Blue Brick
Member
Some old reviews.
by Dick Metcalf
Technical Editor
Shooting Times
Category: Gun Reviews
August 24, 2001
Ruger's .45 ACP Polymer Auto Pistol
Ruger’s P97 auto pistol is much more than merely a continuation of the P-Series. It offers the time-proven effectiveness of the .45 ACP cartridge in an innovative, high-tech, polymer frame, double-action design.
Ruger continued its 50th anniversary-year handgun introductions with the new P97 polymer frame/ stainless-steel .45 ACP semiauto pistol. It is the ninth specific model to be issued in the famed Ruger
P-Series line and brings the total of centerfire autoloader variations in the current Ruger catalog to 27. Although it is a direct descendant of the original P85 9mm auto design (introduced in 1987) via the aluminum-frame/stainless-slide P90 .45 ACP (introduced in 1991), the P97 is a product unto itself, containing several novel features and original design aspects with all major and most minor components designed and built specifically for it.
It is also, I will tell you right up front, the most durably accurate service-grade .45 auto I’ve ever reviewed, delivering average 25-yard full-magazine groups under 2.5 inches at 25 yards, even after 5000 rounds of military-style hardball ammunition. It is a damned fine sidearm.
Not Just A Continuation Of The P-Series
In overall visual appearance the P97 looks very much like all other Ruger P-Series guns, with the same basic configuration aspects and profile, and it closely resembles the polymer-frame P95 9mm introduced in 1996. In case you’re wondering, the number appearing in P-Series model designations refers to the year the product was developed, not to the year it was introduced. The standard P-Series three-dot drift-adjustable rear sight and pinned front blade are there, as is the ambidextrous magazine release. And like other current P-Series guns, the P97 comes supplied with two magazines, a comprehensive instruction manual, and a lockable storage case with padlock.
Ruger’s polymer-frame P97 is descended from the all-steel P85 and P90 models.
The P97 is available in two functional variations: a decock-only version and a double-action-only (DAO) model. In the decock-only version, a cocked hammer can be safely lowered by depressing either of the ambidextrous slide-mounted decocking levers. When released, these levers spring back to the “Fire” position. At the same time, the firing pin is blocked in position, preventing forward movement. After decocking, the pistol can be fired by a double-action pull of the trigger without further manipulation of the decocking lever, and only when the trigger is held fully rearward is the internal firing pin block deactivated.
By contrast, the DAO P97 has no external safety lever, decock lever, or full-cock hammer position at all. After firing, the gun is always automatically “at rest” with the firing pin blocked from forward movement by the internal safety. Only when the trigger is pulled completely to the rear (long-action DA-revolver style) for each shot can the gun fire. All DAO versions have a spurless hammer.
The P97 slide and barrel are constructed of Ruger’s well-known 400-series stainless steel, but the most interesting aspect of the P97 is its injection-molded polymer frame, which is not yet a common design feature for .45 ACP pistols in the firearms industry. There are a lot of 9mm and .40 S&W (and smaller calibers) polymer-frame guns on the market, but there are certainly not nearly as many polymer .45s. The reason is that polymer-frame .45 design implications are not an easy or direct carry-over from the 9mm/.40 platform (which employs same-geometry frame configurations for both chamberings). Plus lightweight .45 ACP pistols offer more apparent recoil (in user terms). Most observers thus assumed that when Ruger got around to introducing its second P-Series polymer pistol model, it would be a .40, not a .45. Ruger, in its typical fashion, surprised us.
Two functional variations of
the P97 are available: a decocker safety version or a double-action-only version.
The P97 frame material itself is a custom compounded, high-strength polymer with a long-strand fiberglass filler, which, as the company says, serves as “a natural shock absorber.” This filler interweaves during molding to produce some of the highest tensile and stiffness strengths available in an injection-molded material. The urethane-based resin that binds the filler together is corrosion and solvent resistant, lightweight, and compatible with most gun oils and lubricants.
