I've only had my R9s for a little over 24 hours so far, but here's my first review with a range report. No pictures as of yet, I didn't have time to set up the camera. Soon, I hope!
Initial impressions:Taking the R9s out of it's nice little black plastic case, the first thing I noticed was that this pistol is SOLID. It just feels like one solid piece of steel - no rattles, nothing loose-feeling, it's just SOLID. It did feel heavier than I expected, but I think that was just an illusion caused by how rock solid it felt. The finish is impeccable, there's not a blemish anywhere on it. The action of the slide is smooth as glass, and feels as high-quality as any $2000+ custom 1911 pistol I've ever tried.
I will state, though, that the slot milled into the top of the rear sight is slightly off-center, a bit to the left of the pistol. This is identical-looking to another person's R9s that was shown on Rohrbaughforums.com. I also viewed another R9s that my dealer owns, which was also cut slight off-center in exactly the same way. Rohrbaugh apparently needs to check the settings on their CNC machine.
The pistol came with two magazines, an instruction manual, and a spare recoil spring (Rohrbaugh recommends it be changed every 500 rounds, so it's nice they included a spare). The magazines appear to be very high quality, with the Rohrbaugh logo nicely engraved on the floorplate.
The trigger is simply amazing, very smooth and relatively light feeling. It does "stack" somewhat, with the trigger pull becoming progressively heavier (but not extensively so) in the last part of the pull. The break at the end is clean. It rivals the DA pull on some of my pistols that have had trigger action jobs - then again, for the price, it should have a hand-tuned, polished feel!
Magazine insertion is a bit trickier than I expected, as with the heel release one needs to angle the magazine in slightly to help push the magazine catch to the rear. I'll admit this is the first pistol I've owned with a heel release, so maybe it's just my inexperience. With only a bit of practice I found I was able to insert magazines fairly quickly, though certainly not as fast as on a side-release based pistol.
Range Report:Usually when I get a new pistol, the first thing I do upon getting it home is field strip it , clean off all of the factory lube/grease, give it a thorough cleaning, and lube it myself (usually using FP-10 on moving parts, and TW-25B grease on the rails). With most new pistols you simply don't know how long they've sat on a dealer's shelf, and often such pistols are shipped with more of a preservative grease than a functional one (SIG pistols often ship with a thick, brown, sticky grease, for example). However, on rohrbaughforums.com a couple (and really, only a couple) of owners have run into some malfunctions that the factory has claimed are due to improper lubrication (either the wrong lube, or not enough). Most of the comments have claimed that not enough lubrication was the issue, though it is interesting to note that the manual specifically states that the R9 should only be LIGHTLY lubricated, and even warns against over-lubrication. As a result, I decided to fire the R9 while it was still lubed from the factory. And, heck, I new from my dealer that this pistol had only shipped from Rohrbaugh three days ago!
Off I went to my nearby indoor range. I took 150 rounds of standard-pressure 9mm with me - 100 rounds of 115gr Speer Gold Dot, and 50 rounds of Winchester White Box. Another comment from the factory is that the Rohrbaugh R9 is a very tight-fitting, precision pocket pistol, and that failing to keep it clean can result in malfunctions. The Rohrbaughs recommend cleaning after 50-80 rounds to avoid problems. My goal with 150 rounds was to see just how quickly I'd run into problems.
I started off with the Gold Dots, as those are my planned carry round. I must say that hand-chambering a round in the R9 is a joy - I've never had a pistol that felt sooo butter-smooth when hand chambering. My Kel-Tec P-3AT is very difficult to hand chamber due to the stiff spring, and often will only partially chamber, requiring an extra push on the slide to get the pistol fully into battery.
I set up a simple target with some 2" Shoot N'c dots, and did some careful slow-fire shots to see just where they'd land, and to get a feel for aiming. At 7 yards I found I was able to keep all rounds easily within a 2" group during careful slow fire offhand. I was able to shrink that to 1.5" at 10 yards when I braced against the table at the range and fired shots as carefully as I could.
Recoil was quite stout, with visible muzzle flash with the Gold Dots. It was, however, quite controllable. I do think that this pistol could be improved by the addition of checkering on the front of the grip. I may have to pick up some of the 3M grip tape and see if that improves the grip, though I hate to do that to such a beautiful piece of functional art.

(continued next post)