1911 .45, what is the best?
Dorian
June 8, 2003, 04:07 AM
I realize that asking "What is the best" will get very opinionated awnsers.
I also don't think I should even have to put that I want a 1911 in anything other than .45, but that I can deal with.
What I've found through the bit of reasearch I've done is that Kimber, Springfield and Colt are supposedly the best. And not in that order.
I had my heart set on a Colt 1911A1(Cause if it isn't colt, it's just a copy!), but now I'm uncertian.
I've also heard that to get a totally reliable 1911 that you have to do a lot of customization. I think that's totally unacceptable for a pistol. I think pistols should be totally reliable out of the box, hence my HK collection. And if this is true, I probably just won't get a 1911 at all.
Thanks
p.s. I'm interested in reliability only. Half an inch difference in accuracy at 75 yards is not important to me. And I'll probably never be able to shoot as straight as the pistol.
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WonderNine
June 8, 2003, 04:25 AM
I've also heard that to get a totally reliable 1911 that you have to do a lot of customization.
You've heard wrong :)
You want more reliability then you'll need a looser slide. Colts come with looser slides for reliability and they are still accurate.
CZ-75
June 8, 2003, 04:36 AM
Colts have the better quality of parts and metallurgy, but sometimes cosmetics leave a little to a lot to be desired; something not excusable when they price themselves at a premium. That said, it would be a good choice provided you can look it over first before buying, making sure the flats are even (to around 1/32nd or so), the corners not rounded, etc. Don't buy a flawed gun and expect the factory to fix it right for all but minor problems when dealing w/ Colt.
"Customization" can be features to fit a shooter, goopy doo dads not needed, or bob a hammer, change grips.
I have seen, own, shot many Colts, Kimbers, Springfields with nothing done except smooth trigger (usually 3.5-4#) , skateboard tape , bob a hammer on Mil-Spec (if hands are fleshy) , change grips.I /we just shoot the durn things. Adj sights to our liking POA/POI , check see if carry load runs evertime, and fuggitaboutit.
After a number of rounds one might change cosmetics , but me, while I appreciate nice looks, I prefer to buy ammo than have looks.
A # didn't change a thing, I know of example of each of the above, not even cleaned , shot right after leaving purchase...one guy ran 900 rds w/o a glitch in his kimber, in one afternooon. The guy that brought one each of the S/A and Colt MIl-specs, same deal--400 rds each , none of us helping burn rds , had a glitch, that morning.
Dorian
June 8, 2003, 05:01 AM
Asthetics/cosmetics aren't something I'm interested in either :)
I want a 1911 cause I think the pistol looks great, in just about any configuration I've ever seen.
And Colt seems to be winning so far ;)
Dobe
June 8, 2003, 08:21 AM
My advice would be to go to the range with a friend and shoot his/hers. Find another friend with another model, and do the same. Kimber took a lot of business away from Colt, and sold more 1911's than many if not most manufacturers in the US. In part, it is because Kimber made such a good handgun, and in part it is because Colt's quality slipped. I understand that now Colt's quality is back, and they are in the race again.
I have shot and been impressed with many different brands. I personally own three Kimbers. I am considering a fourth as I write this. If I were not considering a Kimber, I think I would like to have a Colt series 70. My Kimbers are all Series I. I know where I can get a SS Series I Custom NIB for about Eight hundred.
A note on reliability:
I have more malfunctions from my CZ 75B SA, than I have from any of my Kimbers. I have had only one malfunction from one Kimber, and that was on my first magizine. After that, I have had flawless operation. My Kimbers shoot tight too.
There are a numbers of 1911's that will give you the same results. Good luck with the hunt my friend.
Dorian
June 8, 2003, 10:02 AM
I have a serious problem with your suggestion. :D
I am the only gun owner of all the people I know.
And, in fact, I'm going to start giving USPs to my friends as gifts as soon as I get my next job.
My best friend's dad is a gun owner, but no 1911s, and my old boss had a Llama 1911.............. That wasn't gonna cut it.
So maybe in a couple months when I join the local gun club I'll be able to do that. But as it stands right now, this messageboard is all I've got. :)
El Tejon
June 8, 2003, 11:00 AM
Les Baer, TRS. The weapon is ready off the shelf.
I have yet to have a mal in one of mine (well, a non-Baer mag blew out the top one day at the range, you can read about that here).
The weapon does not need to be a rattle trap in order to be reliable (old myth from its militree service). Baers are super tight and super reliable.
Sean Smith
June 8, 2003, 12:25 PM
The weapon does not need to be a rattle trap in order to be reliable (old myth from its militree service). Baers are super tight and super reliable.
I'm not too impressed with recent accounts of Baer reliability...
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=50289
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=50261
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=47454
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=47064
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=46759
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=46647
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=46633
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=46601
http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=45401
:barf:
tex_n_cal
June 8, 2003, 12:27 PM
Colt. If you want one high end they still sell the Special Combat Government out of the custom shop.
As to the tight/reliable debate, know that guns are self-soiling machines, and the brass shavings/powder reside/sand does have to go somewhere. I will stick one that is a little loose, at least in the slide.
I fitted a new Bar-sto barrel to my Delta Elite, circa 1987. The slide is kinda sloppy, but with its tightly fitted barrel, it's a one hole gun at 25 yards. I expect off a Ransom Rest, it would do 1.5" at 50 yards, which costs you $300 extra on a Baer.
Sean Smith
June 8, 2003, 12:39 PM
Best depends on price.
Right now, I'd say the best value is a new Colt.
http://www.imagemagician.org/images/igc_76543/1991a1.jpg
http://www.colt.com/CMCI/1991.asp
I've owned 2 Delta Elites and the 01991 pictured above. All three ran out of the box. I've had the Deltas customized for fun. :D
B Coyote
June 8, 2003, 02:42 PM
I'm gonna say Kimber, simply because my experience with them has been excellent. I can't comment on other manufacturers, because I haven't done anything with them.
bc:)
sanchezero
June 8, 2003, 05:41 PM
And, in fact, I'm going to start giving USPs to my friends as gifts as soon as I get my next job.
Hey buddy, how're you doin?
:)
Shmackey
June 8, 2003, 07:21 PM
What I've found through the bit of reasearch I've done is that Kimber, Springfield and Colt are supposedly the best.
You found wrong. :) (And this is coming from a Kimber owner.) The Big Three might be the best of the sub-$1k range, but that just means they're the best just like a Honda Civic is the best car. Very good car, but the best? You want the best 1911 there is? Fork over a few grand to one of five or six top-name gunsmiths, forget about it for a year or two, and you'll get one eventually. The best.
I have to disagree about Colt's prices being high; that's certainly not the case for their New Rollmark basic models. I just ordered one of these (http://www.1911forum.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=50275) for way less than a basic Kimber. And it's an actual blued carbon steel gun. And it has all of three MIM parts in it.
It doesn't look like my Kimber because it's not supposed to. It's a classic, not a Classic.
yucapote
June 8, 2003, 07:43 PM
Go for a Springfield. Their 1911's are good quality and if there is problem with one of their guns they are covered by a lifetime warranty. My SA has been totally reliable out of the box. The only things that I've done to it are to add soem griptape to the front strap and replace the mainspring housing ILS internals (it helped to reduce the trigger pull)
Dobe
June 8, 2003, 08:04 PM
Dorian:
"I have a serious problem with your suggestion.
I am the only gun owner of all the people I know. "
Dorian,
Go to your local indoor range. They usually rent handguns for 10-15 bucks.
Good luck
rick_reno
June 8, 2003, 09:30 PM
The Pardini PC45 is doing well - you don't see a lot of them (yet), so it might be too early to tell. Don Nygord imports them, you can see one here. The trigger is adjustable for weight and sear engagement. The gun is doing well with the few that are shooting it.
http://www.nygord-precision.com/3245_pistols.htm
More info here
http://www.pardini.it/inglese/tiro%20dinamico%20ING/PCING.html
and for the compensated version, it's here
http://www.pardini.it/inglese/tiro%20dinamico%20ING/PCSopenING.html
I don't know if Don is importing the compensated gun, you'd have to give him a ring and find out.
surfinUSA
June 8, 2003, 09:42 PM
Colt, everything else is just a copy. And some are very expensive copies.
