
...and I just found an unopened 100 pack of CCI shorts in the gun case......still not sure where that came from...
Single shot .22 Rifles...
Here I am talking of the Stevens Favorites and Model 15 series , the Winchester 67 and 68 , Remington's 510 , Mossberg 25 and others of that ilk....
They can be the most humble of rifle....but a lot of fun to shoot.
I have owned many , taught folks how to shoot with one...won many a : "Betcha can't hit that" kinda shot , got some meat for the camp....
I still own a few.
Simple to use as well as easy and safe for new and old shooters alike.
Many hours can swiftly pass , while shooting at discarded shot shells , stray bits of clay birds and the like...
I understand that their popularity has waned over the years...and most folks just yawn at them.
Dismissing them as next to useless and not a "serious" rifle for any purpose.
One of the many reasons why I like them , is that they are a "fun" rifle to shoot...
Back when I was introduced to firearms...many folks had a firearms , just because they were fun to own and shoot...I like that notion... a lot.
The "Ain't much to 'em" attitude ...can also mean that ain't much to break or go wrong with them....
Plus they are easy to clean and maintain.
Many are also surprising accurate.
With most of them....you can shoot .22 Short , Long or LR which is handy when ammo comes up wanting on the shelves.
I understand that these rifles , like my muzzle loaders are often over looked or underrated...
But if the rifle hits the target where you want it to....it may not matter if that hit came from a rifle that holds one shot or many....
Andy