Ruger American Ranch 762x39 Quality Control

Kungpow

New member
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Location
BC
Hello everyone,

I bought Ruger American Ranch in 7.62x39 as I unboxed it I noticed that there were a few things that didn't look right.

Now that it is in my possession, should I submit it for a warranty?
Is this acceptable quality control for $800?


https://imgur.com/a/IuI4LxH
 
Mine was the same… but I paid 600 years ago. For 800 that’s unacceptable. I was very disappointed with the flexible tupperwear stocks. The action too a million cycles to smooth out as well… I kept saying for 179 dollars more I could have got a Tikka.
 
The stock is tupperware and you are probably not going to get a replacement that is any better. The scuffs are cosmetic so it depends how much the cosmetics matter to you. I use Ruger American .223's for range blasters and they get beat up pretty good so it wouldn't matter to me but that doesn't mean it shouldn't matter to you. You might want ot start with the store you bought it from, the scuffs look like it could have been the bolt bouncing around in the box during transport.
 
Ruger American's are low grade budget guns IMO. Standard models aren't worth the money. Ruger American's not using the Magpul stock and using the standard one are well known to have issues with barrels touching the horrible clam shell stock. In short their standard stocks are absolute trash and Ruger knows about it. Which is why they now sell them with the magpul stocks all ready equipped. That bolt handle looks like #### too. I would say go for a refund and avoid any firearm using clam shell stocks, like the Ruger American, or the Savage a22 unless buying a more expensive model that doesn't have stock issues. With the quality a base Ruger American is pumping out, I wouldn't pay anything above $500 for one.

If you really want a 7.62x39 bolt gun try to buy a CZ 527 used. Will serve you much better.
 
Last edited:
Don't listen to the nay sayers.

Mine looks almost the same. It is a 5 min fix, use some 2,000 wet sand on the bolt and reblue 2 or 3 times, for the barrel, just go over with some acetone and some blueing as well. Not worth the hassle. The replacement will look the same.

PS: The rebluing needs to be done over the whole bolt and barrel. I just did it on mine in 5 minutes after reading your post, lol.
 
Last edited:
That’s about what you can expect from a budget gun. You’d be better off with a $600 savage. Believe me, I had an American ranch. Very accurate, otherwise underwhelming in every way. I don’t own it anymore!
 
Don't listen to the nay sayers.

Mine looks almost the same. It is a 5 min fix, use some 2,000 wet sand on the bolt and reblue 2 or 3 times, for the barrel, just go over with some acetone and some blueing as well. Not worth the hassle. The replacement will look the same.

An 800 dollar rifle shouldn’t need mods…
 
That’s about what you can expect from a budget gun. You’d be better off with a $600 savage. Believe me, I had an American ranch. Very accurate, otherwise underwhelming in every way. I don’t own it anymore!

For 800 you would get a very nice savage, maybe even stainless.
 
For 800 you would get a very nice savage, maybe even stainless.

I agree that they are too high priced. I paid $740 for mine last month, taxes and shipping in.

And help me please. Which Savage in 7.62x39 would that be? The last Savage Scout in that caliber was 1,100 from what I saw. And it is tested well below the Ruger and yeah, a Scout rifle. The other alternative is the BCL Bison and priced higher.

The barrel on mine is exactly centre and not touching the stock.

And I love the threaded barrel in 16 inch.

And CZ, which model please. The old CZ 5xx are selling for double in the used market.
 
Last edited:
For 800 you would get a very nice savage, maybe even stainless.

I have never been a fan of either Ruger or Savage rifles, other than their high end pieces, such as Ruger No1, Ruger Red Label shotguns and Savage 99 of good quality. Even those all needed work to get them to shoot to the standards of those produced by most off the shelf Winchester and Remington etc.

Low quality European or other offshore brands don't give any better quality for the money.

Also, other than the 99s there is no such thing as a "very nice" Savage bolt rifle as they are just FUGLY. Savage shotguns are hohum quality as well.