Gordy Wesen
June 8, 2003, 09:59 PM
Sean, those weren't powder marks on the target were they?:D
Doc
June 8, 2003, 10:46 PM
there are many fine 1911 45's
if you search THR you will find many endorsements,
and many photo's of members collections
the question is for what purpose do you seek a 1911
and what is important to you?
plinking - cost
self defense - ulimately reliable
competetion - accuracy
i think there are three classes:
stock (entry level)
high end production (semi custom)
custom
Stock guns: Kimber - best bang for the buck
there's others, but why?
Why? well if you wanted a particular brand because of cost or availability go for it
stay away from foreign clones just to save a buck
semi Custom: Les Baer, period.
Wilson would be a good choice too
In fact when I asked people who know
(in person, not on the internet) I routinely got the following answer:
Wilson, Les Baer & ...a third name...
If you believe the threads references by Sean Smith,
don't buy a Les Baer.
(I would be curious to know
how many other brands have problems?)
Me, I'm with El Tejon, Les Baer, TRS.
The weapon is ready off the shelf.
...I have yet to have a mal in one of mine
"I don't know nothing about shooting or fighting..."
I would point out though,
ALL mechanical devices may FAIL.
That's not the point.
Sometimes the machining or assembly could be flawed,
even from a fine manufacturer.
A good manufacturer will make it right,
or give you a refund. If you have a problem
contact the manufacturer not the retailer.
Custom: who cares? too much money, but if I were gonna go there
I would unquestionalbe buy Robar.
For competition, I have no clue.
The biggest problem with 1911's is that people DICK with them :cuss:
There are many who see only Colt,
and all others as imitators.
They would also debate
WHICH colt to buy,
cause it would seem that
NOT every Colt is great, hmmmm:scrutiny:
DakotaSig
June 8, 2003, 11:48 PM
but I ended up with a SIG P220ST! :D
I haven't looked back since. :)
JackC
June 9, 2003, 12:48 AM
I have a Colt 1991A1 series 80 in stainless and a Kimber Compact series 1 also in stainless. Both shoot very well, stone cold reliable, the only time either didn't go bang, the mag was empty and slide locked back.
If I had to get rid of one, the Kimber would go, the Colt just has more soul.
Jack
RON in PA
June 9, 2003, 01:12 AM
Get the real thing, the Colt.
Snaps
June 9, 2003, 02:20 AM
I personally am in love with the Wilson Combats. Of course my favorite being the KZ-45
Rob96
June 9, 2003, 04:37 AM
Love my new stainless , new rollmarked, Colt 1991A1.
Grayrider
June 9, 2003, 09:41 AM
Hmm...a lot of guys on here telling you to get Colts. I don't hear that very often amongst my friends who are into 1911s. Now I won't argue about the quality of their metallurgy, but if you get a Colt you will probably end up customizing it quite a bit. Not because you have to, but because you will want to shape it to your liking. I personally prefer to have much of that done already when I buy the gun. Thus a Kimber, Springfield, or maybe a Dan Wesson Patriot has much of this taken care of. Will they still be reliable? Sure they will. My Kimber and SAs have been as realiable as any 1911 I have ever owned. I don't have a DW Patriot, but Stephen A. Camp does. Read his review at the 1911 forums. Then there is the STI Trojan, and I think that will be my next purchase. Very impressive piece of work for just under a grand.
I am not knocking Colt exactly. I have one Delta, and at one time back in the 80's that was the only brand I had in handguns. But they have fallen far behind in terms of features offered, and from my experience their pistols are not as accurate out of the box as the other makers. I cannot see a difference in reliability based on my recent experience either. So I would look further and be sure you get everything you can for your money.
GR
PS: After you get into 1911s, you won't want to buy your friends USPs!
harrydog
June 9, 2003, 11:16 AM
QUOTE:
"Colts have the better quality of parts and metallurgy..."
