UPDATE on Post #18
Last set of days off I went to the range for some pistol shooting. When I went to shoot my Ruger P345 (which I've owned for 15+ years and put hundreds, if not thousands, of rounds through without a single issue) I inserted a loaded magazine and released the slide. Pulled the trigger and the gun did not fire. After keeping the pistol pointed downrange for a minute or two in case of hangfire, I removed the magazine and attempted to rack the slide. The slide will not budge a millimeter! No movement at all! So now I have a loaded round in the chamber and seemingly no way to clear it. I have reached out to Ruger customer service and they directed me to contact Gravel Agency as they are Canada's Ruger Warranty center; I am still waiting to hear back from them
I have thought of two courses of action, but will not try either one until I hear back from Gravel or an expert on here, in case a better solution is out there
1) Attempt to clear the stuck round by attempting to fire it again. Once the pistol jammed up, I was hesitant to fire it. But I could use a vise and a string to fire the pistol 'remotely' in case something goes awry
Pros: Easy to try
Cons: Could damage firearm in unexpected ways
2) Refer to attached photo, but if I can cut/gring/(choose your word) the slide release/take down pin (part number 54 on the attached picture) I should be able to remove the takedown pin and disassemble the firearm by pulling the slide off the front just like for cleaning, but without the need to move the slide rearward like is normally required to remove that pin.
Pros: Disassembly would show what's broken without having to fire the gun
Cons: I can't find that part in stock anywhere. Ruger simply asked me to ask Gravel without answering any of my other questions, such as "was this takedown pin/slide release lever used on any other pistols?" If it was, I could search for that part from a different pistol
To try and answer some questions I assume are coming:
Were you shooting factory ammo?
Yes, this was factory ammo. In particular, this is the last of the stock I have of the classic Canada Ammo 1911/ammo deal where they had crates of Norinco 45acp for dirt cheap. As mentioned above, I've probably put 1000-1500 rounds of this exact ammo through this pistol without any issues over the last decade
Why don't you just bring it to a gunsmith?
Obviously, I can't mail the firearm in it's current condition and the nearest smith is a multi-hour drive. I will do it if I need to, but if at all possible I would like to avoid it
You shouldn't have travelled home from the range with a loaded pistol
I know, but options are/were limited. In it's current state the pistol's safety (which is also a firing pin disconnect) is locked on as this pistol has a key-locked safety, plus a trigger lock, plus locked in a hard case, AND locked in a gun cabinet. I'm trying to make this as safe as I can given the circumstances
Attached photo showing the part I assume if I cut to remove I should be able to disassemble the pistol but is also as-I-believe-it-to-be not currently replaceable (Part #54)
Last set of days off I went to the range for some pistol shooting. When I went to shoot my Ruger P345 (which I've owned for 15+ years and put hundreds, if not thousands, of rounds through without a single issue) I inserted a loaded magazine and released the slide. Pulled the trigger and the gun did not fire. After keeping the pistol pointed downrange for a minute or two in case of hangfire, I removed the magazine and attempted to rack the slide. The slide will not budge a millimeter! No movement at all! So now I have a loaded round in the chamber and seemingly no way to clear it. I have reached out to Ruger customer service and they directed me to contact Gravel Agency as they are Canada's Ruger Warranty center; I am still waiting to hear back from them
I have thought of two courses of action, but will not try either one until I hear back from Gravel or an expert on here, in case a better solution is out there
1) Attempt to clear the stuck round by attempting to fire it again. Once the pistol jammed up, I was hesitant to fire it. But I could use a vise and a string to fire the pistol 'remotely' in case something goes awry
Pros: Easy to try
Cons: Could damage firearm in unexpected ways
2) Refer to attached photo, but if I can cut/gring/(choose your word) the slide release/take down pin (part number 54 on the attached picture) I should be able to remove the takedown pin and disassemble the firearm by pulling the slide off the front just like for cleaning, but without the need to move the slide rearward like is normally required to remove that pin.
Pros: Disassembly would show what's broken without having to fire the gun
Cons: I can't find that part in stock anywhere. Ruger simply asked me to ask Gravel without answering any of my other questions, such as "was this takedown pin/slide release lever used on any other pistols?" If it was, I could search for that part from a different pistol
To try and answer some questions I assume are coming:
Were you shooting factory ammo?
Yes, this was factory ammo. In particular, this is the last of the stock I have of the classic Canada Ammo 1911/ammo deal where they had crates of Norinco 45acp for dirt cheap. As mentioned above, I've probably put 1000-1500 rounds of this exact ammo through this pistol without any issues over the last decade
Why don't you just bring it to a gunsmith?
Obviously, I can't mail the firearm in it's current condition and the nearest smith is a multi-hour drive. I will do it if I need to, but if at all possible I would like to avoid it
You shouldn't have travelled home from the range with a loaded pistol
I know, but options are/were limited. In it's current state the pistol's safety (which is also a firing pin disconnect) is locked on as this pistol has a key-locked safety, plus a trigger lock, plus locked in a hard case, AND locked in a gun cabinet. I'm trying to make this as safe as I can given the circumstances
Attached photo showing the part I assume if I cut to remove I should be able to disassemble the pistol but is also as-I-believe-it-to-be not currently replaceable (Part #54)

Last edited: