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After shooting competitively for 20 years I can confidently say the 1911/2011 platforms have the most issues. There seems to be a new crowd that just discovered the 2011 that hasn't figured it out yet. Now the old players are trying to be new players while still doing their old things. SA makes garage 1911's, it's a story as old as time. John Wick 3 won't fix SA's horrible quality. What's old is new.
So what's interesting to me about this is the volume of posts that say STI/Staccato prices are crazy high, maybe for some models? Don't get me wrong I'm not a fan of them the last STI I bought was a Marauder and I wasn't impressed with the fit/finish especially on internal parts, and trigger quality was good but nothing special, but it has been reliable, though I've seen plenty of them that were not.
Yet I see several sites selling vanilla P models for $2k, that's not much more than the Prodigy especially if the trigger, fit and finish are superior as some have reported. It seems to bring everything to the table and more than the Prodigy does. You'd spend at least $500 with a good 1911 smith these days to do a trigger/tune job.
Please stop posting before you hurt yourself.The 2011 hasn't been the most common platform in any shooting sport ever. You might show up to a specific division nationals event where the 2011 is over represented for that weekend but that is an exception.
SA has always been a go to for 1911s. They aren't gucci, but they run. And before you start with the "My Nighthawk" let me dick slap you right there and remind you that you are comparing a $900 1911 to a $3000 1911.
Doesn't mean the prodigy wasn't a miss, but SA can make a good gun. In fact if a Dan Wesson is too much, SA is a good alternative.
A little backstory as I come at this as a competitive shooter. For "Limited" division is USPSA--the "go to" model was an STI 2011. Specifically a model called "The Edge". it was a 40 cal (think it came in 45 as well) 5 inch 2011 Double Stack. Sort of your base model. Ran at about $2000 even. When "STI" became Staccatto the 5 inch 40 cal became the XL and retailed for $3600. Same Damn gun. Now they don't even sell a 40 or 45 model. That's a problem because in competition you need to be at least 40 caliber to make major (an advantage in scoring--shooting minor your C/D zones hits count for less points). Limited Division was STIs--A lot of Custom Guns started as STI frames even. They owned that division. In one fell swoop they put a big middle finger to the shooting community which has supported them and been loyal customers. Its like Intel saying "Yeah we are not gonna be in the PC business anymore, we want to focus on memory--so all chips are now marked up 100% in price and yeah btw, we going to only sell Apple PC chips"
Please stop posting before you hurt yourself.
Limited Division is almost 100% 2011. (and typically the largest/most popular division) is USPSA AND IPSC
3Gun handgun is very much dominated by 2011.
Bullseye?
One of the reasons we even have divisions in USPSA is the rise of the double stack 1911, led by....guess who.... 2011s
My LB Premier II in .45 from circa '95 was so tight when I first got it, I had to seriously WORK to budge the slide from battery. I honestly thought something was WRONG with it when I first got it. Like they didn't fit the barrel correctly. It was reliable with ball ammo & 230 Golden Saber.Have you ever owned a Les Baer?
Put the first rounds through it ?
There most assuredly is a break-in period with hard fit pistols.
That is one of the few cases I have encountered.
This right here is how it should be. Reliability is king.They just eat everything I feed them from day one.
In one fell swoop they put a big middle finger to the shooting community which has supported them and been loyal customers.
SA has always been a go to for 1911s. They aren't gucci, but they run. And before you start with the "My Nighthawk" let me dick slap you right there and remind you that you are comparing a $900 1911 to a $3000 1911.
I’m just wondering when everyone will quit being so surprised they use customers to beta test instead of working the kinks out and releasing it a little later than projected.These interested me. I have a couple STI's that have run well and I like them and I'd like a 2011 platform with a red dot. That said I carry a CZ P01 and race with a CZ Shadow 2. I shoot the 1911/2011 as well as the CZ's but neither platform is dead reliable as the CZ with no tweaking mags, breaking in pistols or repairing. They just eat everything I feed them from day one. That said, I'll buy one of these after they get the issues worked out....if they do.
Here is the deal. I have around 1000 rds through my 5” Prodigy and several more thousand through my Staccato P
Out of the box the Staccato is far better and ready to EDC for real
The Prodigy took work and money to make it equal
I do my own pistols and have for years so it was just parts
Extreme Engineering Hammer, Sear, disconnecter set 200.00
EGW Slide stop 50.00
EGW Ejector 40.00
Wilson BP firing pin 20.0
EGW Extractor 40.00
Fusion no tool guide rod 60.00
Wilson BP firing pin stop
That’s 450.00 in parts
Pistol 1200.0
Total 1650.00. Plus work I did
Polish ramp
Polish Barrel throat
Correct bolt face and disconnect track
Fit parts
Correct grip safety release so no need for rubber band be. Lol
Probably eight hours work
Now it’s fairly equal but I park would of b en about 500.00 from smith so almost the same into it as P
If we apply the same rules for other pistols (ie 1911’s) I would say the Springfield is most certainly a 2011What defines a 2011?
