Mini-14 Target Rifle
Mini-14 Target Rifle
Manufacturer:
Sturm, Ruger & Co.,
1 Lacey Place, Southport, CT
06890; (203) 259-7843;
www.ruger.com
Model: Mini-14 Target Rifle
Type: Semi-automatic
Finish: Matte stainless
Caliber: .223 Remington
Capacity: Five
Stock: Gray laminate
Barrel Length: 22 inches
Rifling: 1:9 RH
Overall Length: 42 1⁄2 inches
Weight: 9 pounds, 8 ounces
Sights: None; scope bases
integral with receiver, scope rings
included
Trigger Pull: 5 pounds, 8 ounces
MSRP: $995
The Ruger Mini-14 has proven its ruggedness since it started riding around in pickups in 1974, but getting it to
consistently shoot neat little groups at 100 yards has often been an exercise in frustration. Accuracy—frankly not the Mini-
14’s strongpoint—has generally taken a backseat to its simple and reliable operation. With competitive action-shooting
events on the rise, Ruger decided to address this issue, introducing the
Mini-14 Target Rifle accompanied by claims of minute-of-angle performance.
Appropriate for a Mini-14 derivative, the Target Rifle keeps the fixed-piston gas system and rotary bolt with dual locking
lugs borrowed from the M1 Garand and the line’s military inspiration, the M14. The investment-cast receiver and L-shaped
charging handle have a matte-stainless finish. Scope bases integral to the receiver, a feature that debuted on the Mini-14
Ranch Rifle during the early 1980s, also fittingly appear on the Target Rifle. Ruger includes high, 1-inch rings for mounting
an optic, which is mandatory since the receiver and barrel are devoid of iron sights. Other features manifest in the Mini-14
family and carried on with the Target Rifle are a Garand-style safety, stout magazine release lever and ventilated,
fiberglass handguard that covers the barrel from receiver to gas block.
Barrel harmonics, or the vibration of the barrel during firing, can greatly affect point of impact and group size. Functions
that occur within a rifle such as the firing pin striking the primer, the ignition of the propellant, the expansion of the
propellant gases and the bullet’s contact with the rifling as it travels through the bore all produce a number of vibrations
that are ultimately transmitted to the barrel. These vibrations cause the barrel to move in an arc, even before the bullet
has exited the bore. If these vibrations were absolutely consistent, there would be a lot of rifles shooting one-hole groups.
However, their magnitude and duration vary from shot to shot, and five bullets may leave the bore when the muzzle is at
five different points on the vibration-induced arc. In part, this is why even a very tight group will still somewhat resemble a
triangle.
One way to control vibration is to add weight to the barrel, which soaks up the impulses. The heavy barrel on the Target
Rifle works together with the harmonic dampener to reduce the amplitude of the arc, making bullet exit, and therefore
point of impact downrange, more consistent. Different loads, of course, can produce different amounts of vibration, and
the ability to adjust the harmonic dampener allows the shooter to tune the barrel to obtain the best accuracy with any
given ammunition.
A beefy barrel does not a target rifle make, so Ruger continued overhauling the Mini-14 by giving it a stock eminently
suited for shooting from the bench. The thumbhole buttstock has a large, triangular-shaped cutout just behind the pistol
grip that not only lets the thumb encircle the pistol grip, but also provides a stable shelf on which its fleshy base can rest.
Along with the slight swell to the pistol grip, the design promotes a steady, repeatable hold. The stock’s high, slim comb
rises slightly at the heel and digs into the cheek for a tight weld. So it will nestle solidly into a sandbag, the toe is rather
thin and parallels the comb for 3 inches. The stock’s lower line then curves dramatically upward before running forward to
the pistol grip, forming a hook for the non-shooting hand to press against and keep the rifle firmly settled on the bench.
Three removable, black plastic spacers just forward of the rubber buttpad let shooters adjust the stock’s length of pull from
14 to 15 1⁄2 inches in 1⁄2-inch increments. In keeping with the theme of the Target Rifle, Ruger gave the fore-end a 2-
inch-wide flat spot to make it easy to rest the gun on sandbags or hold in an offhand position. The stock is constructed of
a gray laminate that complements both the stainless finish of the rifle’s metal and the black handguard.
A Mini-14 that will shoot minute of angle? I, too, was skeptical. But to give the Target Rifle a fair chance, I topped it with
a Sightron SII Big Sky 4.5-14x42 mm scope and waited for a calm day to test Ruger’s claim. I picked the 55-grain soft-
point load from Black Hills to start. The first several groups from the 100-yard line were around 2 1⁄2 inches—pretty much
what I expected from a Mini-14 and certainly nothing to write home about. Then I began playing with the position of the
harmonic dampener and shot as many holes in the criticisms of this autoloader’s accuracy as I did targets. With this
particular load, the rifle liked the forward end of the harmonic dampener to be positioned about 3⁄4 inch behind the
muzzle. Thusly tuned, it produced five, five-shot groups that averaged 1.03 inches. Pretty dang close, and two of those
groups measured inside the minute-of-angle standard. I tried several other loads, including some with match bullets
weighing between 69 and 75 grains, but none of them delivered the accuracy of my first pick. The runner-up was the 50-
grain Winchester Supreme Ballistic Silvertip load, which averaged 1.10 inches after 25 shots. Perhaps with a little more
tweaking I could find the harmonic dampener’s sweet spot with these other loads and shave a little from their group sizes.
Ruger casts scope bases into the M14-inspired
receiver of the Target Rifle that accept the The Target Rifle’s length of pull is adjustable from 14 to
company’s rings, which are included. Shooters 1 5 1⁄2 inches by adding or removing plastic spacers.
need to top the Target Rifle with some sort of Two long, Allen-head screws hold the rubber buttpad in
optic, as open sights are absent. place and run through the spacers to attach the works
to the gray laminate stock.
True to the nature of the Mini-14, I experienced no failures to feed or fire during testing, and that was during
approximately 400 rounds of 12 ammunition types over three days. No complaints there, but I did have an issue with the
Target Rifle’s trigger. At 5 1⁄2 pounds of pull weight, it’s quite heavy for a rifle intended for target work, and I had to
squeeze through a lengthy amount of creep. Nonetheless, I learned to live with it, and from the factory the Target Rifle
performed as advertised.
The Mini-14 is rarely described as being pinpoint accurate, and in fact, until now it was never made to be. With some
modifications, Ruger has turned this ubiquitous truck gun into a rifle ideally suited for chewing out bullseyes. I’d call the
Mini-14 Target Rifle accurate any day.
—Adam Heggenstaller