Ruger Redhawk

The Ruger Redhawk is a DA/SA, large-frame revolver introduced in 1979 by Sturm, Ruger & Company.

Ruger Redhawk
Redhawk with 5.5-inch barrel
TypeRevolver
Place of originUnited States
Production history
ManufacturerSturm, Ruger & Company
Produced1979–present
Specifications
Mass3.0625 lb (1.386 kg)
Length9.5–13 inches (241.3–330.2 mm)
Barrel length
  • 4 inch (101.6 mm)
  • 4.2 inch (106.7 mm)
  • 5.5 inch (139.7 mm)
  • 7.5 inch (190.5 mm)

Cartridge
ActionSingle and double action
Feed systemSix round cylinder
Sightsiron sights (adjustable rear)

Design and construction

The Redhawk was the first large-bore double-action revolver produced by Ruger, and was primarily designed by Harry Sefried, who previously worked for High Standard Manufacturing Company, where he designed the High Standard Sentinel revolver.[1][2]

Introduced to consumers in 1980, the Redhawk was available in .44 Magnum caliber. It featured a square butt grip, adjustable sights, and 5.5- and 7.5-inch barrel lengths, and was available in blue or stainless steel finishes. The grip profile and solid frame of the Redhawk was similar to that of the Ruger Security-Six revolver. Nevertheless, the new Redhawk introduced some significant design changes.[3]

Designed for long-term use with the heaviest .44 Magnum loads, the Redhawk included a new latch at the crane, so that the cylinder would be locked at front, rear, and bottom, a feature last seen in the Smith & Wesson's triple lock design, discontinued in 1915.[4][5] Sefried himself observed that the triple lockup design "would last almost indefinitely".[6] To simplify the design and cut the number of parts, the Redhawk used a single coil spring to power both hammer and trigger, resulting in a slightly heavier trigger pull in single action mode.[7] Because of the single power spring, Redhawk revolvers typically show little disparity between single and double-action pull weights - often three pounds or less in variation.[8]

The revolver has forward ramp sights with four different interchangeable sight inserts. The rear sights are fully adjustable, featuring a white outline. The Redhawk is available with scope mounts and rings.[9]

The Redhawk holds six or eight cartridges depending upon caliber, and has been produced with 4-inch, 4.2-inch, 5.5-inch, and 7.5-inch barrels. When introduced in 1980, the Redhawk was offered only in .44 Magnum/.44 Special. Later on .41 Magnum, .357 Magnum/.38 Special, .45 Colt, and .45 ACP/.45 Colt were added to the lineup.[10] Redhawks in .45 Colt (only) and .41 Magnum calibers were last produced in 2019.

Variants

In June 2015 Ruger announced a .45 Colt / .45 ACP dual caliber chambering for the Redhawk that incorporates a redesigned grip frame with round-butt grip.[11][12] Ruger achieves this multi-cartridge functionality by partially machining the cylinder to allow use of thin-gauge moon clips for the rimless .45 ACP while still retaining enough cylinder surface for proper headspace of the rimmed .45 Colt cartridge.[13],[14]

Usage

Despite the introduction of the Ruger Super Redhawk, the Redhawk remains in production today.[9] Many shooters prefer the more compact frame of the Redhawk for hunting and self-protection, especially those who do not plan to use a scope.[9][15]

The explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes carried a Redhawk on the 14-month-long Transglobe Expedition and used it to ward off a polar bear.[16]

Production Issues and the Super Redhawk

A 1980s Ruger Redhawk Hunter in .44 Magnum with a custom scope.

During the mid-1980s, Ruger received reports of barrel failures in the Redhawk.[9] The barrels of some Redhawk revolvers had separated at the junction between barrel and frame. The cause of the barrel separation was not known at the time, nor why it had not occurred before, since the Redhawk had been on the market since 1980. Ruger initially addressed the issue by introducing a new receiver design, lengthening the frame 2.5 inches past the cylinder face to the end of the ejector rod. The new design greatly increased barrel support.[9] The extended frame also provided enough length to allow scope bases to be mounted on the frame, rather than the barrel mount required on scoped versions of the older Redhawk.[9] This new design, dubbed the Ruger Super Redhawk also introduced a revised stub grip similar to that of the Ruger GP100 revolver.[17]

