Ruger 22/45 Mark III Target .22 LR, 5.5" Stainless Bull Barrel, Adjustable Rear Sight, 10+1 (2005)
This Ruger 22/45 Mark III Target pairs a 5.5-inch stainless bull barrel with the 22/45 grip frame that mirrors 1911-style angles and controls. Built on a fixed-barrel, straight-blowback system, it features a fully adjustable rear target sight, a stainless receiver, and a black glass-filled nylon frame with Ruger red-phoenix medallion grips. Made in 2005 in the United States, it comes with four 10-round magazines.
Condition
Overall Condition: Fair condition, showing extensive signs of prior use and handling.
Bore Condition: Good - Clean, well-maintained, minor wear marks.
Bore Rifling: Good Rifling - Intact, well-defined lands and grooves.
Specific Condition Notes: This pistol shows major signs of wear with notable finish loss and areas of rust.
What's Included
- Ruger 22/45 Mark III Target Model pistol
- Four 10-round steel single-stack magazines with extended basepads
The Mark III Target configuration centers on accuracy-focused features, starting with a non-tapered, non-threaded 5.5-inch stainless bull barrel. The fixed-barrel design and straight-blowback action deliver the classic Mark-series feel and operation.
The 22/45 architecture provides a 1911-style grip angle and control layout on a durable glass-filled nylon frame. Molded checkering and Ruger red-phoenix medallions complete the grip treatment, while the left-side push-button magazine release keeps operation familiar.
Target sighting is handled by a fixed blade front and a fully adjustable rear sight. The charging handle uses twin rear grasping ears for positive manipulation.
Safety and compliance features include a manual thumb safety and a magazine disconnect. From the factory, Mark III pistols have a left-side loaded-chamber indicator; on this example the indicator has been removed and is not present.
Stainless steel is used for both the barrel and receiver, with a matching stainless finish, paired to a black frame. This U.S.-made pistol was manufactured in 2005.




