Re: 1911 Hammer follow when empty
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: athhud</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Deadly0311</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
I agree that the fire controls of a 1911 are often over complicated and made out to be a voodoo. But in this litegous world we live in, I make the same statements to people. Not that I am trying to make a buck, but I tell them if they dont fully understand the how, why, where, and what it could get bad quickly. I learned the 1911 a couple of ways, the road of "oh shit I dicked this up again, and then from a 1911 builder after I was tired of seeing UPS at my house couple times a week (I was only working on my guns at the time). The idea that you can cut the primary and secondary angle of a sear with a glass table and sandpaper is ridiculous, likewise how do you propose he get a perfect 90 degree cut on the hammer hooks? Keep in mind the # I shoot for is .020 on the hammer hooks, if I could do that repeatedly with a glass table and sandpaper, I wouldn't have spent the countless dollars on jigs, stones, feeler gauges, magnifying glasses, ruby stones (80 dollar stones), and all the other countless stuff just for the 1911. The angles must be right, period the end. I always tell customers that there are 1911 drop in kits, sure they will drop in, but will they be right????? Maybe maybe not. I have seen more than a few "bubba'ed" 1911 trigger jobs and they are bad.....most times the sear and hammer are toast.
I suggest to the OP that you get a sear, hammer, and sear spring from a reputable shop and have them installed the correct way.
Onto the smoke and mirror part of the post. There are alot of things that get over exaggerated in the 1911 world. With the time I have invested in that one platform, studying, reading, watching, and doing I removed those smoke and mirrors. But ask yourself if you want to sit down and do all of that, just half assed put the part in, or pay someone who has already done that and has the tooling to do so THE RIGHT WAY.
oh and keep the dremel away from pistols.......
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I agree completely! My problem is I'm always in the group that wants to "sit down and do all of that". There is no doubt in my mind that smiths earn their pay. There are many people that just assume have someone else do the work and expect it to be done right on the first try. That is where a competent smith comes in. I just get pissed when someone in the business throws around exaggerated dollar figures for tooling and touts that there are complex techniques that a novice could never master..... It ain't rocket science, it's fairly simple mechanics. </div></div>
If you think $500 to $1k is exagerated for a basic set of proper tools for the 1911, I would suggest you visit Brownell's website and look at the price for just the Powers Custom stoning fixture and the stones, which will set you back $300. You can also go to the websites for several of the gunsmithing schools and look at the required tool list for the 1911 classes they teach and you will see the cost is in excess of $2,000, and thats just for the basics. Then there are the "wiz bang" tools which are needed in a shop which specializes in 1911's, which will set you back about another $1,500
Feel free to price them out and report back.
As far as techniques, I never claimed in any of my posts they were "complex" But ask yourself, what sets the top 1911 pistolsmiths apart from the average gun plumber? Yes, the answer is experience, which is what I said it takes to do competent top level work. Nothing complex about it.