It was later determined by Ruger engineers that the Redhawk barrel separations were the result of overtorquing threads on pre-lubricated barrels as they were being screwed to the frame, causing stress fractures.[18] Ruger corrected this problem with revised assembly procedures. However, since the new Super Redhawk design was already complete, and because the original Redhawk remained in popular demand, the decision was made to retain both the Redhawk and the Super Redhawk in production.[9][19][20]

References

  • Herbert G. Houze (October 2005). "Harry H. Sefried II: An Overdue Appreciation", Man At Arms for the Gun and Sword Collector. Mowbray Publishing, Volume 27, No. 5.
  • Taffin, John (2006). "Ruger's Redhawk and Super Redhawk". Gun Digest Book of the .44. Iola, Wisconsin: Gun Digest Books. pp. 193–198. ISBN 978-0-89689-416-7.
  • Wilson, R. L.; G. Allan Brown (2008). Ruger & His Guns: A History of the Man, the Company and Their Firearms. Book Sales, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7858-2103-8.

Footnotes

  1. Buffaloe, Ed, The High Standard Sentinel Revolver, Unblinkingeye.com, retrieved 24 September 2023
  2. Houze, Herbert G. Harry H. Sefried II: An Overdue Appreciation, Man At Arms for the Gun and Sword Collector, Mowbray Publishing, Volume 27, No. 5, October 2005
  3. NRA Staff, Ruger Redhawk, American Rifleman, 12 May 2009, retrieved 24 September 2023
  4. Wilson(2008) pp.161-162
  5. van Zwoll, Wayne, Redhawk vs. Super Redhawk: Which Is Ruger’s Best .44 Magnum?, GunDigest.com, 1 October 2018, retrieved 24 September 2023
  6. van Zwoll, Wayne, Redhawk vs. Super Redhawk: Which Is Ruger’s Best .44 Magnum?, GunDigest.com, 1 October 2018, retrieved 24 September 2023
  7. van Zwoll, Wayne, Redhawk vs. Super Redhawk: Which Is Ruger’s Best .44 Magnum?, GunDigest.com, 1 October 2018, retrieved 24 September 2023
  8. Quinn, Jeff, Ruger Four-Inch .45 Colt Redhawk Revolver, Gunblast.com, 23 December 2007, retrieved 24 September 2023
  9. Taffin, John (2002)"The Legend of Big Red"American Handgunner May/June 2002
  10. "Ruger Redhawk KRH-45-4 Revolver Chambered in .45 Colt".
  11. "Ruger Introduces .45 Auto / .45 Colt Redhawk Revolver". Ruger Press Release. 2015-06-15.
  12. "Ruger Announces .45 Auto / .45 Colt Redhawk Revolver". American Rifleman. 2015-06-15.
  13. Johnson, Richard (2015-06-16). "New Ruger Redhawk in .45 Colt/.45 ACP". TheFirearmBlog.com.
  14. Quinn, Jeff (2015-06-17). "Ruger Redhawk 45 ACP/45 Colt Double-Action Revolver". Gunblast.com. (For images of Ruger's machined .45 ACP/.45 Colt cylinder, see the photos in Jeff Quinn's Redhawk review of the cylinder, rimmed .45 Colt in the cylinder without moon clips, and rimless .45 ACP in the cylinder with moon clips.)
  15. Taffin, John, Ruger's .45 Redhawk, retrieved 24 September 2023
  16. Fiennes, Ranulph (1983). To the ends of the earth: the Transglobe Expedition, the first pole-to-pole circumnavigation of the globe. Taylor & Francis US. p. 416. ISBN 978-0-87795-490-3.
  17. Johnson, Dan C., A Sensible Super Redhawk, Guns & Ammo Handguns Magazine, 10 September 2010, retrieved 24 September 2024
  18. Johnson, Dan C., A Sensible Super Redhawk, Guns & Ammo Handguns Magazine, 10 September 2010, retrieved 24 September 2024
  19. Taffin, John, Ruger's .45 Redhawk, Sixguns.com, retrieved 24 September 2023
  20. Johnson, Dan C., A Sensible Super Redhawk, Guns & Ammo Handguns Magazine, 10 September 2010, retrieved 24 September 2024
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