![]() ![]() The Ruger PC Carbine also features the same bolt lockback and automatic bolt-release feature of the newer Ruger 10/22 rifles. The trigger and trigger safety should feel familiar to all the Ruger 10/22 rimfire owners, as should the charging handle placement and operation. 22 LR rounds, then it should be more than sufficient for centerfire rounds. It seems logical, if the 10/22-design trigger is reliably igniting hard-to-detonate. Though I have not attempted to swap out an aftermarket 10/22 trigger, the trigger unit appears to be compatible with 10/22 triggers.īased on the feel of the very good trigger, I probably would not waste the money on an upgrade. The rear sight is precision-adjustable with marked increments of windage and elevation. It is solid and super fast to assemble and disassemble. The Ruger PC Carbine takedown action is rock solid and looks like a Ruger 10/22-TakeDown and an H&K tri-lugs setup had a baby. They feature the more refined fit and feel precision and machining finish, like was seen on the Ruger Precision Rifles, that just was not possible on the old Ruger equipment. The gun features that apocalypse-surviving rugged Ruger feel at 6.8lbs with the upgraded machining design appearances of being made with the “new Ruger machining capabilities.” That is a mouthful of features for a gun with a street price under $600. The Ruger PC Carbine offers fully-ambidextrous controls, shares the 10/22-based trigger design, features a takedown barrel design similar to Ruger’s 10/22-TD rimfire, has a trigger that feels better than any 10/22 factory Ruger trigger I have tried, a warp-free synthetic stock with front picatinny rail and user-configurable spacers similar to the Ruger Scout rifles, integrated top picatinny rail, ambi-configurable controls, fluted barrel with 1/2×28 threaded muzzle, fully-adjustable rear peep/ghost sight, protected scout-style front scout sight, and SR-series & GLOCK 9mm magazine well adapters all included. The Ruger PC Carbine rifle will likely retail on the street for just under $600, and I can imagine it easily being one of Ruger’s biggest sellers in 2018. The brilliant 10/22-influenced design is everything we could hope for in an inexpensive, reliable and easily serviceable $650 MSRP rifle. ![]()
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