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Description

Designed with both male and female shooters in mind, the LCP is as affordable as it is reliable. At just 9.40 ounces (with an empty magazine), the LCP is lightweight and ideal for all-day carry - ensuring you have it when and where you need it.
Winner of the Shooting Industry Academy of Excellence® 2008 Handgun of the Year Award, the Ruger® LCP® delivers superior ergonomic design and handsome styling. When size and weight savings count, the LCP® is a natural for personal defense carry.
This Custom version of the Ruger LCP comes equipped with a red-anodized, skeletonized aluminum trigger.
Ruger LCP Custom Specifications
- Slide Material: Alloy Steel
- Slide Finish: Blued
- Barrel Material: Alloy Steel
- Barrel Finish: Blued
- Barrel Length: 2.75 in.
- Length: 5.16 in.
- Width: 0.82 in.
- Height: 3.80 in.
- Weight: 9.75 oz.
- Sights: Drift Adjustable Photoluminescent
- Capacity: 6+1
- Grip Frame: Black, High-Performance, Glass-Filled Nylon
- Twist: 1:16 in. RH
- Grooves: 6
- MA Approved & Certified: No
- CA Approved: No
SKU#: 3740

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Comments (11)

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This gun has a great trigger with a Real sight system. I highly recommend. It should come with a spare magazine.

2 votes
0 votes

I broke down and picked one up for the same price at my local gun store. It would have been another 30 for a transfer, so I paid 260 OTD. got an extra 7 rounder, nice package, It's going to be my wifes bedside gun. Now I just have to get her to the range.I forgot how small these are.

0 votes
0 votes

Sweet Pocket Pistol! Good sights, has a good, smooth, relatively light, shoot-able trigger. I put a Hogue grip sleeve on it and it fits my hand perfectly and made it easier to control. It is surprisingly accurate.
Every one that shoots it wants. Had 2 co-workers go buy one after trying mine. This "Custom" model is only $20-$30 more than the "regular" LCP that has no sights and a crappy trigger. This Custom version is significantly better, more shoot-able. If you want a great pocket pistol this is it! (I had a S&W Body Guard 380 - it was inaccurate, unshootable, POS - even after a $100+ trigger job.) Skip the S&W and the "regular" LCP and buy this one.

1 vote
1 vote

Bought one of these for my wife. She put 100 rds through it out of the box to begin break in and says she loves it. I don't care for it, too small. My wife was tearing up El Presidente drills. Alrighty then...LOL

0 votes
0 votes

The sights on this model definitely make it easier to group quickly, but are just too tall for pocket carry (for me) which ruins the needed use. I prefer the regular version.

2 votes
0 votes

The trigger on the newer gen 2 lcp is nearly half that of the gen 1. I was so blown away by my wife's that I bought a gen 2 for myself and sold my gen 1. This particular model has real sights and an aluminum trigger that doesn't have set screw for over travel etc like the aftermarket groups being sold. All in all this is a great deal.

1 vote
0 votes

Anyone here pulled this trigger other than gym? I had the original lcp and the trigger sucked so bad i had to get rid of it. I do remember my summer carry being a lot more comfortable with it. I would like to try the custom but unless the trigger is a lot better then its just going to be a hassle to sell it.

0 votes
0 votes

Took a chance and bought one. They made some significant improvements. Trigger is the biggest change, what an improvement. Much better sights as well. Nice pocket gun for summer carry in the burbs or deep concealment in "gun free zones".

1 vote
0 votes

All the newer ones (after about 2013) have better triggers. If yours was after that date, you will not like this. I was fine with the old one, for what it was intended for, but the new ones are certainly easier to shoot groups with.

As far as pull weight, if I had to guess it's the exact same weight both pre and post 2013 (thought the pull weight isn't really bad, better than most DA revolvers folks carry). The difference is the length of travel. Old ones felt like you had to pull it all the way to the rear before it broke... ok for smaller hands but not so great for huge ones. Newer post '13 model trigger travel is about half that of old.

As far as this custom model vs the regular new ones, I honestly think the pull weigth is STILL the same (all three around 8 lbs or so). But it does feel lighter, and I think it's because the trigger is wider on the custom. More surface area on finger pad = less felt pressure when pulling trigger even with pull weight held the same.

If it sounds like I'm downplaying the changes, I'm not. You really ought to try it, it is a noticeable difference. Its still not gonna feel like a SAO gun such as a p238 because it's still a longer pull with takeup. Though the actual pull weight measured with scale isn't much different at all than the p238 it won't feel as nice. Doesn't cost nearly as much either ;) It's better than it was before, and more seviceable for very large hands now.

Hope this helps

1 vote
1 vote

I had that trigger for the LC9 when it came out, cost me over $100 bucks and didn't work. It would not set far enough with the adjustment to reset after being fired. It was from a well known company that made replacement parts for that crummy LC9 trigger that had 1/8 inch of wobble in it to stop it from seizing.
That is from a Ruger technician. It sucked so bad they admitted that it seized under heavy use so they left it loose. Never again would I own a Ruger auto pistol other than their 22/45. The gun was useless. Then the R51 fiasco.

1 vote
8 votes

Out of curiosity, what does Remington's r51 have to do with Ruger ? (Edit:corrected misspelling of Remington)

9 votes
0 votes
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