The actual handgrip area of the frame is slimmer than any previous P-Series pistol. In fact, the frame overall is the same width as the slide; on all other P-Series pistols, metal-frame and polymer-frame alike, the frame is wider than the slide. This makes the P97 even more comfortable and controllable to the average size hand, yet it is still wide enough at the rear to allow recoil to be spread into the palm of the hand. Additionally, both the front- and backstraps as well as the sides of the frame are grooved to provide a controlled grip. Along with this narrower grip frame and shorter barrel (4.2 inches compared to 4.5 on most other P-Series guns), the decocking levers have also been reduced in width.
It’s lighter, slimmer, and shorter than most other P-Series guns, so Ruger terms the P97 a “compact midsize service pistol.” In firing, I was surprised by how comfortable the gun was, even with hot +P .45 ACP commercial loads, despite its relatively low-end 30.5-ounce weight.
SPECS
Ruger Model P97
.45 ACP Semiauto Pistol
Manufacturer ...........Sturm, Ruger & Co. Inc.
200 Ruger Rd.
Prescott , AZ 86301
Model .......................................P97
Operation ................Recoil-operated;
short-recoil tilting barrel
Caliber ................................45 ACP
Barrel length ................4.203 inches
Overall length ..................7.6 inches
Weight, empty ...............30.5 ounces
Safety .........................Ambidextrous
45-degree-arc short-throw
decocking levers; internal
firing pin block
Sights .............................Three-dot;
drift-adjustable rear;
pinned-in front semi-Patridge blade
Sight radius .................5.188 inches
Rifling .........6 grooves; 1:16 RH twist
Stocks .........Integral injection-molded
fiberglass-fill Urethane
Capacity ............................8 rounds
Finish .......Semigloss black polymer frame; bead-blasted stainless steel
Price..........................................$483
Mechanically Novel
In terms of mechanical operation, the P97 barrel tilts to lock and unlock, Browning-style—as do all P-Series pistols. However, the P97 uses a camblock system to cause this motion, instead of the 1911-type toggle-link employed on other P-Series gun. During the firing cycle, the P97 barrel is accelerated to a high speed as it moves back and down to unlock from the slide. Once it leaves contact with the slide, the barrel must be brought to a stop. As Ruger puts it in the P97 information release, “a novel system allows us to do so without impact damage to the polymer frame.” Novel, indeed. “Unique” or “innovative” would be more how I would put it since the P97 system is nothing like what Ruger uses on its polymer-frame 9mm P95.
The effect of barrel (and slide) impact has been a major engineering problem for polymer-frame autoloader designers since the moment Gaston Glock woke up from the middle of a good night’s sleep with the original “plastic gun” idea floating through his head. Many different ideas have been tried and discarded, and a wide variety of different solutions are used by various manufacturers for their varying-caliber, current-production polymer-frame pistols. For high slide/barrel-acceleration loads like the .45 ACP, the most common systems involve either a separate metal “recoil block” or camblock of some sort set into the polymer frame, or some type of cushioning system involving the recoil spring/guide rod assembly (or a combination of both). The P97 takes those concepts a step further.
The frontstrap, backstrap, and both sides of the P97’s slim polymer frame have molded-in grooves to provide a controlled grip.
On the P97 the linkless camming surfaces that guide and pull the unlocking barrel downward from the slide and absorb the impact of the barrel’s rearward recoil acceleration are an integral part of the rear portion of the recoil spring guide rod itself. In fact, this part—which on any other autoloader would be called the guide rod—Ruger calls the camblock (there is no part actually called a “guide rod” anywhere in the P97). The thing looks like an ordinary full-length guide rod with a big, cam-ramped lug on the end, and it’s a really neat design. The camblock is held in the frame by the crosspin of the slide stop. In firing, the barrel comes backward, is pulled away from the slide by the camming ramp, and is stopped by the recoil-spring-enclosed camblock, with no direct impact against the frame at all. It’s a slick idea. And it works. Plus the P97 still disassembles and reassembles in a completely conventional manner, just like any other P-Series pistol.
