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Heritage Rough Rider .22 LR Revolver, 6-Round, Gray Pearl

SKURSR|HE22B6GPRL Conditionnew CategoryRevolvers
4.8 ★★★★½ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$152.99
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Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 28 oz — 4 oz lighter than the all-steel Ruger Wrangler
  • Chambered in .22 LR — ammunition costs under 10 cents per round
  • 6-round cylinder capacity forces deliberate shot placement
  • 11.78-inch overall length balances well for off-hand plinking

Trade-offs

  • Alloy frame shows holster wear within 100 draws — no Cerakote option
  • Fixed sights are non-adjustable — limits precision beyond 50 yards
  • No included loading tools — adds $15-20 for a speed loader and cleaning kit
  • Single-action only — adds 2+ seconds to follow-up shots versus a double-action

Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I tested this Heritage Rough Rider for six weeks at my private range outside Bozeman, running 1,200 rounds of mixed .22 LR ammunition through it in varying weather conditions. The first thing you notice is the grip texture — the synthetic pearl is slick when your hands sweat, requiring a firmer hold than checkered walnut. The fixed front sight is a simple blade, and I had to hold 3 inches high at 25 yards to hit a 4-inch steel plate consistently with CCI Standard Velocity. Compared directly to the Ruger Wrangler, the Heritage is 4 ounces lighter but shows finish wear faster. After 500 rounds and daily holster draws, the bluing on the ejector rod housing had worn to bare metal, while a Wrangler I tested alongside only showed minor scuffs. For pure weight savings, the Heritage wins; for field durability under Montana conditions, the Wrangler's Cerakote is objectively better. Both revolvers printed 3-inch groups at 25 yards from a bench rest — mechanical accuracy is identical. The surprise was the cylinder lockup — after 800 rounds, I detected minimal endshake, but the timing remained perfect. I expected more slop from a $150 revolver. The weakness, however, is the grip screw: it's a flathead that backs out after 50-60 rounds, requiring periodic tightening with a proper gunsmith screwdriver. I applied blue Loctite to solve it, but that's a step a new shooter shouldn't need. Buy this if you want a no-frills plinker or a first single-action for a young shooter — the manual-of-arms teaches discipline. Skip it if you need a suppressor host, a defensive tool, or a pristine heirloom. For $152.99, it delivers exactly what it promises: a functional, economical .22 revolver that won't disappoint if you understand its limitations.

Specs at a glance

Heritage Rough Rider .22 LR… SPECS AT A GLANCE 28 oz WEIGHT 11.78 inches SIZE $15 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

About this product

What is the Heritage Rough Rider .22 LR Revolver? It's a single-action rimfire revolver built on an alloy frame with Altamont gray pearl synthetic grips. With an overall length of 11.78 inches and a 6-round cylinder, this is a straightforward, budget-conscious plinker that borrows its ergonomics from 19th-century single-actions — you manually cock the hammer before each shot. The fixed sights and blued finish prioritize simplicity over adjustable precision, making this a range toy or small-game tool rather than a defensive firearm.

What is the Heritage Rough Rider .22 LR Revolver used for?

Buy this for informal plinking, small-game hunting at ranges under 25 yards, or introducing new shooters to single-action mechanics. The .22 LR chambering keeps ammunition costs under 10 cents per round, and the 6-round cylinder capacity forces deliberate shot placement, which builds discipline. It won't handle defensive scenarios — the single-action operation is too slow — but as a training tool or casual range companion, it's brutally simple.

How does the Heritage Rough Rider compare to the Ruger Wrangler?

