Ruger Security Six



Security-Six, Speed-Six, Police Service-Six Revolver (Manufactured from 1972 to 1988) Calibers: 357 Mag, 38 Spl, 9mm Beginning Serial Number: Years of Production: 150-00001: 1972. As with all Ruger firearms, the mainspring on the Security-Six is a coil spring, instead of the then-common leaf spring. Coil springs are used throughout virtually all of Ruger’s guns, save the follower in its bolt-action magazine rifles. Coil springs are less expensive to make in quantity and more consistent in their quality than leaf springs.

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Post subject:What are the differences? Security Six/Service Six/Speed Six
Single-Sixer

Joined: Thu Nov 25, 2010 2:52 pm
Posts: 288
Location: Wisconsin
As I'm starting to learn more about the Ruger Double Actions, I noticed on the Ruger website that The Security, Service and Speed Six revolvers used the same serial number list and were built the same time.
I have to ask....what are the differences between the three models?
Thanks!


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Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2011 10:36 pm
Buckeye

Joined: Fri May 28, 2004 1:01 am
Posts: 1093
Location: MN
Some very general info:
Security-Six has adjustable sights, square butt frame.
Service-Six has fixed sights, square butt frame.
Speed-Six has fixed sights, slightly rounded butt frame.
I believe all of them were available in either blue or stainless, variety of barrel lengths, etc.
That should get you started. I'm sure one of the experts will fill in the gaps in my info.


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Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2011 11:55 pm
Buckeye

Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:01 am
Posts: 1167
Location: North East Ohio
Uncle Howie answered yer question well !
I personally wish Ruger would go RETRO and make these guns again.
Lighter weight, yet well built guns!


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Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2011 6:52 am
Moderator

Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 10:26 pm
Posts: 10086
Location: Illinois
Then there's low back grip frame and high.
Security Six available most commonly in 2.75', 4' or 6'. Uncommonly in 3' and 5'. Early ones had fixed sights.
Service and Speed Six's most common in 2.75' or 4' but never in 6' ( well ..... never is a LONG time but I've never seen one ).
Made in .38 Special, .380 Rim, .357 Magnum or 9MM.
And of course there are a dozen or so other minor variation if you wanna get picky.


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Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2011 9:11 am
Blackhawk

Joined: Thu Jan 07, 2010 8:34 pm
Posts: 581
Location: Kuna, Idaho - a sparkling jewel in a park-like setting
And of course there are a dozen or so other minor variation if you wanna get picky.

Don't tell me that!
Now my collection seems insufficient.
Dave

_________________
Suffering with RDS (Ruger Derangement Syndrome) since 1975 . . . .
I used to be indecisive but now I am not so sure.

Last edited by Glupy on Mon Jan 17, 2011 8:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Post subject:Re: What are the differences? Security Six/Service Six/Speed
Single-Sixer

Joined: Fri Mar 20, 2009 4:15 pm
Posts: 264
Location: Winchester, CA
As I'm starting to learn more about the Ruger Double Actions, I noticed on the Ruger website that The Security, Service and Speed Six revolvers used the same serial number list and were built the same time.
I have to ask....what are the differences between the three models?
Thanks!

Hi oldiron1. The other members have explained the differences well. I am going to give you a link that goes into more detail. Here it is.
http://world.guns.ru/handguns/double-ac ... six-e.html
I have a Police Service Six. This is the fixed sight version. In my humble opinion the Security Six Series were the best double action revolvers Ruger ever made. Here is a picture of mine. You won't regret owning one.
Howard
Police Service Six


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Posted: Sun Jan 16, 2011 8:03 am
Bearcat

Joined: Tue Nov 16, 2010 12:57 pm
Posts: 20
Location: Georgia
As has been mentioned :
Service : Fixed sights, square butt
Security : Adjustable sights, square butt
Speed : Fixed, round butt
Other than that, the Speed seems to command a higher price tag. There are quite a few odd-ball examples that keep collectors pretty busy, but any of these revolvers will make great shooters. You really can't go wrong. I have one Service 4', and two Speeds - one 2.75' .357 and one 2.75' 9MM. Fantastic guns.


