4" .357 stainless 90-95% condition. 1982 manufacture date cylinder had almost no visible roller mark. Brown wood grips.
I lost all my books in a house fire a couple years ago all help appreciated.
4" .357 stainless 90-95% condition. 1982 manufacture date cylinder had almost no visible roller mark. Brown wood grips.
I lost all my books in a house fire a couple years ago all help appreciated.
$400 - $450. Great revolvers.
Yeah, I wouldn't disagree with you there. I think I'd take a security or service six from the 80's over the GP100's being produced now though. IIRC, there were some complaints about wear and tear on the six series from people who shot the a lot of .357's out of them so Ruger went to the heavier GP100's.
Sorry for the thread hijack.
I bought a couple of NOS Security 6's , after the GP100 replaced it..
a distributor had then @ ridiculously low (closeout) prices..
bought them in 6" & 2 3/4" sizes. (Wish I'd bought a dozen of them)
My 6" has had more rds through it than all my other pistols, combined...
a college classmate gave it a trigger job, & it's the only Ruger I've shot that
has a trigger comparable to a S&W of the same generation (early 80's)
It'd be hard to wear out a Security Six.. I'm still trying.
and to clarify.. the GP100 replaced the Security/Speed 6's because the GP 100 was/is easier & cheaper to manufacture than the older model.
Thank you for all the input. I think I'd better grab it for the 300.00 the guy wants for it. Honestly, I'm not a huge wheel gun guy but there's just something alluring about this revolver that makes me want to own it!