Sidearms & Scatterguns Ruger SR40c

TLong

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Nov 10, 2009
272
2
Alabama
www.1042blue.wixsite.com
My wife is wanting another carry pistol, and is interested in the Ruger SR40c. I have very little knowledge of this pistol, and was looking for any info you guys may be able to offer about it. I'm looking for reliability, controllability and any other issues you have come across. I'm not going to buy one sight unseen or without her shooting one first, but I would like a little heads up in the mean time.
 
Re: Ruger SR40c

Had the SR9C come through the store, and I wasn't impressed at all:

BAD THINGS

Sights were surprisingly tall & sharp, not well designed for concealed carry.

Safety was very poor, too far back & VERY stiff. Couldn't move the safety onehanded with a firing grip, and I'm not that wimpy, had to get leverage to snap it into place.

Reversible backstap struck me as pretty much worthless. Seems like Ruger just wanted to have the same "feature" everyone else has, but half a$$ed it. Very small and short, although the difference is fairly substantial between each side.

You may get one with 1 normal mag and 1 extended mag, or one with a pinky extended on the normal mag. I don't understand why people have this retarded desire to squeeze their pinkies onto subcompact guns, there's no reason for that. You can shoot a 3" 1911 with your thumb, index, and middle finger just fine, once you start adding fingers below, especially the pinky, people have a tendency to throw shots off.

Trigger blade safety, I think they're asinine and a lousy design trait, I hate having a segmented trigger, the M&P single trigger surface is much more comfortable & predictable.

Slide serrations weren't very good, shallow and not enough bite in the grip.

GOOD THINGS

The grip frame was well contoured, very high arch above the grip, so slide bite is very unlikely. (i hate slide bite on subcompact guns)

Slide was very well radiused in the front for carry, too bad that concept didn't carry over to the rest of the gun.

Cheap, relative to competition.




Moral of the story: Get a M&P C, and skip the Ruger.
 
Re: Ruger SR40c

I won an SR9c and gave it to my wife. Shoots good, she likes it. It is a pocketbook and bedside gun for when I'm gone. I would not have bought one but having shot it and tried it out since it was free I am neutral on it. It gets the job done...it's reliable...it's a good balance of size and power for my wife.