Able To Stand Up To 5000 Rounds
Shooting Times received a review sample P97 from Ruger’s initial production run, and I submitted it to a performance review program devised to assess the new polymer-frame design’s ability to digest varied and different types of current commercial .45 ACP ammunition and to demonstrate how well it would stand up to extended use. The core of the program would be 4000 rounds of Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ military-type ammunition generously provided by Winchester, supplemented by 100 function-test rounds each of nine different other commercial .45 ACP ammunition loads, plus an accuracy review with a selected half-dozen of those load variations representing different bullet weights, bullet configurations, and loading levels—all
of which would amount to a bit over 5000 rounds total shooting.
The nine additional function-test loads included CCI Blazer 200-grain TMJ Combat Match, Cor-Bon 165-grain JHP +P, Federal 180-grain Hydra-Shok JHP, Hornady 185-grain HP/XTP, PMC 230-grain Starfire JHP, Remington 185-grain BJHP (+P) Golden Saber, Speer 185-grain Gold Dot HP, Winchester 170-grain JSP SuperClean NT, and Winchester 230-grain SXT.
The solid slide/barrel interface and full-length guide
rod/camblock contribute to the strength of the P97.
I began by firing the review sample Model P97 with several magazines of the military-style Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ control load to check function and establish an initial velocity baseline, creating an initial accuracy profile with an average of five full-magazine groups at 25 yards from benchrest (all shooting was done with open sights). I was startled by the first group. Eight rounds into the target measuring only 2 1/8 inches center to center. That’s very good for a duty/service-grade centerfire auto, and for .45 ACP factory-production pistols is equaled in my experience only by the results I’ve obtained from semicustom 1911-type autoloaders such as the Kimber Gold Match models. After nine more full-magazine groups, my combined start-point average with this GI-type FMJ load was a trim 2.25 inches.
I next shot up the remainder of the first 100 rounds of the Winchester/USA control and proceeded to fire 100 rounds each of the nine other sample load types. At the 500-round point, I interrupted this process to record another velocity and group-average series with the 230-grain Winchester/USA ammo, before going on to complete firing with 100 rounds each of the remaining different loads.
Then, with 1000 rounds total through the gun, I grouped and chronographed it again with the Winchester/USA load, and I also fired a series of accuracy groups with the selected six load-design variations illustrated in the photo and listed in the chart on the next page. The process was completed by firing the remaining 4000 rounds of Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ with a chronograph and accuracy-firing series at each 1000-round mark. The gun was fired only about 250 to 300 rounds in each series (which amounts to a typical practice session for any serious handgun shooter), allowing the gun plenty of time to cool down and rest between extended firings. This was an accelerated normal use test, not a torture test, and it provides a quick avenue to see how healthy a gun remains while aging without stressing it beyond the design parameters for its intended use.
.45 ACP Ruger P97 1000-Round Performance
Factory Load
Velocity
(fps)
Velocity
Variation
(fps)
25-Yard
Accuracy
(Inches)
Federal 180-gr.
Hydra-Shok JHP
1071
34
2.50
Hornady 185-gr. HP/XTP
873
19
2.25
Remington 185-gr.
Golden Saber +P
1092
30
2.25
CCI Blazer 200-gr. TMJ Combat Match
936
3
2.75
PMC 230-gr. Starfire JHP
801
17
3.13
Winchester 230-gr. SXT
828
29
2.33
Overall average accuracy
2.54
NOTES: Accuracy is the average of five eight-round groups fired from a sandbag benchrest at 25 yards. Velocity is the average of eight rounds measured 10 feet from the gun’s muzzle.
The outcome of all this shooting is summarized in the chart at the end of this article. In more than 5000 total rounds fired with 10 different loads, the Ruger P97 experienced no failures to feed, fire, extract, eject, cycle, or function. None. And if you trace through the firing profile as illustrated, you’ll see something interesting. To wit: The gun essentially shot just as well after 5000 record rounds as it did when new.
