Truly just want to learn with my question…what is the alure of a Ruger No 1 single shot rifle for hunting please? Sincerely I have no thoughts on this at all but can’t help seeing they have a high popularity and just trying to understand the popularity which is obviously high! Is it just the simplicity?
It is a very pleasing design aesthetically, the lines are so well balanced, it just looks good. It is dead simple as others have said, the loading and cocking function is slick, logical and easy to operate. It is minimalistic and cleverly designed, the mechanism is internal, like half a double rifle that doesn't need to break. There is no short stroking, you put in a round, you close the breach, it fires.Truly just want to learn with my question…what is the alure of a Ruger No 1 single shot rifle for hunting please? Sincerely I have no thoughts on this at all but can’t help seeing they have a high popularity and just trying to understand the popularity which is obviously high! Is it just the simplicity?
My new No1 has very plain timber, and I rather like it, just straight grain. So what comes out loudly is the elegance of the form, like Cindarella still in the kitchen. I'll post better pictures when I eventually take posession.Luck can be a fickle mistress as far as wood on No 1's go; I have an AAA butt here, but the forend could barely be called timber. As WAB wrote, they hark back to earlier times; I doubt any modern manufacturer apart from William B would, or could have envisioned them when he did. Elegant, and tough, near indestructible!
What caliber? Nothing wrong with plain wood. Straight grain going the right direction won't fail you when you need it!My new No1 has very plain timber, and I rather like it, just straight grain. So what comes out loudly is the elegance of the form, like Cindarella still in the kitchen. I'll post better pictures when I eventually take posession.
View attachment 532985
30-06What caliber? Nothing wrong with plain wood. Straight grain going the right direction won't fail you when you need it!
Buy it 209!I love Ruger M77’s, so naturally I’ve always wanted a No. 1. My LGS has a beautiful one in 30-06 for sale and if I hadn’t just bought a Mark II I would probably be eyeing it pretty closely.
Very nice, a wonderful caliber!30-06
What's the cut/notch at front of forend?My new No1 has very plain timber, and I rather like it, just straight grain. So what comes out loudly is the elegance of the form, like Cindarella still in the kitchen. I'll post better pictures when I eventually take posession.
View attachment 532985
It is stylistic, similar to a Germanic schnabel forend. It is called the Alexander Henry forend, there are theories as to what the notch is for but I have not heard a consensus on the purpose.What's the cut/notch at front of forend?
It just looks cool/correct. Some early Scottish rifles had it.What's the cut/notch at front of forend?
Go on, bet back there and lay some money down for a deposit/ holding feeI love Ruger M77’s, so naturally I’ve always wanted a No. 1. My LGS has a beautiful one in 30-06 for sale and if I hadn’t just bought a Mark II I would probably be eyeing it pretty closely.
He ended up passing on the sale and I took it upon myself to give it a new home. Going to be tough to decide which one to bring for elk season, my 375 H&H or the 300 H&H.But to hunt with a No1 in the iconic 300H&H is way high on the satisfaction list. I predict there is going to be some love going on here.