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The application and practical value of the pocket pistol is every bit as relevant today, and probably the most notable model of the past several decades is the Ruger LCP, chambered in .380 ACP ...
Ruger came out with its Light Compact Pistol (LCP) in 2008, a sleek-sided, locked-breech, hammer-fired semi-automatic subcompact handgun chambered in .380 ACP for self-defense and concealed carry.
The Ruger LCP, a .380 autoloader with a 2.75-inch barrel and ... glass-filled nylon frame is topped by a through-hardened blued slide. When size and weight savings count, the LCP is a natural ...
380 ACP LCP II ... steel slide with milled-in sights and angled cocking serrations at the front and rear. The 2.75" barrel is not blackened to match the slide but has a natural silver finish ...
380 ACP semi-automatic ... and the slide won’t even lock back on the last round fired. Ruger listened to the criticism, which resulted in the birth of the LCP II. While the LCP II is still ...
My test gun was the Ruger LCP Model 3730. It has a brushed steel slide and a blued alloy steel barrel. The synthetic grip frame is black and of sufficient grip length that I can get my middle ...
It’s the Ruger LCP II .22 LR. The LCP comes in .380 as well, but I wanted another ... grip texturing as well as forward and rear slide serrations. It’s decent ergonomically.