This is not a typical pattern. I’ve done several dozen extended 5000-round and 10,000-round reviews of various makes, models, and chamberings of quality-made centerfire auto pistols over the past decade. In general, given a basically sound, well-made gun, accuracy performance will usually improve, sometimes dramatically, during an initial wear-in period of several hundred rounds, while velocity will often improve as a consequence of actual bore polishing from the bullets (if you don’t think “soft” copper-alloy bullet-jacket metal has any polishing effect on a tough steel bore, explain how dripping water erodes stone).
Averaging about 2.25 inches at 25 yards, the P97 was as
accurate after having 5000 rounds put through it as it was new from the box.
Then, if the design is sound and the material is strong, things will remain at a fairly even performance plateau on out. Poorly constructed guns will wear and deteriorate. The P97 stayed right where it started—very, very good—all the way through, with remarkable consistency. I’d stake my life on the reliability and accuracy of this gun any day of the week. The P97 gets two thumbs up, for sure.
When I called to relate my experience with the P97 to Ruger’s Bob Stutler, his mild response was, “Well, yeah, we make ’em strong.” He also politely allowed as how my 5000-round review (of which I had been so proud in the telling) was only a piddling portion of the extended endurance testing Ruger puts all its pistols through during development. So nothing I had to say was going to impress or hold any surprise for him. Still, I could tell he was particularly happy about how the P97 project had worked out for the Ruger design and production teams. “Yeah,” he chuckled, “this one really shoots good, doesn’t it?”
The American shooter’s long love affair with the .45 ACP auto pistol goes on unabated, even as the 21st century has overtaken us. Originally developed and favored by the U.S. military for nearly 90 years, .45-caliber autoloaders are compact, accurate, and powerful and continue to be favorites of sportsmen, law-enforcement officers, and military units the world over—in the field, on duty, and at the target range. The Ruger P97 adds yet another strong column of support to the .45 legend.
by Dick Metcalf
Technical Editor
Shooting Times
Category: Gun Reviews
August 24, 2001
Ruger's .45 ACP Polymer Auto Pistol
Ruger’s P97 auto pistol is much more than merely a continuation of the P-Series. It offers the time-proven effectiveness of the .45 ACP cartridge in an innovative, high-tech, polymer frame, double-action design.
Ruger continued its 50th anniversary-year handgun introductions with the new P97 polymer frame/ stainless-steel .45 ACP semiauto pistol. It is the ninth specific model to be issued in the famed Ruger
P-Series line and brings the total of centerfire autoloader variations in the current Ruger catalog to 27. Although it is a direct descendant of the original P85 9mm auto design (introduced in 1987) via the aluminum-frame/stainless-slide P90 .45 ACP (introduced in 1991), the P97 is a product unto itself, containing several novel features and original design aspects with all major and most minor components designed and built specifically for it.
It is also, I will tell you right up front, the most durably accurate service-grade .45 auto I’ve ever reviewed, delivering average 25-yard full-magazine groups under 2.5 inches at 25 yards, even after 5000 rounds of military-style hardball ammunition. It is a damned fine sidearm.
Not Just A Continuation Of The P-Series
In overall visual appearance the P97 looks very much like all other Ruger P-Series guns, with the same basic configuration aspects and profile, and it closely resembles the polymer-frame P95 9mm introduced in 1996. In case you’re wondering, the number appearing in P-Series model designations refers to the year the product was developed, not to the year it was introduced. The standard P-Series three-dot drift-adjustable rear sight and pinned front blade are there, as is the ambidextrous magazine release. And like other current P-Series guns, the P97 comes supplied with two magazines, a comprehensive instruction manual, and a lockable storage case with padlock.
Ruger’s polymer-frame P97 is descended from the all-steel P85 and P90 models.
