This week I took delivery of a shiny new Puma M92 in .480 Ruger. It's the blued carbine model, with a 20" round barrel and the wood stock and fore-end. I'm pretty excited, as I've wanted one of these beasties for a year or two. So when I saw that LSI had started importing new stock again, I jumped all over one.
The stock is a straight-grip carbine style, and feels good in the hand. As with other 1892-action carbines, it's quite a narrow gun, and is lightweight and very pointable.
The tubular mag will hold 9 rounds of the big .480 if you feed it by withdrawing the tube spring, or 10 rounds if fed traditionally through the loading gate in the side of the receiver. Given the standard 1892-style half-cock safety, it's possible to carry with a round in the chamber for a total of 9+1 or 10+1, depending upon your loading preferences.
Initial impressions...
It seems solidly put together. The action is a little stiff at first, but feels substantial and positive. I suspect with a good strip, clean and lube, and with a little use, it will slick right up. The finish in general looks good on all the mechanical parts. I'm not seeing much in the way of burrs or other manufacturing defects, and things seem to fit together snugly.
So far I've run some snap-caps through it a few times, and while they're a bit lighter than factory rounds, they load and eject positively. The ejection seems clean and consistent - even standing up, the rounds all fall in a little cluster on the floor. I'll be interested to see whether that's true of spent brass, too.
The barrel and receiver are blued pretty well. The finish seems deep and even for the most part. There are a couple of small areas on the sides of the receiver which are a tiny bit lighter in color, if you look at them under the right illumination, but it doesn't seem serious enough that it would affect the durability of the finish. While I didn't buy this as a display gun - it's definitely a shooter and a workhorse - it looks pretty good out of the box.
Trigger pull is crisp, and quite short. I'd ballpark it somewhere around the 3 pound mark, but I don't have a suitable measuring device to be sure. It feels good to my hand, anyway, which I suppose is really job number one. It's not up with the likes of the Savage AccuTrigger, for example, but it feels
really good for what many would call a rough-and-tumble carbine. I'm impressed.
As for how it shoots - I'll have to wait and see this weekend. I'm going to a new range, so I don't know whether they'll let me put any jugs out, but if I have the opportunity I'll do some penetration and expansion tests on the .480 Ruger cartridge. Right now I have a box of Hornady XTP JHPs, and I hope to pick up a couple of other brands before I head out depending on local stock.
Pictures, range report, and maybe some water jugs o' truth to follow later this weekend.
