February 20, 2014, 01:53 PM | #1 |
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My new Ruger P90
I bought a used, good condition Ruger P90 from Gunbroker a while ago with the intention of refinishing it to my liking. The frame was cerakoted semi gloss Socom Blue and the slide blasted to a dull grey, and I spent a few hours polishing it up with successive grit sandpaper and Mother Mag polish, and installed a pair of Mike's grips and a heavier recoil spring. The machine marks and the pitting imperfections (all invisible until the polishing) make it a little incomplete, but I think I like it best like that. Most people don't seem to bother with these models. Here are the pics of the results.
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February 20, 2014, 02:20 PM | #2 |
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but big
Bull-strong (originally designed for the 10mm cartridge), durable, reliable, accurate.
Nice work
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February 20, 2014, 02:25 PM | #3 |
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Great job! I always loved those.
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February 20, 2014, 08:16 PM | #4 |
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Did you polish the guide rod as well? Mine skuffed up pretty badly the first time I shot it.
Nicely polished. It kind of gives it an antiqued look (even though, of course, it's not that old).
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February 20, 2014, 11:44 PM | #5 |
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I ended up liking the antique type look more then what it would be if it was a flawless mirror finish.
The guide rod was polished easily, but it is behaving oddly. Maybe I just don't know enough about aluminum but when I took the pics it had only been sitting on the shelf for a week after I polished it, and the guide rod has blurring and scratches, like it was oxidizing. I was under the impression that should take months if not years |
February 20, 2014, 11:46 PM | #6 |
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Nice job refinishing. If you haven't shot it yet, or another one, you are going to love it. I got mine used too and love taking it to the range.
Shoot Safe and Often |
February 21, 2014, 03:29 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
Sure the Sig guys may smirk when I pull out my ol' P90 at the range, but it doesn't bother me. I just chuckle as I recall reading once of Mr. Massad Ayoob showing up at competitions with the humble P90. The other competitors giving the 'O crap' look as they realized they were going to be out done by the P90 of all guns. Enjoy it. Oh, and shoot some hot rounds through it and listen as it says: " Is that all you've got?" |
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February 23, 2014, 06:57 AM | #8 |
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I have always liked the P-series guns, my sister has my Dad's old P-89 I gave him years ago. Very underrated and affordable on the used market!
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February 23, 2014, 08:09 PM | #9 |
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I have a Ruger P-90. It shoots well, runs always and it is accurate. But the trigger is pretty horrendous. I have read that swapping it out for a Ruger P-95 trigger is the ticket for improvement and there's very little work that needs to be done for the swap. However, it does seem like getting your hands on a Ruger P-95 trigger isn't the easiest thing to do.
Your pistol -- I really like the color change on the frame, although it definitely appears as black and not any manner of blue to my eyes, at least with these photos. But major improvement in how it looks. I can't say the same for the slide, I really don't care for the bright, shiny, almost mirror look to it, but to each his own. Your work certainly looks well done, I just don't care for the look of the slide. Mine doesn't get a heap of range time. My log says it's eaten only 1,375 since I got it (barely used) four years ago. But for the $325 I spent on it, I'm happy with the purchase. I wouldn't hesitate to trust it if I found myself in that position, but I do have to relay a short tale: I also replaced the OEM grips (those grips are horrendous in look & feel!) but I did mine with a set of NOS Pachmayr. And in my first range trip out, it was massive, fall-on-my-face FAILURE. Quite simply, the rubber grip was interfering with the trigger bar/linkage. I didn't realize that on the range, I simply thought the gun went to the crapper on me. Further investigation revealed the problem and a lot of very methodical work with an X-acto razor fixed everything and not even a hiccup since that time, and that was a thousand rounds ago. So... please check, re-check, and check again to ensure that any replacement grip panels, especially rubber or anything that may bend, swell, or be gorilla-gripped to deform and change shape does NOT interfere with the linkage, or you may also have a day of frustration on the range. You will notice that the OEM grips are rock-solid and won't be gripped or squeezed out of shape. If you replace them with anything pliable, you can have complete failures if they interact with that linkage.
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February 23, 2014, 08:25 PM | #10 |
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I wish I hadn't sold my P-90, it was the first gun I bought for myself and it was a great gun. I sold it to partially fund a Kimber Pro CDP II and while I now own the nicer gun I still mist that P-90. Mine was a great shooter and would eat just about anything I fed it with the exception of some reloads with LRN bullets, I never could get those to feed reliably.
Stu |
February 23, 2014, 09:54 PM | #11 | ||||
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February 24, 2014, 01:38 AM | #12 | |
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Quote:
As for the stainless, I normally don't like the look, however, reading through my list, there are only a few guns that I selected stainless for, the rest are blued or coated. So I tried it out on this also, and I enjoy the antique look. When I get my S&W 4566 I'll try that out in more of a satin. Thanks everyone for your comments. I will have more plans for cerakote in interesting combinations (I hope) in the future. |
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Tags |
cerakote , p90 , ruger |
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