Ruger 22 Pistol - Pistols All Compact Firearms New Models Distributor Exclusive Pistols Available at CA Pistols MA Serial Number Search Instruction Manuals LCP® LCP® II LCP® MAX LC380® Safety-380® MAX9s -380® MAX9s - American® Pistol SR1911® PC Charger™ SR22® Mark IV™ 22 Charger™ Silent-SR® Silent-SR® ISB LCP® LCP® II LCP® MAX LC380® Security-380® EC9s® ® LC MAX3 ® Security-380® EC9s® MAX-9® Security-9® - 7 Silent-SR® Silent-SR® ISB LCP® LCP® II LCP® MAX LC380® EC380® Safety-MAX-380®9 Safety-9® -5.7 ™ American® Pistols SR1911® SR22® Mark IV ™ 22 Charger ™ LCP ® LCP® II LCP® MAX LC380® EC9s® Security-380® MAX-9® Security-9® Default-9® -5. Compact Competition SR1911® Full-Size Target Commander-Style Officer-Style Competition SR22® Mark IV™ 22 Charger™ Revolver Revolvers ® ® Redhawkca New Model One-Six® One-Ten® One-Nin® One-Seven™ Convertible Standard New Model Blackhawk ® Blue Stainless Conversion Beasley ™ New Model Super Blackhawk® Standard Beasley ™ Hunter Beasley ™ Hunter Beasley ¢ Stainless All Bolt-One Automatic Rimfire Center Left Hand New Models Distributor Exclusives Serial Number Search Manuals Precision® Rifle Precision® Rimfire American® Rifle America® Rimfire® Scout Rifle and Hawkeye® 77 Series PC Carbine™ LC Carbine™ AR-556® SFAR™ 10/22® Mini-14® No1 Silent-SR® Silent -SR® ISB Precision® Rifle Precision® Precision® Rimfire American GO Wild® Camo Hunter Compact Vortex® Crossfire II® American® Rimfire Standard Compact Wood Action Target Long Range Scout Rifle Hawkeye® Hunter FTW Hunter Long Range Hunter Long-Range RANGE COMPACT 7 AFRICA LOSSCONDATORS 7 7/44 77/357™ 77/22 77/17 .11 AR-556® Standard MPR Free Float Rifle SFAR™ PC Carbine™ LC Carbine™ 10/22® Carbine Tactown Light Target Compact Miniature Sport-4 Ranch Tactical Mini Thirty® Precision ® Rimfire America® Rimfire Standard Compact Wood Action Target Long Range Target 10/22® Carbine Tactown Light Target Compact Tactical Sport Competition 77 Series 77/17 Precision ® Precision ® Precision American Rifle. Rifle Camo Hunter Compact Vortex® Crossfire II® ® Scout Rifle PC Carbine ™ LC Carbine ™ Hawkeye® Hunter FTW Hunter Long Range Hunter Long Range Predator Compact Laminate Compact Africa Alaskan Guide 77-Series 77/44 77/357 ™ 77/22.® Mini-14® Rifle. American® Rimfire ® Scout Rifle Hawkeye® 77-Series AR-556® SR-22® 10/22® Mini-14® No1 Custom Shop Accessories Magazines & Loaders Trigger Bags, Cases, Bags & Pouches Stocks & Swivels Holsters Sights. , Lights & Laser Optics, Scopes & Bases Rings & Scopes Gear Bipods & Monopods Riflescopes.

By clicking on the link above, you will leave the site and be redirected to the site of an independent, federally licensed dealer.

Ruger 22 Pistol

Ruger 22 Pistol

The tool you want is available through that seller and subject to all federal, state and local laws.

Ruger Mark Iv Target 22 Lr 5.5 In. Barrel 10 Rnd Pistol Stainless Steel

Please note that this service is not available for international users due to export regulations. Distributors of ® products located in the United States are not authorized to export our products. Any questions should be directed to the distributor in your country. For a list of overseas distributors of ® products, please click here.