I've hear this mentioned from time to time, as a reason to buy a Colt over the competition, but I'm always curious how this conclusion is arrived at. Is there any evidence, anywhere, that Colt's metallurgy is any better? If so, I'd love to see it. As a matter of fact, I've heard that Colts sometimes have a tendency to crack when subjected to years of high round counts. I wish there was a way to find the truth.
BigG
June 9, 2003, 11:23 AM
I've had good luck with Colt Government Models and Gold Cups, no failures of any kind with more than 10 pistols and about 30 years. Also the one Army 1911A1 I had was trouble free. Have not owned any clones.
Dobe
June 9, 2003, 11:51 AM
I've hear this mentioned from time to time, as a reason to buy a Colt over the competition, but I'm always curious how this conclusion is arrived at. Is there any evidence, anywhere, that Colt's metallurgy is any better? If so, I'd love to see it. As a matter of fact, I've heard that Colts sometimes have a tendency to crack when subjected to years of high round counts. I wish there was a way to find the truth.
Harrydog, I believe you are right. I don't and haven't seen higher quality from Colt. I think that Colt has quality firearm (forced onto them by the competition), but Kimber took most of the 1911 business away from them.. You do not do this by building inferior firearms.
I am currently weighing the purchase of another 1911. It is between a Kimber Series I or a 1911 Series 70. From past performance, I am leaning toward the Kimber, but I feel confident that I really would not be disappointed in the Colt.
45auto
June 9, 2003, 12:27 PM
Tough question,
The notion that the 1911 needs a lot of customization to work is false. You can spend an enormous amount if you wish, but those modifications are well beyond what you stipulated you need. Most of those are well beyond "need" for anyone.
I think the chances of getting a very reliable 1911 out of the Big 3 that you mentioned are very good, out of the box.
But, IMHO, the chances are greater than the other "modern" guns that you may get a 1911 that needs either a "tweak" and/or better mags. So, it may be possible that an extractor may need adjusting and/or the need to buy better mags which solves a large portion of the so called problems.
So, if you you like the way it handles, shoots, etc, then it's worth the potential little extra effort.
If the HK feels and shoots as good or better than the 1911, you should pass- why bother!!
That said, for the money, I'd buy the Springfield "Loaded". If money is not primary and you want the Colt, they are excellent,
buy that and add an extended beavertail and better sights at the very least.
Good luck
G Man.40
June 9, 2003, 04:32 PM
Wilson Combat makes a fine line.:D
Chairman Meow
June 10, 2003, 05:29 PM
I went through this very decision making process and I ended up choosing a Springfield because the Loaded model seemed to be the most gun for the money. I paid about $580 for it as opposed to the $800 to $900 I was looking at to get one of the Kimbers I liked. Don't get me wrong, I really like Kimbers, I was just a little low on funds and I found the Springfiled to be a better deal. I had some hiccups with it out of the box, which pissed me off to no end. :fire: I replaced the extractor with a Wilson hardened extractor and bought some Wilson 8rd mags. It is now very reliable and a joy to shoot. I have rounded off some of the edges a little around the thumb area and I plan on taking the Integral Locking System out of the mainspring housing just because it makes me feel good to own guns that are illegal in California. :D
45auto
June 10, 2003, 06:55 PM
I think you did better buying the Springfield.
Some of the companies, not the big 3 of course, are getting the message.
S&W uses Wilson mags and Dan Wesson uses CMC power mags for some of their models. Imagine including high quality mags to reduce the chance of misfeeds- what a novel idea!
Sean Smith
June 10, 2003, 10:31 PM
The Colt metalurgy thing is pretty simple. It really doesn't have to do with frames and slides (although those are high-quality forgings), but with the internal components. They use alot less MIM than Kimber does. Over on 1911forum.com they had a list of which parts were made of what if you feel like digging around for it.... along with another topic full of stories of Kimber MIM parts breaking in two with minimal use.
harrydog
June 11, 2003, 08:10 AM
Ahhh. The internal parts. That makes more sense.
I don't doubt that Colt frame & slide forgings are excellent, but I was always curious about people saying that their metallurgy was superior to anything else.