Who decides?
Staccato decides. "2011" is trademarked by them. Staccato can name anything they want 2011. Same with Colt & AR15.What defines a 2011?
Who decides?
Well in court maybe. Out in the real world the users and owners decide.Staccato decides. "2011" is trademarked by them. Staccato can name anything they want 2011. Same with Colt & AR15.
I suppose you only refer to Kleenex-brand facial tissues as Kleenex, and call all other brands facial tissues right?Staccato decides. "2011" is trademarked by them. Staccato can name anything they want 2011. Same with Colt & AR15.
No. I call facial tissue my shirt.I suppose you only refer to Kleenex-brand facial tissues as Kleenex, and call all other brands facial tissues right?
I thought they were double stack 1911's.I thought 2011s had 2 piece frames?
Here you go then. Is your Glock mag Platypus a Platypus or a 2011?
The old 2011 was the double stack frame (carbon fiber mag well and steel rails?) and other "improvement" options that STI made standard on their pistol.Staccato decides. "2011" is trademarked by them. Staccato can name anything they want 2011.
SVI made those and PT still makes something like that with the Honcho.I wouldn't mind finding the slide they made with the caliber swappable breach face. Swap the breach, barrel, recoil spring and mags to change caliber.
Does that make glocks 2011 by default then ?Here you go then. Is your Glock mag Platypus a Platypus or a 2011?
Here you go then. Is your Glock mag Platypus a Platypus or a 2011?
Couple of guys on the Enos forums have made pretty extensive changes to theirs… apparently mostly compatible with “standard” 2011 parts, exception being the shape of the trigger bow in stock grip. Good info in this thread (including a grip transplant from an STI).Mine says "Platypus" on the slide and won't take an STI mag, so I'm pretty sure it's a Platypus and not a 2011.
Something like the Prodigy is definitely a clone of a 2011, but since that's pretty cumbersome I'm OK with just calling it a 2011.
I've resisted the urge so far to put a Prodigy into inventory and then play Lego with it - has anyone tried to mix and match grips and frames between the STI and Springfield pistols?
Thats why Im not too concerned at the moment. Going to go clean and lube it, see what happens. Always a good day when you have a new pistol.Rookie mistake. Cleaning of factory gunk and correct lube makes a difference on many brands of guns.
Think of it like a mil-surplus battle stick. Clean off the cosmoline, oil, put into service. The manufs dont know how long it will sit on the shelf, or what shelf. They dont want it rusting / whatever...
It feels bigger than my G19 but only sleightly. Feels a little "rounder" than a Glock if that makes sense, I like it a lot compared to my 1911.As someone who has owned and shot a few 1911s over the years but not handled a 2011 I have to ask since I never see it talked about; isn't the grip insanely thick/wide compared to say a Glock? Maybe it's just how they always appear in photos/video.
That makes sense. I've handled a ton of pistols over the last 10 years but oddly enough I don't think I've ever handled or maybe even SEEN a 2011 in person in any flavor in that time.It feels bigger than my G19 but only sleightly. Feels a little "rounder" than a Glock if that makes sense, I like it a lot compared to my 1911.
I will say that if you envision this as a "duty" gun then just save and go with a Staccato. There is some break-in with these and in my mind if I have to fiddlefuck the gun to get it to work itll just be a range toy until its proven otherwise.That makes sense. I've handled a ton of pistols over the last 10 years but oddly enough I don't think I've ever handled or maybe even SEEN a 2011 in person in any flavor in that time.
I'll have to hit up my LGS this weekend and see if they have a Prodigy to get a feel. Maybe it'll push me into wanting a Staccato. On paper the weight of a Staccato P isn't appealing vs the various Glocks and HKs I've had. I used to carry a 5in 1911 every day but I moved on from that years ago.
Yeah I think I'd skip the SF (I pretty much always have anyway lol). I have my carry gun figured out, but have thought of the Staccato P vs say a 19X for a more general purpose handgun for things other than shoving into the waistband for CC.I will say that if you envision this as a "duty" gun then just save and go with a Staccato. There is some break-in with these and in my mind if I have to fiddlefuck the gun to get it to work itll just be a range toy until its proven otherwise.
I regret this one but if it takes a little work to get running then Ill play with it in USPSA rather than take a 60% hit by selling it back to the store. Idk, first world problemsYeah I think I'd skip the SF (I pretty much always have anyway lol). I have my carry gun figured out, but have thought of the Staccato P vs say a 19X for a more general purpose handgun for things other than shoving into the waistband for CC.