Sturm, & Co., Inc. The nation's leading manufacturer of rugged, reliable firearms for the commercial sporting market. With products made in America, Marlin offers consumers nearly 800 variations across more than 40 product lines across two brands. For nearly 75 years, Sturm, & Co., Inc. A model of corporate and social responsibility. Our slogan "Firearms for Responsible Citizens" demonstrates our commitment to these principles as we strive to provide quality and innovative firearms. The Ruger Standard Model is a semi-automatic pistol introduced in 1949 as Sturm's first product. , Reger & Co. This is an inexpensive .22 caliber rifle marketed for casual sports, target shooting and diving. Company founder William B. Developed by Ruger, the Standard Model and its progeny have become the most accepted and successful .22 caliber semi-automatic pistols.

In the years after World War II, World War II firearms designer and trapper Bill Ruger purchased a World War II Japanese Nambu pistol from a US Navy repatriate, and he successfully replicated it in his garage.

Using the Nambu silhouette and bolt system, Ruger built his first prototype, but lacked the necessary capital to finance his entry. In 1949, when Ruger showed his wealthy and potential financier Alex Sturm a prototype, he was impressed by its traditional aesthetics and resemblance to the classic German Luger P08 pistol.

Review Of The Ruger Mark I Pistol .22lr

Realizing that prospective buyers shared his enthusiasm, he quickly signed on with a $50,000 investment, and together the two founded the American firearms company, Sturm, Ruger & Co.

Ruger's new product is called the "Standard" model. Designed as a low-cost recreational and sporting product for the outdoors, hunting and firearms, Ruger pioneered several simple and innovative manufacturing techniques used in the new pistol, including piano wire coated springs. At the time, most manufacturers used flat springs and made receivers from two stamped metal halves.

These methods worked well with rifles with only .22 fire pressure, and the cost savings it produced allowed Sturm and Ruger to radically outperform the competition, which still used old and extreme manufacturing methods.

Ruger 22 Pistol

Financier Sturm, a heraldry enthusiast, contributed the company's trademark "red eagle" crest, which appears as a medallion on the left handle panel.

Ruger Mark Iv Target .22 Lr Semiautomatic Pistol

In a favorable review published in the American Rifle Magazine, Major General Julian S. Hatcher, a well-known rifle officer, created great public interest with an advertisement published in the same magazine.

Checks started coming in from buyers, but as Ruger settled into the "old school" of financial responsibility, it set the standard for the "black" operation that served the company long before the pistols were actually shipped. ok In the future. Within months, all of the seed money was gone, but the first 100 standard pistols were produced and delivered to early buyers.

Since its introduction in the fall of 1949, the new pistol has been a success, and although it faced competition from the start, it soon gained a large share of the pistol-to-pistol market segment. Unfortunately, Alex died prematurely of viral hepatitis in November 1951 and did not live to see the final success of the Sturm Corporation.

As a memorial, honor and tribute, Ruger Sturm has ordered that the background of the eagle emblem be changed from red to black on future production models of the famous and successful rifle it co-produced and sold.

Ruger Mk Iv 22/45 Lite .22lr Pistol

For the next 33 years, the Standard Model continued to be produced consistently in the same form, but the new corporation expanded the basic model archetype into the pistol production line, including various models. They offered additional barrel lengths and configurations, created versions optimized for target shooting, and added the option of a stainless steel finish. The line was also revived in 1982, 2004 and 2016 with three mechanical "MK" series updates, the Mk II, Mk III and Mk IV.

The MK II added a slide stop that included a slide on the last round and was made of stainless steel. The MK II has several barrel lugs; 4.75 (12.1 cm) and 6 (15 cm) light barrels; 4 (10 cm), 5.5 (14 cm), 6.875 (17.46 cm) and 10 (25 cm) bull barrels, and 5.25 (13.3 cm) and 6.875 (17.46 cm) heavy barrels . All rifles are target models with bull or hardened barrels, and a long, wide front sight with an adjustable rear sight and an aggressive undersight to reduce glare. In 1999, the 18th version of this popular pistol appeared in the Sturm Ruger catalog and sold over 2 million units, eventually becoming the most successful and beloved.