SP 101

OLDNAVYMCPO

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I am considering buying a Ruger SP 101 snubby DAO in .357 . I have not shot a Ruger DA since a Security-six some thirty years ago. Thought it was a piece of junk then. Own any number of Blackhawks/Redhawks( yeah, I know it's DA/SA) and like them. In fact I'm on my way to the range to try out a New Vaquero I just purchased. Just looking for expert opinion (experience) on the snubby. Thanks.
 
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Great gun, my son owns one and I have shot it a few times. No piece of junk at all, good carry piece for town or country.
 
I've got two of them, one with a 3-inch barrel and the one below with a 2¼-inch barrel. Both of mine are DA/SA. I really like them. The Ruger SP101 is built like the proverbial brick shipyard, but still easily concealable. I don't think you'll find too many people who have anything negative to say about them. As stout as it is, it makes shooting .357's plausible...which you really can't say about the so-called "feather weights."
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I own a DAO SP101. I got it used and cheap. It is a great gun, no real complaints, but as stated above, it is heavy and not so small. My stainless model 60 is easier to carry than the SP101.

Some can pocket carry an SP101, I cannot. So I have to carry it on a belt, with a holster. If I have to do that I would rather have something with more than 5 shots.

For me, I like the J frame centenials, for pocket carry. I like my GP100 for holster duty, but now that I have a 327pc I don't see myself carrying the GP much either.

All Ruger and S&W revolvers are top notch quality wise, you just have to find the one that is configured the way you want it. Also I learned the hard way buy the one you really want, don't settle for something else. Eventually you will buy the one you wanted in the first place anyway. Ed
 
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The SP-101 is a tank, and (as folks have noted) a little on the large and heavy side for what it is. Five shots in a gun that perfectly fits a (six-shot) Colt Detective Special holster. The Lett stocks that come with them work well and Ruger's DA pulls (at least those I've felt) these days are great.
 
I love my 3" SP101. I swapped the factory springs for a set from Wolff and the DA is silky smooth. It's my hiking/fishing companion and rides very well in a Simply Rugged Sourdough holster for that purpose.

For pocket carry though, I go with the SW 638.
 
I have a DAO 2.25" and carry with a Simply Rugged holster. Very nice, great shooting gun. I appreciate the extra weight of the gun for the control it offers when shooting .357 ammo. You cant cheat the laws of physics. Weight is your friend when firing .357 ammo.
 
I also have a 2-1/4" DAO SP101. I carry it in a Mika pocket holster, and am perfectly satisfied with it for that purpose. I shoot all .357s with it and the little extra weight is great for this, as was mentioned. I also really like the stock, sq. butt grip -gives me a good, solid hold. The trigger is excellent also.

Regards,
Andy
 
Mine has the barrel a whisker over three inches, as I wanted real performance with all ammo, inc. .357 loads. And the overall weight and bulk of the gun precludes easy pocket carry, anyway.

I do not subscribe to the theory of DA-only revolvers, so mine has the conventional spur hammer. This allows accurate SA fire at a snake's head, small game, or at more distant opponents. Those who carry the SP-101 as an outdoors gun probably do so with these factors in mind.

The DA trigger pull is smooth, but fairly heavy. I've thought of getting Wolff springs in a lighter weight, but want to make sure that all primers will fire. Some 357 primers are supposedly hard. Personally, I've never experienced a failure to fire, even in S&W guns.

If I was limited to two handguns, one of the two combos I'd consider are my SP-101 and its companion GP-100 (four-inch bbl.) or a .38 and a .357 S&W. (M-60 and M-66.)

Frankly, I'd pass on that DA-only snub and get a three-inch SP-101. You can hide it in an inside-trousers holster or wear it on the belt in one of Ruger's holsters best described as a "thumbsnap Threepersons" design. And El Paso Saddlery, Lobo Leather (board member) and others can fix you up with holsters. The SP-101 does NOT fit my holsters from Bianchi and El Paso for a three-inch barreled S&W Model 60-4. Note: the Bianchi Model 5 (lined) does not fit the M-60-4. It is made for a normal three-inch barrel, not the lugged sort in the M-60-4. Bianchi told me to just force it in and stretch the holster. They lost a customer. I bought two El Paso holsters for it, instead. The Bianchi holster will remain, until I can afford a more conventional three-inch M-60 or M-36-1. It works fine with those, of course.

Ruger's holsters are bargain priced at about $40 or less and look good in pics. They carry the Ruger heraldic logo. You can order direct from them on non-gun items. (Holsters, caps, shirts, etc.)

I think the SP-101 is a very solid, durable little gun. But it's not at its best as a DA-only snub. If that's what you need and you want light weight, a poster above suggested a S&W M-638. That'll provide all the recoil you want in a gun that light. And unlike a Centennial, it'll still allow cocking for SA fire, although the hammer is largely shrouded.