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Post subject:
Bearcat

Joined: Sun Dec 12, 2010 10:31 am
Posts: 81
Location: Southern VA
I have recently bought 2 service six's and 1 security six. I don't have a speed six yet but have been looking for the past 2 months and have noticed that the speed six's go for more,for basically, the same gun as the others.
What is the appeal of the speed vs the other 2 types to command a higher price?


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Posted: Sun Jan 16, 2011 12:53 pm
Blackhawk

Joined: Sat Apr 22, 2006 1:01 am
Posts: 593
Location: Port St.John, Florida, USA
The round butt looks better to some folks on the Speed-Six..


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Post subject:
Hawkeye

Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2004 2:01 am
Posts: 10762
Location: Rugerville, AZ
Then there are the employee-only runs that include a lanyard ring and 'half-moon' front sights...
The DA-only versions with no hammer spur.
The fixed-sight Security Six guns.
The heavy barrels and the tapers.
Pre-warning guns...
?

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Posted: Sun Jan 16, 2011 5:48 pm
Single-Sixer

Joined: Thu Nov 25, 2010 2:52 pm
Posts: 288
Location: Wisconsin
Thanks much guys!!
I noticed just poking around Gun Broker that the Speed Six really does command a premium price tag. There is something though about the round but that does look sharp about them in my opinion.
I appreciate the education!


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Posted: Sun Jan 16, 2011 8:02 pm
Bearcat

Joined: Mon Mar 02, 2009 1:14 pm
Posts: 90
Location: Canal Fulton, Ohio
I suppose that if someone really wanted a Speed Six type butt they
could get a old beater square butt frame gun an apply a little file work
to make it into one.
I just bought an OD color spray painted early model Security Six
.357 mag. off of Gunbroker. Paid $ 250 for it. The seller assured me
on the phone that I could return it if it did not live up to his claims about it.
I have not rec'd the gun yet and I hope that after I heat-gun the old paint off
that it is not all pitted under the ancient amature paint job. The grips look good.
I bought it to use as a powerful and reliable trail/backup/beater gun.


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Ruger Security Six

Ruger Security Six Sights

Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2011 9:46 am
Single-Sixer

Joined: Mon Dec 27, 2010 2:55 pm
Posts: 137
Location: Winter Haven, Florida
Hey Doc ,
I saw that Security Six for a couple of days & was thinking the same thing as you. Perfect for a field gun/trail beater.
Also had thoughts of getting it 'Bead Blasted' which I think would remove all of that spray & leave a flat grayish finish.
Love my sixes, got 3 & was shooting them on Saturday


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Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2011 3:50 pm
Ruger Guru

Joined: Wed Mar 28, 2001 2:01 am
Posts: 11003
Location: Colorado native, Vermont transplant
Security Six available most commonly in 2.75', 4' or 6'. Uncommonly in 3' and 5'. Early ones had fixed sights.
Service and Speed Six's most common in 2.75' or 4' but never in 6' ( well ..... never is a LONG time but I've never seen one ).

