Any time I ask about Ranch Rifles by Ruger, I get mixed emotions. Most everyone agrees that they are inherently inaccurate. I just got one. They are right. But, there seems to be a pattern to it. It will shoot a nickel sized group at 50 yards but it shoots a 12 inch group at 100 and a six foot group at 200. Being as I purchased this rifle to carry in my company truck on a daily basis to use on coyotes, cougar, and hogs, it will not serve me beyond 50 yards. Most of the critters that I seek to kill do not expose themselves at that range.
That said, I have asked a well respected gunsmith in the Dallas area who does all my gun work, what he thought. The info that he is putting together is that perhaps this is intentional on the part of Ruger to escape the assault rifle image. He and several of his gunsmith friends think that perhaps the end of the barrel is swaged somewhat in the applicaton of the front sight band and that it is enough constriction to cause the bullet not to stabilze. I have a 580 series with 9 inch twist. So, it should handle 55 gr bullets, but it wont.
These fellows have experimented with numerous ranch rifles which are not grouping, and have found that if they cut the barrel off behind the front sight and re-crown it, that the rifles come back into MOA. This seems strange to me. If I am to keep this rifle, I have to get it to where I can make a killing shot on a coyote at 200. I hate to think that I paid this kind of money for a rifle, and then I have to spend several hundred dollars more to get it to shoot a consistent group.
I'm curious if any of you know whether Ruger will fix this, or if I am stuck with another lemon? Anyone have any experience with the Ranch Rifle?
C