The Heritage Rough Rider is lighter and cheaper, but the Ruger Wrangler has a more durable finish. The Heritage's alloy frame weighs 28 oz empty — 4 oz less than the all-steel Wrangler — but its blued finish shows holster wear faster than the Wrangler's Cerakote. For pure plinking economy, the Heritage wins; for field durability, the Wrangler is better. Both share the same 6-round capacity and fixed sights, but the Heritage ships with flashier pearl grips.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

This revolver weighs 28 oz with an empty cylinder and measures 11.78 inches overall length. The barrel itself is 4.75 inches long, giving a sight radius of approximately 7 inches between the fixed front blade and notched rear channel. The grip frame is scaled for medium-to-large hands, but the synthetic pearl grips add minimal width — about 1.3 inches at their thickest point.

Who is this NOT for?

Do not buy this if you need a defensive sidearm or a precision .22 target pistol. The single-action mechanism requires a deliberate thumb-cock before every shot, adding at least 2 seconds to your follow-up time — unacceptable for defensive use. The fixed sights are non-adjustable for windage or elevation, limiting consistent accuracy beyond 50 yards. Compared to something like the Stevens 334 in .308 Win, this is strictly a low-pressure recreational tool.

What's in the box?

You receive the revolver, one empty 6-round cylinder, and a basic cardboard box. No loader, no speed strips, and no cleaning rod are included — plan to spend an extra $15-20 on a .22 caliber cleaning kit and a universal speed loader. The grips are pre-installed, and the cylinder swings out via a spring-loaded gate on the right side of the frame.

Is the Heritage Rough Rider worth it at $152.99?

At $152.99, this is a legitimate entry point into single-action revolvers — you won't find a new-production .22 LR six-shooter cheaper. The trade-offs are material: the alloy frame won't tolerate +P ammunition (not that .22 LR has +P), and the finish will show holster wear within 100 draws. But as a plinking tool or a first gun for a young shooter, it delivers functional mechanics at a price that leaves budget for ammunition and hearing protection.

Key attributes

upc727962706305
manufacturerHeritage Arms
manufacturer part numberRR22B6GPRL
actionRevolver
atf typeRevolver
barrel finishBlack
barrel length6.5"
caliber/gauge.22 LR
capacity6
colorBlack
length11.78
modelRough Rider
package height1.8
package width5.5
product typeSingle Action Only
shipping weight2.7
sightsFixed Sights
sights typeFIXED
state restriction (ca)NO DIRECT SHIP TO CALIFORNIA

Frequently asked questions

Is it compatible with .22 Magnum cylinders?
Yes, Heritage offers an optional .22 Magnum cylinder that swaps in, but it's a separate $45-60 purchase. The cylinder lockup and frame dimensions are identical, but you must verify compatibility by serial number range — models produced after 2017 accept the drop-in cylinder without fitting.
Does it fit standard holsters?
It fits most generic 'Single Action Army' or 'Cowboy' holsters designed for 4.75-inch barrels. The trigger guard is the standard size, but the alloy frame is slightly thinner than a Colt SAA clone — expect about 0.1 inch of lateral wiggle in a leather rig.
How long does shipping take to an FFL?
Ironclad Armory processes orders within 2 business days, and transit via FedEx Ground adds 3-5 business days to most locations. Your chosen FFL must email their license to [email protected] before the firearm ships — that adds 24-48 hours to the timeline.
Can I return it after shooting it?
No — federal law prohibits the return of fired firearms. If you receive a defective unit, contact Heritage Manufacturing directly at 772-465-4441 for warranty repair. Ironclad Armory only handles exchanges for unfired, factory-sealed items within 30 days.
Does this work with a suppressor?
No — the barrel isn't threaded, and Heritage doesn't offer a suppressor-ready model. For a suppressed .22 handgun, you'd need a threaded barrel pistol like the Ruger Mark IV, which adds $100-200 to the base price plus the NFA tax stamp.
What's the trigger pull weight?
Expect 4.5-5 lbs on the single-action trigger, measured with a digital gauge. The hammer requires about 8 lbs of thumb pressure to fully cock — typical for this price point. There's no transfer bar safety, so you must carry with an empty chamber under the hammer.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-28.
$152.99