Tag Archives: minithirty

Ruger’s rifle that never was– the hard hitting XGI

With a decade of fast Mini-14 sales behind them, Ruger decided to up-gun that .223 rifle to a much more impressive .308 caliber around 1984.

In the mid-1980s, Ruger was planning a reinvention of the company to include police and military products. They marketed the AC556 and the GB-series Mini, as well as introduced the P-85 pistol all aimed at law enforcement sales. Many police departments were adopting the ’14 for use from coast to coast and it made sense to offer an accurate but compact semi-auto in .308 Win that could be used by SWAT teams and the like.

Other 7.62x51mm options on the market for LE use at the time, the Springfield M1, HK G3, and semi-auto FN FALs, were and still are very long and awkward to use rifles tipping the scales at close to 10-pounds.

The answer was the XGI rifle and they are about as rare as it gets.

1985 Ruger catalog page on the gun offering great things to come...

1985 Ruger catalog page on the gun offering great things to come…

Read the rest in my column at Ruger Talk

Mini 30: The all-around, goto Ruger carbine

Over a decade after Ruger brought out their classic Mini-14 rifle in .223, the company decided to update the design to a completely new hybrid chambered in a very Russian caliber. The rest, as they say…is history.

Why was it invented?

Taking a trip back to the mid-1980s, the Reagan-era had a lot of neat things about it. Besides allowing private ownership of new full-auto firearms, the feds also had very relaxed import regulations with Communist China as a counterbalance to the Cold War with the Soviet Russians. This open border trading policy with Beijing allowed thousands of Chinese made Norinco Type 53 carbines to flood the country from sea to shining sea.

chinese made norinco sks are often called spikers due to the shape of thier bayonet

These East Asian versions of the Soviet Semenov SKS-45 rifle were sold for as little as $79 brand new in the box.

It was estimated that during that decade nearly a million SKS’s and almost as many Polytech, Maddi, MAK, and Norinco AK-pattern semi-autos arrived on our shores. This propelled the humble 7.62x39mm round, made military standard behind the Iron Curtain before Winston Churchill even coined the term, to instant popularity in the U.S.

The cartridge, ballistically similar to the .30-.30 Winchester, was effective out to 200 meters or more and was insanely cheap with 1300 round cases of brass Chinese milsurp going for under a $100 bill. Soon domestic production by Remington and Winchester started, meaning that the loading was available in your local Wal-Mart and gun shop.

That’s when Ruger decided to answer the Chinese invasion with a carbine of their own.

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Read the rest in my column at Ruger Talk