Hi guys,
Bought a NIB Springfield Armory Micro Compact about a month ago.
On average I was having about 1 FTE out of 10 for the first 300rds or so which I consider an adequate break-in period. I tried a lot of different types of 230gr in it, no difference.
Brought it to a trusted "smith who knows 1911s well. He polished the breech face, feed ramp, deburred it where it needed it and so forth. He gave it a good work over.
I picked it up after he had done the work and took it to the range that afternoon. There was no real difference. It kept on stovepiping on me.
I went back to the 'smith and told him nothing had changed.
And here's what he told me. "Look, I did the best I could. But the big ol' 1911 was designed around that big ol' cartridge. Now everybody is redesigning that pistol to make it smaller. When you get a good one, you get a good one but when you get one that ain't right, there real hard to make right. Good luck with it."
Of course I had the option of sending it back to SA and hassling over who would pay the shipping and waiting 3 weeks or a month to get it back. But no matter what, I figured I'd always have some nagging doubt in the back of my mind about the pistol.
So I traded it in for a 2 1/4" barrel Ruger SP101. It took the SA plus $75 bucks to get it. I lost some dough but what's piece of mind worth when it comes to your carry piece, right?
I also gave up 2 rounds; the SA held 7rds with one in the chamber, the Ruger holds 5. The "one shot stop" stats give the edge to the .357 but I figure it's like the difference of being run over by a big Lincoln or a big Cadillac, in other words, there ain't much difference.
I took the SP101 to the range tonght and I'm very happy. Folks will tell you they are built like a tank. They ain't lying to you.
I shot some .38spl, some 38spl +P and finally a lot of .357 ranging from 110gr to 158gr. The recoil is not the "snappy" muzzle flipping type. It's more of a straight push back like a 1911.
Follow up shots were very manageable. I was very surprised and pleased with the lack of bad ass recoil. I was expecting a lot worse and it was really nothing.
I was shooting at regular slow fire pistol targets all night and used a silhouette target for my last 10rds. It was Remington full power 158gr stuff shot from 21 feet, all double action. i wasn't doing any rapid fire by any means, just steady pulls on the trigger.
I was all smiles walking out of the range. First time out? Hell yeah! And I can't wait to spend some more time at the range with this revolver. I literally couldn't be happier with it.
Now I love the idea and concept if the micro compact 1911s and one day I'll probably buy another but I don't know if I'll ever carry one for self-defense.
Take care,
Mike
Bought a NIB Springfield Armory Micro Compact about a month ago.
On average I was having about 1 FTE out of 10 for the first 300rds or so which I consider an adequate break-in period. I tried a lot of different types of 230gr in it, no difference.
Brought it to a trusted "smith who knows 1911s well. He polished the breech face, feed ramp, deburred it where it needed it and so forth. He gave it a good work over.
I picked it up after he had done the work and took it to the range that afternoon. There was no real difference. It kept on stovepiping on me.
I went back to the 'smith and told him nothing had changed.
And here's what he told me. "Look, I did the best I could. But the big ol' 1911 was designed around that big ol' cartridge. Now everybody is redesigning that pistol to make it smaller. When you get a good one, you get a good one but when you get one that ain't right, there real hard to make right. Good luck with it."
Of course I had the option of sending it back to SA and hassling over who would pay the shipping and waiting 3 weeks or a month to get it back. But no matter what, I figured I'd always have some nagging doubt in the back of my mind about the pistol.
So I traded it in for a 2 1/4" barrel Ruger SP101. It took the SA plus $75 bucks to get it. I lost some dough but what's piece of mind worth when it comes to your carry piece, right?
I also gave up 2 rounds; the SA held 7rds with one in the chamber, the Ruger holds 5. The "one shot stop" stats give the edge to the .357 but I figure it's like the difference of being run over by a big Lincoln or a big Cadillac, in other words, there ain't much difference.
I took the SP101 to the range tonght and I'm very happy. Folks will tell you they are built like a tank. They ain't lying to you.
I shot some .38spl, some 38spl +P and finally a lot of .357 ranging from 110gr to 158gr. The recoil is not the "snappy" muzzle flipping type. It's more of a straight push back like a 1911.
Follow up shots were very manageable. I was very surprised and pleased with the lack of bad ass recoil. I was expecting a lot worse and it was really nothing.
I was shooting at regular slow fire pistol targets all night and used a silhouette target for my last 10rds. It was Remington full power 158gr stuff shot from 21 feet, all double action. i wasn't doing any rapid fire by any means, just steady pulls on the trigger.
I was all smiles walking out of the range. First time out? Hell yeah! And I can't wait to spend some more time at the range with this revolver. I literally couldn't be happier with it.
Now I love the idea and concept if the micro compact 1911s and one day I'll probably buy another but I don't know if I'll ever carry one for self-defense.
Take care,
Mike
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