Last Spring, our church had a range day in conjunction with our Mission Conference. We knew our missionary speaker liked to hunt and shoot. We created an opportunity for people in our church family who also like to hunt and shoot to hang out with the missionary in an informal setting. There they could enjoy some shooting together prior to a short message from God’s word.
My friend “Welly” brought his Ruger Precision Rimfire in .22 WMR to the range day. I was really impressed by some of his shooting. It seemed like Welly just could not miss.
A few months later, Welly offered me the chance to borrow the rifle to review it. I eagerly took him up on his kind offer.
First Impressions
When I took Welly’s Ruger Precision Rimfire out of its case, the first thing that impressed me was how substantial it is. At 6.8 pounds, it is relatively heavy for a rimfire rifle. There is a lot of well-machined, nicely-fitted, solid steel in this design. The pistol grip and the adjustable comb were just about the only synthetic parts that I noticed at first glance. Fit and finish were excellent, with good materials, quality assembly, and no blemishes or tool marks.
The next major impression I had of the rifle was that it looks like a cross between an AR and a bolt action target rifle. The pistol grip, the design of the safety, the shape of the frame around the magazine, and the style of the handguard surrounding the barrel all reflect common AR design elements. The bolt action and the Quick-Fit Precision Rimfire Adjustable Stock both reflect common target rifle design elements. It looks like an AR and a target rifle got married and started a family. The Ruger Precision Rimfire is their firstborn.Continue reading“Ruger Precision Rimfire in .22 WMR, by Thomas Christianson”

To start, I should mention that I’ve been a Macintosh user for my home computers since 1986. My first Mac was a Macintosh Plus, purchased just after I got off of active duty as an Intelligence Corps officer. This was before I was ever married. I’ve owned a whole succession of improved Macs since then. Since the turn of the century, most of those have been alloy-case MacBook laptops. I’ve always been fairly good about keeping backups, and that has saved my bacon, on several occasions. In recent years, I’ve used the Time Machine backup utility, with 1-Terabyte large form-factor hard drives in a Sabrent quick-change desktop hard drive docking station. With two vertical slots, this docking station vaguely resembles a bread toaster, so I naturally nicknamed it “The Toaster.”