Brer Bear
June 11, 2003, 01:58 PM
I have been bitten by the 1911 bug, and have begun the search for information... so far, as I understand it, there are two types of barrels and receivers, for the 1911's, ones with throated barrels, and ones with ramped barrels. Is one configuration more likely to feed a wider range of ammunition than another? If this is indeed true, which manufacturer makes which type? :confused:
Sean Smith
June 11, 2003, 03:41 PM
The majority of .45 ACP 1911s are unramped. The general consensus among pistolsmiths is that the unramped arrangement is more reliable in .45 ACP 1911s. For higher pressure cartridges, a ramped barrel is generally better. Some pictures of different 1911 barrel types:
http://www.geocities.com/mr_motorhead/10tech.html
Brer Bear
June 12, 2003, 07:48 PM
Ok, i get it now, for lower pressure rounds like the .45 there is no advantage over the original configuration (internal ramp & throated barrel), but for higher pressure rounds like the 10mm, .40, .38 super & 9x23 a ramped barrel and frame would be ideal. Thanks for the information.
Pendragon
June 12, 2003, 08:43 PM
Not sure how much you want to spend.
If you can swing ~$1300ish, the Valtro (www.valtrousa.com) is an amazing 1911 - extremely well made and fitted.
Do some searches on us rabid Valtro owners who own these guns - they are as reliable as a 1911 gets, they have some very nice features seen usually only on a full on custom pistol.
Only bummer is - the wait is getting longer all the time and there is pretty much just one way to get them - although I had a different safety installed and you can get hard chrome instead of blueing...
Its a little more than the factory jobs, but this baby is an utter gem. I have one in the low 400s...
dsk
June 14, 2003, 02:50 AM
Harrydog, I believe you are right. I don't and haven't seen higher quality from Colt. I think that Colt has quality firearm (forced onto them by the competition), but Kimber took most of the 1911 business away from them.. You do not do this by building inferior firearms.
The early Kimbers were indeed very good. But then Kimber started doing what all new manufacturers do, suffer growing pains and not keep the initial emphasis on quality over production levels.
I also find that street talk lags behind relaity by at least a couple of years. When people say that Brand X is doing well or doing poorly, they're really talking about what was happening years ago. The new Colts are indeed as good or better than anything they've made since the mid 1960's. It's just taking awhile for enough people to see and handle one to get the word out. And of course, some people just have a vendetta against Colt thanks to their prior business practices and won't give them any slack.
Volpe
June 14, 2003, 11:10 AM
I have Colts and Springfields. I took the SF and tightened the slide and peened the rails until I had to stone them to get the slide back on. The gun was tight as a drum and utterly realiable. I dont think I ever had a jam with it and it shoots very accurately. But, you really dont ned a tight slide for accuracy because its how the barrel fits that counts. The barrel has to lock up tight in the slide then yer cookin. Now, with that said, it depends on what you are going to do with it. For banging around save some $$ and go with the SF but a Colt is, well, a Colt. I have seen and am thinking about getting a 10mm in either a Dan Wesson or I hear Kimber might be coming out with one. They are both nice guns also....
Rich357
June 18, 2003, 04:28 PM
Hi Sean,
Several of those posts you listed, that were made to the 1911, were made by the same person. It looks like only two or three people had a problem with their Baer pistols. Don't you think two or three people represent a small percentage of Baer's customers?
Rich
Doc
June 18, 2003, 05:10 PM
Rich:
Sorry, need to vent/flame.
:fire:
The people who know handguns,
because THEY DO GUNS FOR A LIVING
including:
Roy Huntington*
Robbie Barkman
Clint Smith*
Harry Fleming*
Charlie Petty
John Taffin
Mike Venturino*
Ken Hackathorn
Ray Chapman
Jack Furr*
and others
AGREE that there are many quality 45's, even out of the box.
BUT they* ENTRUST THEIR LIVES to Les Baer's skill and craftsmanship.
When I want a new toy,
I buy it and then ask them what they think,
because I wanted it anyway.
You don't have to believe me,
what do I know, I'm just a gynecologist.
But when I want opinions and advice
upon which I am going to STAKE MY LIFE
I ask them and trust their opinions.
