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By 2010, the Red Label's sticker price had grown to $1,899, and production had dropped to only 1,323 guns. Although originally conceived as a quality affordable American made alternative to pricey hand-made European shotguns, competition from imported brands had increased substantially. Production of the Red Label was discontinued by Ruger in 2011.
Ruger Hawkeye; Ruger MP9; Ruger Red Label This page was last edited on 22 November 2024, at 07:23 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Ruger PC4 GR (US – Semi-Automatic Carbine – .40 S&W) Shotguns; Ruger Gold Label (US – Side by Side Shotgun – 12 Gauge) Ruger Red Label (US – Over/Under Shotgun – 12 Gauge, 20 Gauge, 28 Gauge) Submachine Guns; Ruger MP9 (US – Submachine Gun – 9×19mm Parabellum) Rung Paisarn Heavy Industries; Rifles
Ruger had a division known as Ruger Golf, making steel and titanium castings for golf clubs made by a number of different brands in the 1990s. [12] Sturm, Ruger stock has been publicly traded since 1969 and became a New York Stock Exchange company in 1990 (NYSE:RGR). After Alex Sturm's death in 1951, William B. Ruger continued to direct the ...
Ruger Red Label; S. Standard Manufacturing DP-12; Stevens Model 311; Stoeger Coach Gun; W. Weatherby Orion; Winchester Model 21 This page was last edited on 15 ...
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William Batterman Ruger (June 21, 1916 – July 6, 2002) was an American firearms designer and entrepreneur, who partnered with Alexander McCormick Sturm to establish Sturm, Ruger & Company in 1949. Their first product was the Ruger Standard, the most popular .22 caliber target pistol ever made in the United States. After Sturm’s death in ...
A division of Canadian Industries Ltd. formed in late 1939 to produce munitions for the projected war effort. In 1941 they began to make high-quality boxer-primed .303 "Red Label"-type ammunition for use in aircraft machineguns. In 1942 they made the first Canadian government-manufactured 9×19mm Parabellum cartridges for Commonwealth forces.