The P97 is available in two functional variations: a decock-only version and a double-action-only (DAO) model. In the decock-only version, a cocked hammer can be safely lowered by depressing either of the ambidextrous slide-mounted decocking levers. When released, these levers spring back to the “Fire” position. At the same time, the firing pin is blocked in position, preventing forward movement. After decocking, the pistol can be fired by a double-action pull of the trigger without further manipulation of the decocking lever, and only when the trigger is held fully rearward is the internal firing pin block deactivated.
By contrast, the DAO P97 has no external safety lever, decock lever, or full-cock hammer position at all. After firing, the gun is always automatically “at rest” with the firing pin blocked from forward movement by the internal safety. Only when the trigger is pulled completely to the rear (long-action DA-revolver style) for each shot can the gun fire. All DAO versions have a spurless hammer.
The P97 slide and barrel are constructed of Ruger’s well-known 400-series stainless steel, but the most interesting aspect of the P97 is its injection-molded polymer frame, which is not yet a common design feature for .45 ACP pistols in the firearms industry. There are a lot of 9mm and .40 S&W (and smaller calibers) polymer-frame guns on the market, but there are certainly not nearly as many polymer .45s. The reason is that polymer-frame .45 design implications are not an easy or direct carry-over from the 9mm/.40 platform (which employs same-geometry frame configurations for both chamberings). Plus lightweight .45 ACP pistols offer more apparent recoil (in user terms). Most observers thus assumed that when Ruger got around to introducing its second P-Series polymer pistol model, it would be a .40, not a .45. Ruger, in its typical fashion, surprised us.
Two functional variations of
the P97 are available: a decocker safety version or a double-action-only version.
The P97 frame material itself is a custom compounded, high-strength polymer with a long-strand fiberglass filler, which, as the company says, serves as “a natural shock absorber.” This filler interweaves during molding to produce some of the highest tensile and stiffness strengths available in an injection-molded material. The urethane-based resin that binds the filler together is corrosion and solvent resistant, lightweight, and compatible with most gun oils and lubricants.
The actual handgrip area of the frame is slimmer than any previous P-Series pistol. In fact, the frame overall is the same width as the slide; on all other P-Series pistols, metal-frame and polymer-frame alike, the frame is wider than the slide. This makes the P97 even more comfortable and controllable to the average size hand, yet it is still wide enough at the rear to allow recoil to be spread into the palm of the hand. Additionally, both the front- and backstraps as well as the sides of the frame are grooved to provide a controlled grip. Along with this narrower grip frame and shorter barrel (4.2 inches compared to 4.5 on most other P-Series guns), the decocking levers have also been reduced in width.
It’s lighter, slimmer, and shorter than most other P-Series guns, so Ruger terms the P97 a “compact midsize service pistol.” In firing, I was surprised by how comfortable the gun was, even with hot +P .45 ACP commercial loads, despite its relatively low-end 30.5-ounce weight.
SPECS
Ruger Model P97
.45 ACP Semiauto Pistol
Manufacturer ...........Sturm, Ruger & Co. Inc.
200 Ruger Rd.
Prescott , AZ 86301
Model .......................................P97
Operation ................Recoil-operated;
short-recoil tilting barrel
Caliber ................................45 ACP
Barrel length ................4.203 inches
Overall length ..................7.6 inches
Weight, empty ...............30.5 ounces
Safety .........................Ambidextrous
45-degree-arc short-throw
decocking levers; internal
firing pin block
Sights .............................Three-dot;
drift-adjustable rear;
pinned-in front semi-Patridge blade
Sight radius .................5.188 inches
Rifling .........6 grooves; 1:16 RH twist
Stocks .........Integral injection-molded
fiberglass-fill Urethane
Capacity ............................8 rounds
Finish .......Semigloss black polymer frame; bead-blasted stainless steel
Price..........................................$483
Mechanically Novel
In terms of mechanical operation, the P97 barrel tilts to lock and unlock, Browning-style—as do all P-Series pistols. However, the P97 uses a camblock system to cause this motion, instead of the 1911-type toggle-link employed on other P-Series gun. During the firing cycle, the P97 barrel is accelerated to a high speed as it moves back and down to unlock from the slide. Once it leaves contact with the slide, the barrel must be brought to a stop. As Ruger puts it in the P97 information release, “a novel system allows us to do so without impact damage to the polymer frame.” Novel, indeed. “Unique” or “innovative” would be more how I would put it since the P97 system is nothing like what Ruger uses on its polymer-frame 9mm P95.
