Before you ask...yes I own a couple and am not some brand loyal cool-aider.
I was at my local dope (gun) dealer yesterday when the topic of controlled round feed came up. Now mind you, i am not a big fan of it anyways. I have guns that are push feed and guns with the Mauser extractor, and on the whole, the Mauser system has given me a lot more grief. Any who, one of the customers was looking at current CRF options and the shop employe/gunsmith mentioned the limber, the CZ, the 798 etc...but I was shocked when the Ruger 77 was not mentioned, so the nice guy that I am, I chimed in about the ruger. The smith quickly shot me down, saying the ruger is not a CRF. Now, I am not Layne Simpson, but I know my fair share about things that go boom. I was told that though the 77 has the non rotating extractor, its nothing more than a complicated push feed. Still not buying it, he took 4 77s off the shelf in various calibers. Making sure the environment was safe, and putting the safety in the middle so the bolt could still be manipulated he proceeded to load a round into the mag of each gun. Sure enough, on all three, when the bolt is pushed forward, and the case rime engaged by the extractor, a big enough bite was not taken to remove the round unless the bolt was slammed all the way into battery seating the round firmly into the extractors grip, thus proving his point. I was flabbergasted to say the least.
I rushed home to try the same thing on both my 77 7 mag and my 77 .308...same story! The round has to be fully pushed into the chamber for the extractor to grab enough of the rime to remove the cartridge. If you only go half way and then pull back, they just kind of vomit the round on top of the mag.
I am kind of pissed to say the least. I was willing to deal with the worst trigger on a current production rifle, the accuracy crapshoot, and the blued receivers that turn purple with age ( more on this below), but this is too much! I called the folks in Ct. and what’s more, was told that this type of function was normal, and that’s why you can load the ruger by putting a round in the chamber and letting the extractor jump over the rim like a push feed, where as in a mauser, it must be loaded from the mag.
What do you all think about this. This basically removes any advantage from having the mauser style extractor. The idea is that if you have a deformed bullet or blocked chamber, you could remove the round, and strip a fresh one from the mag. A ruger cannot do this! I tried 2 of my actual Mausers, and they work as designed. As soon as the round comes out of the mag box, the extractor has them firmly and will extract them.
As far as the bluing turning purple, all of my blued rugers have done this. It looks terrible and when I contacted ruger they said it was normal. It only does this on the receiver and none of my other guns do this. I have a couple Winchesters over 50 years old and several Remington’s that are roughly 30 years old and the bluing looks perfect. Why do rugers turn plum like this? Before anyone asks, I don’t use any weird solvents, just hopes number 9 and shooters choice.
Needless to say, I may have to sell of my rugers. I am very bitter right now!