:fire:
and yes, as you noticed,
very few people
have had legitimate complaints with Les Baer guns,
but they sure are vocal aren't they?
to borrow a phrase, they are "email cowards".
When I have a problem with
a product
I give THE MANUFACTURER first
dibbs to correct the problem
(see my previous thread regarding my Kimber TLE II shooting high)
Jump in here anytime El Tejon...
Mil Novecientos Once
June 18, 2003, 09:27 PM
http://www.springfieldarmory.com/images/pistols/PX9109LLarge.jpg
Rich357
June 18, 2003, 09:32 PM
Hi Doc,
I'm not sure if you're venting in my direction. I agree with you.
I was mildly taking Sean to task. I thought he was making it look as if Baer had lots of complaints, when in fact there were several posts by one person and one or two other posts by one or two more people. That to me is not a very significant number of complainers in relation to Baer's customer base.
Please feel free to vent in Sean's direction.
Rich
ps Doc, anytime you need to go on vacation I'll be happy to
fill in for you at work. I've given much of my time to
studying the female anatomy. :)
Mr. Black
June 19, 2003, 01:27 PM
I'm going to assume that you're talking new here.
There are the "sub-class" guns which I'd stay away from if your interested in reliability. Lllama, Rock River (or island, whatever)
Then there are the big three (think cars) colt, SA and Kimber. However, the Colts and Kimbers are NOT real 1911's. They've both got stupid extra crap in them.
And Kimber is A) located in yonkers (I've got a think against NY) B) Buys frames from S&W (HUD agreement will be binding if W doesn't win) and C) so cheap that an $800 gun comes with a plastic mainspring housing. And depending on who you talk to, their MIM parts are the ones that give MIM 1911 parts a bad rep. Oh, and you can't get them "un-customized" I don't see how Kimber is increasing our choices by only selling "loaded" guns. But, some people like that stuff.
I, personally, would have really liked to have been able to buy a Colt, however, I refuse to pay the $1,000 for the series 70 rei-issue that should cost less to make. They're nice (shot one yesterday) but the series 80 stuff makes for a fishy trigger pull and pisses me off.
So I got an SA. Which means I get to be PO'd by the "Imbel Brazil" (they're good frames, just not american) However, the customer service is excellent and the pistol is utterly reliable. It would be (and is) my choice for any kind of serious work.
And then there's the high end stuff. You get better QC, a tighter slide fit (feels nice but unnecessary even for accuracy) a name and a big price tag.
I've shot $1,500 Les Baer's etc. One was so tight at lockup you could hardly rack it. But at the end of the day, they were no more reliable than my SA and worse, usually (to me) unconfortable with their checkering, speedbumps, thin grips etc.
So buy an SA if the series 80 stuff makes you mad, or buy a colt if it doesn't.
PS-Soon all Kimbers will have external extractors. One more reason they're not a 1911.
ruger357
June 19, 2003, 02:06 PM
I've had great luck with my Kimber.
Jeff Timm
June 19, 2003, 06:32 PM
A 1936 Colt Government Model Commercial Blue.
Geoff
Who knows if it's good enough for Indiana Jones, it's good enough for him.
Who also knows one in excellent condition, would be worth thousands.;)
Catbird
June 19, 2003, 07:27 PM
I'm definitely not an impulsive buyer. After spending several days reading and researching this very question, I decided on a stainless, NRM, Colt 1991A1. I'll be picking it up in two days. After that, I'll begin my quest for a "new" 70-series Colt 1911. :D
valnar
June 19, 2003, 07:39 PM
I got to this thread a little late. This is for the original poster.
Since you mentioned Springfield and Kimber, I assume you want a decent production gun with some custom features at a price below $1000. If I am wrong, well, there are always the cu$tom shops.
In the boundaries I just said, I would highly recommend the Dan Wesson Patriot above all others. 'tis one fine looking 1911.
-Robert
Sean Smith
June 19, 2003, 07:53 PM
There are the "sub-class" guns which I'd stay away from if your interested in reliability. Lllama, Rock River (or island, whatever)
Uh, there is a HUGE difference between Rock Island Armory and Rock River Arms. RIA sells cheap third world slag. Rock River Arms sells very high quality $1,000+ custom guns made in the USA. Try having some facts next time.