I don't believe the Security Six was ever made in 5'. The only 5' guns I'm aware of are the RCMP Police Service Sixes.
Also, I have never seen a 3' Security Six but that doesn't mean there are none. However, the 3' tube appears with some regularity on the later Speed and Service Sixes. I think the reason the 3' is rare-to-non-existent on the Security Six is because it did come out so late in production - the Security Six was the first model dropped from production in favor of the then-new GP100 but the Service and Speed Sixes remained in production for a couple of years until Ruger got the capacity to produce fixed sight GP100 guns. So the 3' barrel appeared when Ruger already knew the Secutiy Six was being replaced, so I don't think they ever made the 3' for the Security Six (which would require a new barrel design due to the sight ramp).
There are rumors to some early frame (low back 150 prefix) fixed sight guns made with 6' barrels for export (what later became the Police Service Six was first sold as simply a fixed sight Security Six) Those early fixed sight Security Sixes appear on the earliest dealer price sheets in both .38 Special and .357 Mag as models SDA86 and SDA36 but examples are unknown and may never have been produced. By the way, the very earliest Security Sixes were adjustable sight but were simultaneously offered in fixed sight. The 2 digit guns that I have seen are all fixed sight and the earliest 3 digit that I am aware of is an SDA82 with a 3 digit SN. The first 2000 (or so) guns also had cast barrels versus later forged barrels.
The Police Service Six is most common in 4' and the Speed Six is most common in 2.75'. In the Security Six, I used to believe that the 2.75' was the scarcest but I now believe the 6' is at least as uncommon as the 2.75'. By far, the most common length for a Security Six is the 4'.
Collecting these early DA's offers up nearly as many (maybe more) possibilities as collecting old model Single Sixes as far as variations go. There were 12.25 million guns made over about an 18 year period, 3 basic models, multiple barrel lengths, several calibers, blue or stainless, pre-warning & post-warning, different grips, different sights, standard or heavy barrel, different triggers, different hammers, contract guns for police and government agencies with unique features such as lanyard rings and/or markings such as 'U.S.' and atypical model markings such as GS32N, SS84L, SS32L, foreign contract guns such as the oddball .380 Rimmed caliber, 4 different types of period packaging plus the late-ship oddballs in plastic cases or cardboard boxes with barcode labels, non-standard finishes, etc. Plus a whole myriad of aftermarket commemorative guns, some of which had at least a little factory buy-in.
So far there seems to only be a handful of collectors seriously following these guns but they are getting more and more interest all the time. Values for NIB examples have gone up quite a lot in the past decade but are still reasonable compared to collecting the guns that are more widely followed.
These DA's offer up a great opportunity for new collectors to get into Ruger collecting without breaking the bank and likely offer a higher potential for appreciation than the OM SA Rugers which have been sought after for the past 30+ years and have actually seen some recent depreciation. New 'variations' are constantly being discovered as more and more folks take notice and start paying attention to the subtle differences.
Sorry, didn't mean to go off on a rant...


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Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2011 5:12 pm
Ruger Guru

Joined: Mon Jan 22, 2001 2:01 am
Posts: 9724
Location: Dawson, Iowa
I'm a little late on this post oldiron, but don't forget the roundbutt Security-Six! Even though it does have a round butt, it is still called a Security-Six. Evidently a few gov't or police agencies wanted a round-butt security so a few (very few!) were made.
and since I'm kind of having a little fun with this, there are also some round butt Service-Sixes (turned into Speed Sixes during late 'SIX series production in order to use up their old Service-Six stock.....just round off the lower corners of the grip frame at front and rear and you've got a Speed-Six! There are a few of these known and they are marked Service-Six (but will be boxed as 'SPEED-SIX' and will letter as 'SPEED-SIX').
Confused yet???
Chet15


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2019-12-07

From about the mid-1960s through the 1970s, the mid-frame .357 Magnum, double-action revolver was the most popular service firearm riding on a law enforcement officer’s hip. The .357 Mag’s stopping power was legendary, as well as being pretty legitimate, and the medium-frame size didn’t break down an officer’s arches. Smith & Wesson’sModel 19 pretty much ruled the roost, though the Colt Trooper had its adherents too. Those who could, of course, slipped a Colt Python into their Sam Brownes, though the snake was technically not a medium frame.

Bill Ruger, who already had successfully gone against the grain with his autoloading .22 LR Standard Model, Single-Six and Blackhawk single-action revolvers, as well as his Nos. 1 and 3 single-shot rifles, figured he could muscle his way into part of the law enforcement and personal protection markets, too. Along with Harry Sefried and Henry Into, Ruger began working on the medium-frame double-action revolver project in 1966. Among Ruger’s many talents were to design strength into smaller and smaller platforms and develop built-in modular sub-assemblies. What evolved from these fertile minds became known as the Security-Six, announced in 1970 and began shipping in 1972, and it was another great success story for Ruger.

