Painkillers
What barrel length on your ruger and what kind of load are you shooting?
5.5 inch, with a Bisley handle. I still allow the gun to roll up on recoil, but I appreciate the extra handle purchase from the traditional plow handle. The gun is stainless.
I haven't started handloading for 45 Colt yet, so I'm shooting factory brass loads for now while I collect my spent brass. Today I shot two boxes of Sellier and Bellot, Lead Flat Nose (LFN), 250 grain, 16.2g. Oddly, there is no advertized chrony speed on the boxes. All I can anecdotally offer is that they were hard hitting, with a soft recoil. I've shot much stouter loads in 45 Colt, again though, no noticeable change in point of impact from my point of aim. They just hit harder (...and get there faster I suppose?).
I don't spend enough time with SA revolvers, I like them...I even fanned off 3 rounds today which is really fun and really, really, inaccurate, but fun.
I know the round can be loaded up to nearly .44 REM MAG ballistics, and if any gun could take a steady diet of such loads, it'd be the Ruger line and who knows I may load some spicy rounds to see how they react, but for now, I'm happy to just shoot factory loads.
When Hickok is talking about hold overs and Kentucky windage, he's taking incredibly long shots. That large gong of his has got to be more than 100m out there. The sights on any pistol aren't going to put you on a target out there. He knows the drop on a 250 grain projectile (to use 45 Colt as an example) because he's shot thousands of rounds with those pistols. He therefore knows to aim over the gong a foot or more to allow the bullet to fall on the gong. His comments about "windage" could be from the wind, but more likely he's commenting on how that particular lot of ammo that he's shooting seems to print, so he compensates. It's all just a high speed dart game.
I don't shoot handguns much past 7m (21 feet).