Guns International #: 102172292
Seller's Inventory #: 701135
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Guns International #: 102172292
Category - Ruger Revolvers - Super Redhawk
- .44 Magnum Revolvers
Seller's Information
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Seller: Guns Dot Com
Member Since: 9/8/21
State:
Minnesota
Zip: 55337
Country: United States
Phone:
(866) 582-4867
Platinum Seller
Active Listings: 33083
Total Listings: 290362
Seller Type: FFL Dealer
Return Policy: All new gun sales are final.
CERTIFIED USED GUNS Guns Certified Used Guns may be returned within 3 days after the transfer is complete for any reason for a full refund, minus any fees, shipping costs and a 15% restocking fee. A Guns Certified Used Gun may also be returned within 7 days if it is malfunctioning with proper use. NON-CERTIFIED USED GUNS Non-certified used guns can be returned if there is a mechanical defect that occurs within 3 calendar days of the physical transfer of the firearm to your possession. All other reasons for returns on non-certified used guns are ineligible. Payment Methods: Discover, Visa, MasterCard, American Express. Financing options also available.
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STURM, RUGER & CO., INC. NEW MODEL SUPER BLACKHAWK
Description: Guns Listing ID: 701135 For sale is a Ruger New Model Super Blackhawk used in good shape. n the early 1950s, Westerns were popular in movies and television. Colt had discontinued the iconic Single Action Army prior to World War II, and few single-action revolvers were available to meet market demand for cowboy-style revolvers. In 1953, the new firm of Sturm, Ruger & Company introduced the Single-Six, a .22 LR rimfire single-action revolver. The Single-Six proved to be a popular seller, leading Ruger to develop and market a centerfire revolver similar to the Single Action Army: the Ruger Blackhawk. The Ruger Blackhawk was named after the Stutz Blackhawk automobile. [6][7] Ruger introduced the Blackhawk in 1955. Chambered for the .357 Magnum, the Blackhawk was a simple and strong design, and it sold well. In 1956, as Smith & Wesson was introducing the new .44 Magnum, Ruger quickly developed a variant of the Blackhawk in the new cartridge. Ruger achieved wide popularity with this firearm in a hotly anticipated new cartridge, which was both cheaper and more readily available than the Smith & Wesson Model 29 revolver. According to popular legend, Ruger was able to field a .44 Magnum revolver at nearly the same time as Smith & Wesson due to a Ruger employee finding expended .44 Magnum cartridge cases at a scrapyard and deducing that Smith & Wesson was about to launch a new cartridge.[8][9] The 1955–1962 Blackhawks are known today as the \"Flattop\" models, because their adjustable rear sights were not protected by \"ears\" extending up from the frame as later became standard. From 1962 through 1972, Ruger made the \"Three Screw\" Blackhawk in various calibers, so called by the number of screws visible on the side of the revolver. The Flattop and Three Screw Rugers were modernized compared to the Colt Single Action Army, in that they had adjustable sights instead of the Colt‚‚s fixed sights, and they used wire coil springs instead of the Colt‚‚s flat leaf springs. Bill Ruger chose coil springs due to their greater durability, saying that it solved one of the primary weaknesses of the Colt design. The early models of the Blackhawk still operated the same way as the Colt, in that the hammer was half-cocked to load and unload and that the firearm was not safe to carry with all six chambers loaded due to the hammer resting upon the sixth chamber.[10] In 1973, in order to eliminate accidents occurring from the hammer jarring against a round loaded in the sixth chamber, Ruger introduced the New Model Blackhawk. The New Model Blackhawk did not require the hammer to be half-cocked for loading and unloading, and it employed a transfer bar mechanism which prevented the cartridge under the hammer from being fired without the trigger being pulled. The New Blackhawk was seen as limiting firearms accidents and legal liability. Ruger then began offering a retrofit program, offering free transfer bar conversions to earlier variants of the Blackhawk. It is worth noting that the Super Blackhawk is capable of operating with much higher pressure handloads than factory produced ammunition in .44 Magnum. Factory produced loads such as Federal Champion 240 gr JSP loads are right around 800 ft-lbs muzzle energy. Loads in excess of 1200 ft-lbs muzzle energy are commonly produced by handloaders for this caliber and the Super Blackhawk can, in fact, handle more powerful loads than any .44 Magnum lever action rifle and substantially more powerful rounds than any do SOLD Manufacturer: RUGER Model: NEW MODEL SUPER BLACKHAWK Caliber Info: 44 MAG Condition: Used - Non-Certified Barrels: 7.5 BARREL Finish: STAINLESS |
Guns International #: 102172292
Seller's Inventory #: 701135
Guns International #: 102172292
Seller's Inventory #: 701135