Description
About Ruger No.1
The Ruger No.1 was introduced in 1967 and its single-shot design, with a falling-block action. It gives a very strong lock-up not dissimilar to the old English Farquharson rifle.
Bill Ruger was a visionary industrial designer and a visionary firearms designer. For example, he saw the potential in the Japanese Nambu pistol that most reviewers created his classic Ruger Standard.
Trigger and Safety
- Like most good single-shot rifle designs, the Ruger No.1 is simple and uncluttered, with nice clean lines to its profile.
- The trigger, sear, and safety of the Ruger No.1 are within the tang section at the rear. This means that the entire design of the receiver area is compact. With no visible external pins or screws to mar the appearance. And only the mainspring housed outside the action. This sits on a welded section to the front of the receiver. Which not only houses the ejector spring but also serves as an attachment base for the fore-end.
- The only visible external screw is that of the pivot pin. Which secures the Farquharson-style lever. This finger-lever latches directly onto the trigger guard. Which precludes the painful act of wedging your finger between the trigger and the lever.
- In order to open the breech of the Ruger No.1, you move the lever downward. Thereby unlatching it from the guard, and begins the downward movement of the breechblock. When the breechblock is level with the exposed rear end of the barrel, the final downward movement of the lever works the extraction of a spent case, with the last few degrees of movement initiating an offset toggle that hits the extractor and kicks the case rearward clear of the action.
- The Ruger No.1 has a small screw on the fore-end bridge of the Ruger No.1 that can vary the force of the extraction process so reloaders do not have to go fumbling around in the mud after precious brass.
Barrel, sights, and stock
Ruger No.1 Tropical rifles are available as light Sporters, varmints, or tropical gun configurations, but this medium Sporter version with open sights and barrel band is perfect as it stops that recoil cutting your hand if the sling was placed on the fore-end as on a normal rifle. The Ruger’s No.1 barrel is 24in long, and the barrel diameter is 0.674in at the muzzle and not threaded.
Furman –
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