The movement in the front sight blade was all vertical. The horizontal dimensions are tight enough that I had to use the tip of a tiny jewelers screwdriver to gently pry the blade out of it's notch. Tight on the sides, tight on the top, vertical movement when seated and installed. The most likely scenario that I could think of was an oversized hole for the pin in the sight blade.
I haven't yet learned how to reverse drill a hole and make it smaller, so I started thinking of other ways.....
Locktite came to mind first and was discarded because I don't want to make this permanent.
Using a center punch to throw up a few burrs on the bottom edge was considered and quickly discarded with visions of flying sight blades joining the other feral parts in the bowels of the garage.
Stretching the blade vertically with a hammer and flat punch was also discarded because the displaced metal would have to come from somewhere and I would simply replace vertical movement with horizontal movement if I didn't do it perfectly.
Shims. I needed shims.
I sorted through the various bits and pieces of metal that all good hoarders accumulate and didn't find anything thin enough. A quick search online found some brass shim stock that I could order (and did) but it won't be here until next week and I want to shoot this thing tomorrow.
I was about to cut up my spare set of feeler gauges when I remembered that my wife keeps a roll of .001 aluminum shim stock in the kitchen.

I poured myself a drink to make it look like I was in her domain for a legitimate reason, slyly tore a corner off of the aluminum foil roll, and then scampered back to the garage with my prize like a racoon running from a tipped over garbage can.
An X-acto knife worked perfectly for trimming several pieces of my new shim stock to the right size. A 1/16" punch was used as a slave pin for test fitting. A total of 8 shims were stacked into the sight pin channel before the slop went away. A little hammer hammer and we were back in business.
I'm not sure how I managed to get the rear spring underneath the rear sight on the other gun with the sight already pinned in place. It sure wasn't happening this time. A much better method turned out to be using two dabs of grease to hold the springs in place and setting the sight assembly on top of both at the same time.
I really do not like the designs that Ruger used for their wooden grips. They just don't work for my hands. The only thing worse for my middle knuckle than a set of Ruger target grips is a set of Ruger magna grips. I decided to dress this one up with a set of grips out of the pile. I think they may be Kassnar grips....if anyone recognizes the tag please let me know.
All clean and ready for the initial range trip tomorrow....stay tuned.