"Reliable enough for a CCW" is a function of a particular example of a gun, not something that extends across models (for example, you shoot a gun to see if it is reliable enough, you don't say "well, Glocks are reliable" and stuff one in a holster without checking yours out).
My Taurus 1911 is a great shooter, but seems to have an early issue with light primer strikes (it's still very new), but I expect that to be fixed rather quickly (the shop is handling that). Once it gets back and I confirm that the light strikes are in the past, then it will be the "house gun," which requires just as much reliability as a CCW firearm.