Re: 1911 in 9mm
Finally. Someone who knows what he's talking about (300redbeard). How do I know? When I was punk teenager learning how to shoot from Bucky Murdock, Jim Clark, Sr., Jim Clark, Jr. and Kay, hanging around bothering Sam Beason and them in their shop in Keithville, and since then, I learned these few smiths are learned in the skilled classical fine art of 1911 pistolsmithing.
I don't mean to be a snot, but....somebody who doesn't know much about 1911's should get one of those plastic guns made in Austria or Brazil. Plastic and 1911 pistols are too different for a novice shooter to be competent with both<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 300redbeard</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I've been pistolsmithing 1911's since 1988. I'm a competitive bullseye shooter (2650 High Master), former AMU & All Reserve Pistol Team member with National Championship wins and national records. If there is something I know about its 1911's. Regardless of caliber if the pistol isn't built right, it's not going to function. Properly built 9mm's are getting 1" groups at 50 yards from a Ransom rest. Yes that's correct 1" groups. Typically will shoot better than .45's, but that's another story. I've recently worked on 2 Les Baer pistols. He's supposed to be one of the best! Wrong, quality control sucks. With today's CNC machining perfection, anyone can assemble a 1911 that looks good, but it takes a MASTER to properly fit a barrel. In my experience all the big name smiths that mass produce 1911's cannot properly fit a barrel. A smith who is classically trained in fitting barrels one at a time can build awesome shooting 1911's in any caliber. Proper tuning to include mainspring, recoil spring, extractor tension, magazine, etc is a must, but it'll never shoot worth a damn if the barrel isn't fit right. I'm not talking about locking up like a vault either, that's nice for a competition firearm, but there are factors that contribute to proper function for the tactical weapon as well. I would never personally buy a mass produced 1911. I'd find a pistolsmith who does it one at a time, and obviously knows how to do it right. It's worth the money.</div></div>