Gun Review Rohrbaugh R9s Stealth - the Truth About Guns

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The gun for this review was provided by the Kentucky Gun Company.

In 2014, Remington Outdoor purchased Rohrbaugh Firearms. Considering Remington'south stewardship of other assimilated brands, devotees of Rohrbaugh'southward fabulously expensive, finely-crafted pocket pistols were apprehensive. Remington soon realized their worst fears, consigning the Long Island gun brand to the dust heap of history. But not earlier going total Borg. Enter the RM380. It'due south basically the Rohrbaugh R9 — Shooting Illustrated's 2005 "Handgun of the Year" — made new . . .

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Remington ships the all-metal RM380 with two six-round magazines, one flush and one with a pinky finger extension.

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There's no mistaking the RM380's DNA. The photo in a higher place shows the RM380 spooning with a Rohrbaugh R9. Other than a little bling, they're identical. Well, almost. As you'd look, in their quest to convert an almost $1200 niche-market place pocket-carry pistol into a competitively priced, mass-marketable cocky-defense gun, Remmy's contradistinct a few things, mostly for the amend.

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Remington replaced Rohrbaugh'southward Eurotrash-style heel-mounted magazine release with a expert ol' traditional ambidextrous magazine release behind the trigger guard, right where it ought to exist. The relocated mag release makes for easier, quicker mag dumps and reloads. They too added some well executed checkering to the front strap for a surer grip. A singled-out beavertail at the back helps preclude "slide seize with teeth."

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In the interest of keeping their little guns as sleek and snag-gratuitous as possible, the Rohrbaughs lacked a slide stop. The resulting gun didn't lock back when empty (apparently). The RM380's slide stop ensures that once the hammer'southward dropped on your last round, y'all'll know it — without that awkward "click" on an empty chamber.

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Remington's likewise reworked the Rohrbaugh recoil organization. Rohrbaughs were notorious famous for needing a spring swap every 200 rounds (some wags called them "the gun you aren't supposed to shoot.") Big Green wisely subbed two nested recoil springs for the Rohrbaugh system.

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Getting to those recoil springs is not as easy as one would hope. Takedown on the RM380'due south a bit on the fiddly side. Remington included an addendum to the manual telling owners that belongings the gun ejection port up (i.e., gangsta style) and moving the slide back slowly will release the takedown pin enough to remove it. No such luck. The pin on my T&E gun dropped slightly, merely not enough to grab and remove it.

I needed a paperclip to push button the pin gratuitous. On one level, that's a expert thing. If just aligning the hole in the slide with the pin acquired the pivot to drop free, that could happen when you really don't desire it to (especially if you're a gangsta). Still, takedown's an issue.

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Similar about safety-less pocket guns (and the Rohrbaughs earlier it) the RM380's got a long trigger pull. How long? If I were to aim the gun downrange and pull the double-activeness trigger you'd have enough time to bank check your electronic mail before it launched lead. While the RM380's bangswitch isn't every bit buttery as its forebear, information technology's noticeably smoother than nearly mouse guns. Smith & Wesson Airweight fans won't be jelly, merely owners of the class-dominating Ruger LCP might turn slightly green. So to speak.

As with all of its competitors (e.g., the aforementioned Ruger LCP, Smith & Wesson Bodyguard and Kel-Tec P3AT), the Remington RM380's trigger's reset is a chip of an outcome. There isn't one. No aural or felt reset signal. An RM380 shooter has to let the trigger all the way out before squeezing off a follow-upwardly shot. If you brusk-stroke the gun, you lot own't got nil. Fugitive that unfortunate consequence takes regular training.

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I brought our RM380 sample to the range and fed information technology everything yous run across to a higher place — an assortment of rounds from inexpensive cheap range reloads to premium self-defense ammo. In all, I pulled the trigger more than 500 times on little gun. The semi-automatic pocket pistol shot everything I threw at it — or into information technology — without malfunction. I fired the RM380 in about every position I could imagine. That potentially troublesome pin caused no troubles whatever.

Thank you to the RM380'south reset, or complete lack thereof, I found myself slapping the mouse gun'southward trigger. Or, yes, curt-stroking it. With a little practice, I could proceed my finger on the go pedal and fire reasonably fast follow-ups and double-taps. Under stress . . . who knows?

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Equally far as accuracy is concerned, you needn't be. Concerned, that is. With its fixed, low-profile, snag-free sights, the RM380 delivers minute of bad guy good terminal ballistics, which is all you need in a pocket gun.

Rohrbaugh's fiddling pistols had a devoted following. Big Greenish's version removes the defunct New York gun's biggest (smallest?) problem — the 200-round recoil spring replacement issue. The "new" gun also puts the design well within reach of the average gun buyer. While the tiny-nine market place has sucked a lot of oxygen out of the once-fashionable .380 market, the RM380 is an well-nigh perfectly suitable alternative to the established players.

Specifications:

Caliber: .380 ACP (.380 Auto, 9mm Browning, 9mm Corto, 9mm Kurz, 9mm Short, 9×17mm and 9mm Browning Court)

Capacity: 6+i

Action: DAO

Overall length : 5.27″

Barrel Length : 2.9″ (416 stainless steel)

Overall height : 3.86″

Pull weight: 8-nine lbs.

Sights: depression-profile sights; the front sight consists of a uncomplicated ramp, the rear is notch-style.

Weight (empty): 12.2 oz.

Price: $417 (MSRP), about $360 street

Ratings (out of five stars):

Build quality: * * * * *

Steel slide and barrel, metal frame. A solid, nicely executed deep concealed conduct, every-day carry or backup gun.

Ergonomics (carry): * * * *

Slightly chunkier (wider) than its primary carry-gun competitors — retrieve LCP, Bodyguard 380 and P3AT. Still eminently pocketable.

Ergonomics (shooting): * * * *

No mouse gun is fun to shoot, but the RM380's added thickness fills the hand which reduces felt recoil and makes emptying a few mags at the range more than than tolerable. You'll need to do with that trigger.

Customize this: * *

Y'all tin can replace the grip panels and add together a laser. Add a nice pocket holster for this micro pistol. That'southward it.

Reliability: * * * * *

Rock solid.

Overall: * * * *

One star deducted for the RM380'south long trigger pull and fiddly disassembly. All the same, Remington bought a proven design and fabricated information technology ameliorate and cheaper.

The gun for this review was provided by the Kentucky Gun Company.

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Source: https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/gun-review-remington-rm380/

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