Ruger’s penchant for building a strong double-action revolver centered on two things: a solid frame, sans a sideplate and using investment castings of modern steel alloys that could be heat treated to maximum strength after most of the machining work was completed. To wit this meant that the new double-action would have a slightly larger cylinder widow compared to the S&W Model 19 to accommodate a slightly larger diameter cylinder. The topstrap of the Security-Six was thickened a bit, as was the barrel shank, to better stand up to a steady diet of magnum loads. Keeping strength—consequently shooter safety—paramount, the engineering team found a way to offset the locking bolt notches, leaving more metal to support the weakest part of the firearm. Too, the locking bolt and hand were more robust. These small parts take quite a beating when the revolver—any revolver—is fired rapidly.

Security

The grip portion of the frame bears a resemblance to the High Standard Sentinel, which, coincidentally, was also designed by Seifried. As with all Ruger firearms, the mainspring on the Security-Six is a coil spring, instead of the then-common leaf spring. Coil springs are used throughout virtually all of Ruger’s guns, save the follower in its bolt-action magazine rifles. Coil springs are less expensive to make in quantity and more consistent in their quality than leaf springs.

Review: Ruger Security Six - Shooting Times

Ruger service six for sale

In order to control the Security Six with .357 Mag. loads there needs to be more weight than is found by beefing up the frame and cylinder slightly. Therefore Ruger hung a bull barrel with an underlug to protect the extractor on the frame. The barrel features a full-length rib and a ramp with a 1/8″ Baughman-style front sight pinned to the ramp. At the rear is an adjustable sight.

When the Security-Six was being developed, much ado had been made about making revolvers safe to carry with all of its chambers loaded. Ruger in particular was in civil lawyers’ sights because of some idiots carrying their single-action Blackhawks fully loaded and the hammer down on the firing pin, even if for more than a century people had been carrying their single actions with the hammer down on an empty chamber. Some of these boneheads managed to perforate their legs. The sharks—excuse me, civil lawyers—smelled money in the water. The money was Ruger’s, and he engineered a way to protect it with a transfer bar system that prevented the hammer from touching the firing pin except when the trigger is pulled completely to the rear.

Another safety feature was an interlock that prevented the hammer from being cocked when the cylinder is opened. Conversely, the cylinder cannot be opened while the hammer is cocked. So while some of the sharks were successful in drawing small amounts of blood from Ruger, this transfer bar system stemmed the flow of blood, and the company was able to continue prospering.

Ruger Security Six Serial

Finish on the carbon steel Security-Six was black oxide over a nice but not elaborate polish. In 1975 when the stainless Security-Six came to life, the appearance was a subdued brushed stainless steel. Hammers and triggers on the carbon steel revolvers had their backs finished in black oxide and their sides polished to a near mirror finished and left in the white. Stocks were oil-finished walnut with a diamond-shaped panel of checkering. Full-size target stocks came sometime later.

The Security-Six was an instant hit because in no small part its price was 16 percent below that of a S&W Model 19 and 25 percent below that of a Colt Trooper. Among those using the Security-Six were the U.S. Border Patrol; the former U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Postal police, as well as numerous private security firms. Even the British Royal Ulster Constabulary Police Officers adopted it. Though in production only 16 years, more than 1.5 million copies were produced.

Variants included a fixed-sight version known as the Service-Six, the Speed-Six in either 2 1/2″ or 3″ barrel lengths, some very rare revolvers chambered in 9 mm Parabellum called the M109, some more chambered in .38 Spl. and a 6″ barreled version often seen with sportsmen.

Security-Sixes are not often found on the used market. Those that do show up are usually priced at from $250 for a well-used and well-worn specimen, to a little more than $300 for a more pristine copy.

The Security-Six was seldom seen on the target line. It wasn’t necessarily due to a lack of accuracy, but because the double-action pull was so heavy and gritty. The single-action pulls didn’t inspire confidence either, averaging more than 4 lbs. Both could be improved by a talented gunsmith, but by then you could have bought a Smith & Wesson or Colt. Ruger’s Security-Six was meant for those who needed a powerful, tough and relatively lightweight revolver to save their hides. It did so, splendidly.

Article by American rifleman

Ruger Security Six Disassembly

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