The effect of barrel (and slide) impact has been a major engineering problem for polymer-frame autoloader designers since the moment Gaston Glock woke up from the middle of a good night’s sleep with the original “plastic gun” idea floating through his head. Many different ideas have been tried and discarded, and a wide variety of different solutions are used by various manufacturers for their varying-caliber, current-production polymer-frame pistols. For high slide/barrel-acceleration loads like the .45 ACP, the most common systems involve either a separate metal “recoil block” or camblock of some sort set into the polymer frame, or some type of cushioning system involving the recoil spring/guide rod assembly (or a combination of both). The P97 takes those concepts a step further.
The frontstrap, backstrap, and both sides of the P97’s slim polymer frame have molded-in grooves to provide a controlled grip.
On the P97 the linkless camming surfaces that guide and pull the unlocking barrel downward from the slide and absorb the impact of the barrel’s rearward recoil acceleration are an integral part of the rear portion of the recoil spring guide rod itself. In fact, this part—which on any other autoloader would be called the guide rod—Ruger calls the camblock (there is no part actually called a “guide rod” anywhere in the P97). The thing looks like an ordinary full-length guide rod with a big, cam-ramped lug on the end, and it’s a really neat design. The camblock is held in the frame by the crosspin of the slide stop. In firing, the barrel comes backward, is pulled away from the slide by the camming ramp, and is stopped by the recoil-spring-enclosed camblock, with no direct impact against the frame at all. It’s a slick idea. And it works. Plus the P97 still disassembles and reassembles in a completely conventional manner, just like any other P-Series pistol.
Able To Stand Up To 5000 Rounds
Shooting Times received a review sample P97 from Ruger’s initial production run, and I submitted it to a performance review program devised to assess the new polymer-frame design’s ability to digest varied and different types of current commercial .45 ACP ammunition and to demonstrate how well it would stand up to extended use. The core of the program would be 4000 rounds of Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ military-type ammunition generously provided by Winchester, supplemented by 100 function-test rounds each of nine different other commercial .45 ACP ammunition loads, plus an accuracy review with a selected half-dozen of those load variations representing different bullet weights, bullet configurations, and loading levels—all
of which would amount to a bit over 5000 rounds total shooting.
The nine additional function-test loads included CCI Blazer 200-grain TMJ Combat Match, Cor-Bon 165-grain JHP +P, Federal 180-grain Hydra-Shok JHP, Hornady 185-grain HP/XTP, PMC 230-grain Starfire JHP, Remington 185-grain BJHP (+P) Golden Saber, Speer 185-grain Gold Dot HP, Winchester 170-grain JSP SuperClean NT, and Winchester 230-grain SXT.
The solid slide/barrel interface and full-length guide
rod/camblock contribute to the strength of the P97.
I began by firing the review sample Model P97 with several magazines of the military-style Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ control load to check function and establish an initial velocity baseline, creating an initial accuracy profile with an average of five full-magazine groups at 25 yards from benchrest (all shooting was done with open sights). I was startled by the first group. Eight rounds into the target measuring only 2 1/8 inches center to center. That’s very good for a duty/service-grade centerfire auto, and for .45 ACP factory-production pistols is equaled in my experience only by the results I’ve obtained from semicustom 1911-type autoloaders such as the Kimber Gold Match models. After nine more full-magazine groups, my combined start-point average with this GI-type FMJ load was a trim 2.25 inches.