$800 is a lot of money for some folks, for others it's pocket change.

OP, you could have bought a HOWA for similar dollars and would have been much happier.

Don't shoot it and send it back, telling them the quality promised in their ads is lacking and buy a Howa in the same chambering.
 
While not exhaustive, I looked at the Ruger American, Howa and Mossberg. I thought the Mossberg was the nicest.
 
I have never been a fan of either Ruger or Savage rifles, other than their high end pieces, such as Ruger No1, Ruger Red Label shotguns and Savage 99 of good quality. Even those all needed work to get them to shoot to the standards of those produced by most off the shelf Winchester and Remington etc.

Low quality European or other offshore brands don't give any better quality for the money.

Also, other than the 99s there is no such thing as a "very nice" Savage bolt rifle as they are just FUGLY. Savage shotguns are hohum quality as well.

$800 is a lot of money for some folks, for others it's pocket change.

OP, you could have bought a HOWA for similar dollars and would have been much happier.

Don't shoot it and send it back, telling them the quality promised in their ads is lacking and buy a Howa in the same chambering.

There was a thread one month ago:

https://www.canadiangunnutz.com/for...39-W-20-Inch-Heavy-Barrel?highlight=howa+mini




Originally Posted by blakeyboy View Post
This if funny, is it April 1st or something? They say 95% of all automobiles are bought based on looks, so only 5% use their logical brain, you showed your colours here with that last part of your comment. Do you own all the rifles being discussed here?

I have a bone in this fight. I have had 3 howa mini's and 3 ruger rar's. Still have 1 howa mini and 3 ruger rar's. Here's what you need to know about howa. The only part they got right was the action, the bolt, and the barrel. Everything else is crap. They are accurate but it's amazing how much garbage people will put up with for accuracy and think that accuracy equals quality. Barf. Anyhow, lets start with the stock, you got a svelte little piece of metal stuffed in a 34.5 oz pig of a piece of plastic, like putting a honda 4 cylinder turbo into a bread van, quality from steel to stock difference on a scale of 1-10 is about a 20. Next lets move to the bottom plastic and magazine. You got a 5 round magazine that's just as porky and cheap as the stock and it's about the right size to hold 10, sadly the finicky little push feed needs a delicate bottom pressure from the rounds below, any the plastic surround has cracked for so many guys, the magazines have proven unreliable for many (tipping rounds down at the shot) and that removes hunting reliability (range toy only confidence). Now lets look at the trigger, the only thing it does right, like the action/barrel (accurate) is it breaks at the right weights and adjusts to the right weights and is reasonably crisp, but the blade feels like a gas station cap guns blade, two stage feels cheap as well, and the stamped metal safety is a proper joke. Lastly, for those willing to spend triple the original price to 'do it right the second time' Legacy sports doesn't import the stainless versions of these, huge fail in this massive North American market. I've done two customs builds and sold them, proof carbon barrel on one, an ultralight chassis on another, and just finishing up the final one I had in an ultralight compact sheep hunters theme (think Kimber Montana) so I've spent the coin and know what I'm talking about. You need to buy the Pendleton stock, or stocky's carbon and there are other stocks from bell & Carlson etc. then you need to find aluminum bottom metal kits, couple guys make hinged floor plate, one guy makes a cz 527 magazine conversion as well as a blind bottom along with the hinged, then you'd wanna talk to timney to get a proper trigger and safety. All of that would be worth it on a stainless base...maybe. As it is I'll be 99% of the way there (just no timney yet but if she shoots how I hope then I may finish it all the way with the trigger).

The ruger, needs absolutely nothing. The money you spend to buy one is all you need to spend. No smithing, no replacement parts, nothing. Trigger gets down to 3 lbs. They shoot. The stock is 1000x better and completely adequate and nice for the price point. Mount a scope and use it. It's a working mans rig and is perfect for it's price point. The howa starts at the same price point and you have to basically build a whole new rifle around the barrelled action to get a sense of a proper rifle not some Mattel plastic toy. Mine are all in 6.5 Grendel, but same x39 case.