Then there are the big three (think cars) colt, SA and Kimber. However, the Colts and Kimbers are NOT real 1911's. They've both got stupid extra crap in them.
Techinically, none of them are 1911s, because none of them are military contract guns made before the 1911A1 was adopted. The Colt is the closest to correct of the three, even with the firing pin block safety (the technical term for "stupid extra crap")
I, personally, would have really liked to have been able to buy a Colt, however, I refuse to pay the $1,000 for the series 70 rei-issue that should cost less to make. They're nice (shot one yesterday) but the series 80 stuff makes for a fishy trigger pull and pisses me off.
You sound confused. The going rate for those guns is more like $850. And they don't have Series 80 stuff, that's why they are called Series 70. And you realize that it is really easy to remove the Series 80 parts... right?
Doc
June 19, 2003, 10:52 PM
Rich:
yep, your comments are correct.
PM me and I will continue my diatribe offline
Doc
PS: I could really use the help; ask Skunkabilly
Tamara
June 19, 2003, 11:58 PM
Hrmmm...
I've had several 1911's that were spotty in the reliability department (mostly troubles feeding JHP's or crappy factory magazines):
Colt Series 70 Commander, old Springfield "pre-milspec milspec", 'nother "pre-loaded" Springfield, an Auto-Ordinance, and an early Colt 1991A1.
Then there are the ones that have been champs from the day I got 'em:
A racegun built from parts (Essex frame, Colt slide), ParaOrd P-12.45, Springfield V-10, Kimber Custom Classic Stainless LE, Springfield Professional, an old "Clackamas, OR" Kimber Custom Classic, a Colt Series 80 Enhanced in .38 Super, Springfield Stainless Loaded, and a Les Baer Concept III.
Mr. Black
June 20, 2003, 01:14 PM
There are the "sub-class" guns which I'd stay away from if your interested in reliability. Lllama, Rock River (or island, whatever)
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]Uh, there is a HUGE difference between Rock Island Armory and Rock River Arms. RIA sells cheap third world slag. Rock River Arms sells very high quality $1,000+ custom guns made in the USA. Try having some facts next time.
Well duh. I couldn't remember if it was Rock Island or River that was the cheap phillipino guns. I didn't want to get it wrong. Sorry if you got confused when I was talking about $300 crud.
Techinically, none of them are 1911s, because none of them are military contract guns made before the 1911A1 was adopted. The Colt is the closest to correct of the three, even with the firing pin block safety (the technical term for "stupid extra crap")
Okay, let's be nitpicky. But I don't see how the colt is the closest, when it has extra parts from the original. Sure, a mil-spec has a different ejection port, and a flared frame; but it hasn't got functions that existed on neither the original, nor the A1 with the exception of some Swartz (like Kimber) safeties in the 30's.
You sound confused. The going rate for those guns is more like $850. And they don't have Series 80 stuff, that's why they are called Series 70. And you realize that it is really easy to remove the Series 80 parts... right?
I refuse to pay $850 ($1000 list, I believe) for a gun that costs Colt less to make than the guns that they sell for little over $500. It was a series 80 I shot the day before. While they are, overall, a nice gun; the trigger pull is still fishy. Feels more like a BHP than a 1911.
And why would I want to remove parts that are there for my safety? Why would I buy a weapon that I must remove parts off of? I sure know that removing safeties on a gun doesn't open one up to any more liability.
Why, on the internet do people; instead of nicely asking for clearification, automatically assume you're an idiot and feel the need to tell you "how it is?"
Pumpkinheaver
June 21, 2003, 09:51 AM
I've got a Kimber that I bought new in '98 that has NEVER jammed using factory defensive ammo. The only time it has balked was when I first got it and tried some light target loads in it, I bought a lighter mainspring from wolfe and have never had a problem since. I highly recomend Kimber.
Sean Smith
June 21, 2003, 08:10 PM
And why would I want to remove parts that are there for my safety?
Why would you care about removing parts that you don't want the company to put there in the first place? :confused:
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