If you want less recoil, more durability with fairly heavy firing over the decades and you want .357 capability, buy an SP-101 with three-inch bbl. It is also a better club if you have to use the gun that way. Hopefully, you'll never have to grapple with an opponent while holding an empty gun.

Usually, the five shots in an SP-101 will suffice. But for what it's worth, the late David W. Arnold told me that in his time as a senior cop and anti-terrorist leader in Rhodesia (now black-ruled Zambia), he found that if a mob was fired on, they quickly left. Most crooks are not the hardened military vets of the 1986 FBI Miami shootout. If they get shot at, they disperse. But a burglar might jump you at close range in a motel room or your home, and knowing that you have a gun that can stun him long enough for you to wrench clear and shoot is comforting. I wouldn't be so sanguine about using an Airweight or Titanium S&W in that way.

I hope this isn't more than you wanted to know, but perhaps it'll interest some readers.

To sum up, I like the current SP-101 very much. But not in DA-only snub format.
 
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No one has asked why the OP thought a Sec-6 was junk? I don't necessarily think that Ruger's had any quality issues over the years. I'd be hard-pressed to find much difference in quality over a clean discontinued Six series, and any new SP.

Anyhow, the SP is a tank, as has been pointed out. IF your hands and wrists can handle the maggies, so can it.
 
I am considering buying a Ruger SP 101 snubby DAO in .357 . I have not shot a Ruger DA since a Security-six some thirty years ago. Thought it was a piece of junk then.

I don't think I've ever heard anyone call a Security Six "a piece of junk" before. The one I owned briefly years ago was cosmetically rough--"well worn" would be a kind description--but a fine shooter with a quite decent trigger. Wasn't DAO, however.

I wish I still had it, but it got away.
 
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My Security Six is still my go-to-the-desert gun. I carry it in a El Paso Saddelry Tom Threepersons crossdraw holster, good both for sitting in a car and for walking. I have it sighted in for 100 yds and can hit a torso sized target at that range every time.
 
My Security Six is still my go-to-the-desert gun. I carry it in a El Paso Saddelry Tom Threepersons crossdraw holster, good both for sitting in a car and for walking. I have it sighted in for 100 yds and can hit a torso sized target at that range every time.


Where do you park on desert hikes, and how do you protect your car from the heat and from thieves? I'm really curious, especially with summer here.

Anyone else doing hikes in that sort of country, feel free to join in. The car must be like a furnace after a few hours. That'd affect anything left in it: food, water, etc. Absolutely DO NOT leave optics in a hot car! The heat will vaporize the rubber in the seals all over the lenses and prisms, and the repair people may never get all of that haze off. Look carefully at used binoculars and telescopic sights. They are frequently ruined by leaving them in cars in summer. (Shine a strong flashlight into the tubes from the objective lens end and look around.)

Anyone replying to this question should probably start a new topic for that.
 
I have a snub nose security six, and think it is a fine gun. I'd trade my SP101 for another security six in a heart beat. The OP must have had a real lemon.

Anybody think there is room on an SP cylinder for one more hole? Ruger should have done what ever they had to do to make the SP a six shot revolver IMHO. Ed
 
I have a snub nose security six, and think it is a fine gun. I'd trade my SP101 for another security six in a heart beat. The OP must have had a real lemon.

Anybody think there is room on an SP cylinder for one more hole? Ruger should have done what ever they had to do to make the SP a six shot revolver IMHO. Ed

I think they did, if you want a .327 revolver. I'll stay with a five-shot .357.
 
I just bought a new SP101 DAO, and immediately put some Badger boot grips on it. I love the Badgers for the extreme grip angle that they present, and they excel at concealment.

I'll order up some TT Gunleather to carry IWB, and for me, it is NOT a heavy or large gun.

Yes, 5 shots is short on capacity, but for the intended use (arms length, "get off me" gun), I love the SP101.

Here is my new one:





My last SP101 got sent off to Gemini Customs, for a complete working over, and the results were stunning.
I sold it off (bad habit of mine), but this new one will probably get the same treatment:



One last thing....I finally found a great use of MIM parts.
Ruger used to have VERY sharp edges on their triggers, but now that they switched to MIM triggers....SMOOTH edges and profile!
 
Did not mean to disparage Ruger Security Sixes but what I remember from was a clunky, unattractive handgun with an atrocious trigger pull. Back then my carry gun was a Colt Diamondback that had been tricked out by a friend and Lawrence, Ks gunsmith named Tom Kincaid, perhaps some readers may remember him. Anyway that probably skewed my thinking. I have owned and shot a grunch of Rugers over the years and hold them in high esteem. Really have the bug now to buy the SP101 DAO snubby. Thanks for all the response.
 
I've had the DAO 101 on order for a couple of weeks. Hoping it comes in soon. The LGS did have a 3" in stock. Got to fondle it. Just a little big and wanted the bobbed hammer. Built like a tank. Really liked the front lock up on the crane. Never had an issue with any Ruger I've owned.

Figure it should split the difference between my 640-1 and the 3" M65.
 
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