I next shot up the remainder of the first 100 rounds of the Winchester/USA control and proceeded to fire 100 rounds each of the nine other sample load types. At the 500-round point, I interrupted this process to record another velocity and group-average series with the 230-grain Winchester/USA ammo, before going on to complete firing with 100 rounds each of the remaining different loads.
Then, with 1000 rounds total through the gun, I grouped and chronographed it again with the Winchester/USA load, and I also fired a series of accuracy groups with the selected six load-design variations illustrated in the photo and listed in the chart on the next page. The process was completed by firing the remaining 4000 rounds of Winchester/USA 230-grain FMJ with a chronograph and accuracy-firing series at each 1000-round mark. The gun was fired only about 250 to 300 rounds in each series (which amounts to a typical practice session for any serious handgun shooter), allowing the gun plenty of time to cool down and rest between extended firings. This was an accelerated normal use test, not a torture test, and it provides a quick avenue to see how healthy a gun remains while aging without stressing it beyond the design parameters for its intended use.
.45 ACP Ruger P97 1000-Round Performance
Factory Load
Velocity
(fps)
Velocity
Variation
(fps)
25-Yard
Accuracy
(Inches)
Federal 180-gr.
Hydra-Shok JHP
1071
34
2.50
Hornady 185-gr. HP/XTP
873
19
2.25
Remington 185-gr.
Golden Saber +P
1092
30
2.25
CCI Blazer 200-gr. TMJ Combat Match
936
3
2.75
PMC 230-gr. Starfire JHP
801
17
3.13
Winchester 230-gr. SXT
828
29
2.33
Overall average accuracy
2.54
NOTES: Accuracy is the average of five eight-round groups fired from a sandbag benchrest at 25 yards. Velocity is the average of eight rounds measured 10 feet from the gun’s muzzle.
The outcome of all this shooting is summarized in the chart at the end of this article. In more than 5000 total rounds fired with 10 different loads, the Ruger P97 experienced no failures to feed, fire, extract, eject, cycle, or function. None. And if you trace through the firing profile as illustrated, you’ll see something interesting. To wit: The gun essentially shot just as well after 5000 record rounds as it did when new.
This is not a typical pattern. I’ve done several dozen extended 5000-round and 10,000-round reviews of various makes, models, and chamberings of quality-made centerfire auto pistols over the past decade. In general, given a basically sound, well-made gun, accuracy performance will usually improve, sometimes dramatically, during an initial wear-in period of several hundred rounds, while velocity will often improve as a consequence of actual bore polishing from the bullets (if you don’t think “soft” copper-alloy bullet-jacket metal has any polishing effect on a tough steel bore, explain how dripping water erodes stone).
Averaging about 2.25 inches at 25 yards, the P97 was as
accurate after having 5000 rounds put through it as it was new from the box.
Then, if the design is sound and the material is strong, things will remain at a fairly even performance plateau on out. Poorly constructed guns will wear and deteriorate. The P97 stayed right where it started—very, very good—all the way through, with remarkable consistency. I’d stake my life on the reliability and accuracy of this gun any day of the week. The P97 gets two thumbs up, for sure.
When I called to relate my experience with the P97 to Ruger’s Bob Stutler, his mild response was, “Well, yeah, we make ’em strong.” He also politely allowed as how my 5000-round review (of which I had been so proud in the telling) was only a piddling portion of the extended endurance testing Ruger puts all its pistols through during development. So nothing I had to say was going to impress or hold any surprise for him. Still, I could tell he was particularly happy about how the P97 project had worked out for the Ruger design and production teams. “Yeah,” he chuckled, “this one really shoots good, doesn’t it?”
The American shooter’s long love affair with the .45 ACP auto pistol goes on unabated, even as the 21st century has overtaken us. Originally developed and favored by the U.S. military for nearly 90 years, .45-caliber autoloaders are compact, accurate, and powerful and continue to be favorites of sportsmen, law-enforcement officers, and military units the world over—in the field, on duty, and at the target range. The Ruger P97 adds yet another strong column of support to the .45 legend.