JNewell
Member
I believe that story completely, and anyone who followed Bill Ruger over the years will, too. These are the folks who welded a rod into the original M77 barrel just ahead of the chamber and tried to blow up the action (they didn't succeed). Another exploit was filling the cylinders of an Old Army with Bullseye (filling...Bullseye!) and plugging the barrel to see if it would blow up (it didn't).
I don't think it's realistic to expect other manufacturers to have that kind of zeal, though, and I'm not sure Ruger would do the same today.
Great anecdote, thank you for sharing that. WBR got tons of sh!t in his latter years but he was really a giant.
I don't think it's realistic to expect other manufacturers to have that kind of zeal, though, and I'm not sure Ruger would do the same today.
Great anecdote, thank you for sharing that. WBR got tons of sh!t in his latter years but he was really a giant.
I don't know about Smith & Wesson replacing a gun due to over pressure ammo, but I do know about Ruger!!
A number of years ago while shooting a metallic silhouette match in Florida, I observed a friend's Super Blackhawk blow up!! The topstrap was broken and bent up at a 90 degree angle. The fired chamber in the ciylinder was gone and the chambers on each side of it detonated, blowing them apart also. Pieces of the blown out cylinder hit the shooter next to my friend breaking bones in his hand.
My friend called Ruger the next day. He was put on hold by the customer service agent. The next thing he heard was a rather gruff, yet polite sounding voice telling him to pack up the gun and any ammo left out of the box he had been shooting and ship it to them in Southport. Wishing to keep track of the proceedings for his records, my friend asked, "To who am I speaking?" The voice said, "This is Bill Ruger. I want to know what it took to blow that gun up!!"
Two weeks later, my friend had a special courier knocking at his door. The man had a package and a letter from Southport, Connecticut. In the box was a brand new Ruger Super Blackhawk. The letter from Mr. Ruger stated that the ammo that was sent with the blown up gun had been disassembled and analyzed. It seemed that the company that had re-manufactured the reloads loaded 22 grains of Hercules Bullseye powder in the .44 Magnum casing behind a 240 JHP instead of 22 grains of Hercules 2400 powder---an amazing quaduple overload! This load was 4 times the pressure of a Ruger proof load!
After a number of incidents like this, the careless ammo remanufacturer was closed down. Sturm, Ruger and Co ate the cost of that Super Blackhawk to satify Bill Ruger's curiosity!!