Sturm, Ruger and Company has been pretty good and putting out products that the customer wants, but sometimes they miss the mark or fail at perfecting the product.
In no particular order:
XGI
We'll start with the Ruger XGI. The XGI was a scaled-up version of the Mini-14, which is a scaled-down version of the M-14. In reality these were M-14s built Ruger's way. Calibers were .308 Winchester and .243 Winchester.
Although they were advertised in the Ruger Catalog from '84 to '86 none were ever shipped due to functioning issues.
357 Maximum Blackhawk
MP9
In the late 1980's Ruger hired UZI designer Uziel Gal to redesign his infamous pistol/carbine. The result was a closed bolt select fire version that had many improvements over the original UZI design. Ruger hoped the gun would be adopted by US Government agencies that had a need for such a CQB weapon. Unfortunately, the gun never found favor with the alphabet agencies.
Being that the gun fired from a closed bolt, it could probably be built as a semi-auto only version for civilian sales, but alas this was the Bill Ruger Sr. era and that wasn't going to happen on his watch. Only 1,500 of the pistol/carbines were produced before it was discoed.
96/44
In 1996 Ruger introduced a lever action carbine. Although it was chambered in three calibers (.17, .22 & .44) the .44 Magnum was the most interesting. The styling was reminiscent of the Savage model 99, which was a favorite of Bill Ruger and one which was still in production at the time this rifle was introduced.
The 96/44 was dropped from the catalog in 2006 with around 23,000 units produced, the rimfire version was discoed in 2009 with close to 57,000 being produced.
Red Label
The Red Label was built in the three most popular chamberings 12, 20 & 28 gauge. The gun was expensive to produce and weighed more than the typical over-under.
Ruger discontinued the shotgun in 2011, then reintroduced the gun in 2013 with a newly designed receiver and a $500 drop in price. This new version was better built, lighter and easier to shoot but alas the gun was dropped from the catalogs in 2014. Around 150,000 were produced, so it is not rare by any means, but not very well known outside of the Ruger fan base.
Gold Label
Another Ruger shotgun is the Gold Label, this one even less known. The Gold Label was a hammerless side by side shotgun introduced in 2002 in 12 gauge only. The gun was not very popular and in 2006 it too was dropped from the catalog. These are considered somewhat rare as only 3,361 of them were produced during its 3-year run.
Deerfield Carbine
The Ruger Deerfield Carbine was a 44 Magnum carbine, introduced in 2000. This was a modern replacement of the beloved Ruger 44 Carbine which was discontinued in 1985.
The rifle, also known as the 99/44, was built on the Mini-14 platform and used a 4-round rotary magazine. 17,441 of these were made before the gun was discontinued in 2006.
There was also a 96/22M in 22 Magnum. I had one. I also have both a new and old model single-six both in 22+22 Magnum. Those frames are beefier than the Bearcat.
ReplyDeleteVolquartsen made a .17 HMR 10/22 for a while that used a tungsten bolt. Savage had the right idea by developing a delayed blowback action for the A17
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