The Ruger Gunsite was specifically designed around Cooper's concept of a Scout Rifle by some of his closest friends at Gunsite and Ruger. The Ruger Gunsite features bulletproof reliability, good usable accuracy, and provides for various magazine capacities. The rifle does all this while delivering the common sense scout rifle design elements that make it handy and user friendly. If you were only going to own one bolt action rifle, the Ruger Gunsite Scout should be it.
This collaboration produced a great version of the Cooper Scout rifle which matches up well to his original guidelines. My version lacked a few tweaks after the initial review period to make it fit the scouting purpose. It needed a great sling, a sensible optic to extend the capable range of the gun, a better muzzle brake, improved shooter comfort, better trigger, and smaller polymer magazines with full capacity. For the extras, I fired up the world wide interweb and headed over to Brownells.com… becuase, ya know they everything.
CARRYOVER UPGRADES
In my original review of the Ruger Gunsite Scout rifle I featured a Hi-Lux 2-7 scope and Andy's Leather Rhodesian Scout sling.
An Andy’s Leather Rhodesian Scout Sling was carried over in the redue. I personally consider one of the finest leather slings you can put on a rifle. Think of it as the offspring of a National match and easily useable field sling. Technically it is the closest sling you will get to a Cooper recommended Ching Sling without adding extra swivel studs and a triple sling mount. It is a beautiful sling and has delivered everything I could possibly ask for from a sling supported shooting position. It does take a little practice to figure it out, however once you are locked in, you see the advantages downrange want this on every rifle you own.
CHEEK PAD
BARREL FREE-FLOATING
My original Ruger Gunsite scout had questionable barrel floating. Yeah, yeah... Ruger said they addressed it, however mine was not passing the free-float paper test by a long shot. 30 minutes later after a little sanding with sandpaper wrapped around a dowel rod and I had a barrel which was without argument free-floated. I did see more consistent groups after reassembly and testing so it was worth the trouble.
MORE MAGS
The factory steel Ruger Gunsite Magazines are well made and reliable, but a bit bulky and expensive considering other options on the market. I am not sure everyone knows that Ruger choose to use an AICS compatible magazine which is the same magazine used on most “bottom metal equipped” short action .308 Remington style sniper systems. There are now a ton of companies who make magazines such as MDT, Alpha, AICS, and even now Magpul. I have had good luck with all the AICS magazines I have tested in the Ruger Scout, however my two favorites are Alpha Mags and Ruger polymer magazines. Both of these magazines deliver a full ten rounds, but they are double stack magazines which means they are about an inch shorter than the factory magazines. Less bulk is a great thing. The Alpha Mags are definitely the best and highest quality magazines out there for AICS compatible firearms, however they $62 each. The Ruger Polymer Scout mags deliver the same functionality but sell for around $30 on Brownells and are available in 3, 5 and 10-round options. I added a 5 and 10 round mag to my cart and continued shopping. The 5-round magazine pictured provides a hunting legal magazine capacity (see your local laws) and is very trim. The 3-round version is almost flush fit.
MUZZLE BRAKE
TRIGGER UPGRADE
The last upgrade I added to the cart was a new Timney Ruger MKII trigger. This trigger is usually an easy upgrade for most other Ruger MKII format rifles, however not so much for the Gunsite Scout rifle. It was a far more involved install than I had imagined, but when it was done… WOW!
The old trigger assembly was removed and replaced with the Timney Ruger MKII trigger and fit into the action just as it should. Then the fitting started. The safety tung has to be fitted and matched to your safety lever. This is something that is done usually by hand at the factory or by a competent gunsmith, but in this case it was a slow tuning process of using a file to hand fit the safety tung. Once I had a tight safety throw that will did not allow the gun to fire, I moved on to fitting the different shaped and wider Timney trigger into the Gunsite stock. This required a significant bit of Dremel work on the trigger guard and stock. After the final fitting and reassembly, the trigger feel was drastically improved. Another benefit is that the Timney trigger is adjustable from 1.5 lb-3 lbs. I will note that unless you have done this type of hand fitting upgrade before, I would strongly recommend turning the process over to a gunsmith as you could end up with a rifle which is unsafe.
FINAL THOUGHTS
From stock to upgraded, the Ruger Gunsite Scout Redue delivered the functionality and accuracy I was hopeful of on the factory rifle with my initial upgrades. The accuracy improving trigger and free float barrel upgrades improved 100-yard groups down to solid 1" groups from the 1.2"-1.5" groups with factory ammunition. Interestingly Hornady 178gr Match ammo delivered a few groups just under the 1" mark pretty consistently. Despite the extra barrel free-floating work and hours on the Timney trigger install, the 20%-30% group reduction sizes tell the story that the time and expense were worth it.
The muzzle brake delivered a pretty huge recoil reduction which makes actually shooting more than a few magazines actually fun. The Ruger Polymer magazines are lighter and more compact at a price that is affordable.
SPECS
Caliber .308 Win
Cap. 10
Stock Black Laminate
Front Sight Post
Rear Sight Adjustable
Length of Pull 12.75" - 14.25"
Material Stainless Steel
Barrel Matte Stainless 18.00"
Length 39.50" - 41.00"
Weight 7.10 lbs.
Option Right-Handed
MSRP $1099.00
Leatherwood Hi-Lux 2-7 LER Scope - $153.99
Andy’s Leather Sling - $55
Hornady Cheek Rest - $31
Brownells Sourced Products
Timney Ruger MKII Trigger - $125
Miculek .308 Brake/Compensator - $59
Ruger Polymer Magazines - $30 each
SOURCES
Ruger - http://www.ruger.com Hi-Lux Leatherwood - http://hi-luxoptics.com Andy's Leather - http://www.andysleather.com/ Hornady - http://hornady.com/ Timney - http://www.timneytriggers.com/ Brownells - Buy at Brownells.com and support MajorPandemic.comMiculek - http://www.miculek.com/
Check BROWNELLS for the best deals on firearms and accessories
Ruger - http://www.ruger.com Hi-Lux Leatherwood - http://hi-luxoptics.com Andy's Leather - http://www.andysleather.com/ Hornady - http://hornady.com/ Timney - http://www.timneytriggers.com/ Brownells - Buy at Brownells.com and support MajorPandemic.comMiculek - http://www.miculek.com/
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nice
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