This little carbon howa I'm building will be triple the cost and headache to get right as compared to the ruger. It's broke in, range days planned to see how it shoots, zero, collect drop data to set up and then will hunt it potentially or it's going down the road at a huge loss to me...again. I wanted to love them as the cartridge is what I'm about. One would be better off if seeking a proper high quality rifle in this cartridge in different platforms altogether, sako 85 XS action, even an older ruger 77 boat paddle x39 stainless would be a dandy start (barrel and wood stock with red recoil pad like rugers should be) and even a cz 527 American can be done way better and of higher quality. I will never buy another howa, ever.

yup, have heard that only accurate rifles are interesting, but interesting covers anything, in this case...it's an interesting piece of sh1t

what I like and appreciate from the ruger is that it's honest, needs nothing, fits it's value/function perfectly, the howa is not, it should be a $200 gun to start because you still spend more than the cost of a ruger to get it in the same league, you can't build an ultralight out of the ruger as it's got a beefy action/barrel but if that's not on the menu for project then I'd take the ruger platform over the howa every day that ends in y and twice on Sundays

you've all been warned, protect your wallets, a howa done mostly right is no bargain, you'd be better off chasing down other platforms period
 
That inletting job is pretty sloppy but I've seen the same on pricier wood stocked guns too TBH. Guess what? One of em was on a Howa Mini with a walnut stock. Cost a lil more than the Ruger ;) Seen it on CZs too.

Honestly I'd touch it with a file and not care any more than that. Or swap a stock with someone someday.

The bolt handles gonna look like that after you shoot about it.

To each their own and its YOUR opinion that counts but I wouldn't lose sleep over it.


The difference between the Ruger American and Savage Scout in 7.62x39 seems to be that the Ruger doesn't just hold 3 rounds and work a lot better with only 2 and break magazines. That was the deal killer for me. I genuinely like Axis rifles apart from their cheap matte "blue" finish and spotty ejection in 223 Rem.
 
I agree that they are too high priced. I paid $740 for mine last month, taxes and shipping in.

And help me please. Which Savage in 7.62x39 would that be? The last Savage Scout in that caliber was 1,100 from what I saw. And it is tested well below the Ruger and yeah, a Scout rifle. The other alternative is the BCL Bison and priced higher.

The barrel on mine is exactly centre and not touching the stock.

And I love the threaded barrel in 16 inch.

And CZ, which model please. The old CZ 5xx are selling for double in the used market.

The only other CZ option would be the CZ 600 trail, and they are going for around $1400. I also think we are only getting the .223 version to start. So getting one in 7.62x39 would be hard at this time. The 527 was really the only traditional 7.62x39 bolt action I would of considered worth owning. It truly is sad they had to go and cancel them, and all the other 500's for the generally poor 600 lineup.

That's not to say the Ruger can't shoot, or work right. I have a buddy who put one into a Magpul stock and it works great. The Magpul stock made it fit nice and IMO made it a much better gun. But the original stock was garbage and got thrown out into the trash the moment he took it off. And the fact he even had to throw out a new stock and buy a new one is ridiculous. IMO for the price it's unacceptable.

It sucks these days with Sub $1000 rifles. Everything has spiraled to as cheap to make as possible. Leaving large gaps in quality, for each one of the brands trying to cut corners and costs. The Savages have a horrible cheap finish. The Ruger has cheap trash level stocks that deserve to be in the land fill. Every brand has their own issues. All of them stem from cost cutting, by removing quality from their products.
 
Last edited:
They should have made the stock from a glass reinforced plastic. Instead we get twisted up cheesey ####. My stock is the same, a twist in the fore end, and it touches one side of the barrel.
 
Back
Top Bottom