Sidearms & Scatterguns Who has experience with a 1911 in 38 super??

I've had both a 2011 and two 1911's in 38 super. They all got a hang up here and there because the case is a semi rimmed design. Those were the days before the 38 super comp brass came out so I went to 40 S&W in 2011 which is as reliable as can be. If it's to be a pistol you'll be shooting much I'd get it tuned for the super comp which has a normal rim. I believe the tune is mostly extractor fit and retensioning.
 
I've had both a 2011 and two 1911's in 38 super. They all got a hang up here and there because the case is a semi rimmed design. Those were the days before the 38 super comp brass came out so I went to 40 S&W in 2011 which is as reliable as can be. If it's to be a pistol you'll be shooting much I'd get it tuned for the super comp which has a normal rim. I believe the tune is mostly extractor fit and retensioning.

I had a Caspian hi-cap in 38Super and converted (actually had EGW do it back when they still worked on guns) to 38 SuperComp. All it was was a new extractor George tuned for me. I used Starline brass and 121gr bullets and it ran 100%. Granted that was an open gun with a 5-port compensator, so you may want to do some load testing to find the right one for your rig. Itfed great thru the magazines, which in a well-built pistol will be what makes or breaks you.
 
I have a Caspian framed 1911 built by Peine Custom. Mine is a full blown USPSA Open gun. I have my extractor tuned for SuperComp. I have Caspian mags, Springfield Armory mags, and a couple of Tanfoglio mags. The old Springfield Armory double stack mags are the best I've found. I put about 8K rounds through it last year. All handloads. Im using a Montana Gold 124gr JHP over Autocomp. 100% so far. I switched to production this year.
 
I've got four 1911's in 38 super. All 4 have no issues using 38 super brass. I have several different magazines that all work, Meggar, metalform, kimber, lone star ordnance & colt.

The metalform magazines were rebuilt after many years using tripp followers & springs. The rebuild was required to fix issues with the slide locking open after the last round, no issues now.
The newest kimber mag (only have 2 of these) needed a rebuild day one, wouldn't lock the slide open. Tripp followers & springs fixed the new magazine.
The Meggar magazines worked from day one, the only issue with those is that the floorplate is very hard & i couldn't drill them to install a bumber pad.
The colt magazines are very old & came with a pistol i bought, worked from day one. I did a thorough clean job before using them.
The lone star magazines (3) are very old & only needed a cleaning to insure proper function.

Personally i think a properly built single stack 38 super will work with just about any magazine that is in good shape.

On a side note i recently realized that the current Wilson 10mm magazines use the same follower (flex follower) as the tripp 38 super magazines.

Don't have a 2011 so i can't comment about using super comp brass in those double stack magazines.

I load 121 & 125 jhp in my pistols & am currently trying some 130fmj's. No reason for the change to 130's other than they were free.

The only factory ammo i've purchased was magtech, sig v-crown, & cor bon; all functioned perfectly.

 
Thanks awp762. My buddy had some metalform magazines i found at his house for a 45 ACP 1911 project i purchased. Have not come across any 38 super magazines yet, but if i had to guess he probably bought metalform mags for this build as well.

About how much per round are you spending when you load the 38 super yourself? Buying factory rounds is pretty pricey...
 
For the last 5 years I have used a Wilson Combat Ultra Light Carry chambered in .38 Super as my primary carry gun. My favorite mags are Checkmate welded flush base plate-10 rounders for the mag in the gun, and WC ETM's after that.....the Checkmate's are super reliable, and flush fit, but hard to seat with the slide forward. The WC ETM's are also super reliable, and easier to seat if the slide is in battery. I carry WC 124gr XTP's ( they run 1370 fps out of my gun), and practice with whatever is cheapest.

This blaster has been super reliable, VERY accurate, easy to carry, and easy to get FAST hits, both close and far. Whats not to love?

YMMV,

Best,

Will
 
Thanks awp762. My buddy had some metalform magazines i found at his house for a 45 ACP 1911 project i purchased. Have not come across any 38 super magazines yet, but if i had to guess he probably bought metalform mags for this build as well.

About how much per round are you spending when you load the 38 super yourself? Buying factory rounds is pretty pricey...

To clarify my earlier comments:
The 9rnd metalform magazines that i bought & worked from day one had the welded base + round top metal followers.
I bought/installed their rubber bumper pads from Brownells, it was the cheapest solution for a working magazine with bumper pads installed.
The older metalform ones had orange plastic followers & about 10 of them came with a pistol i bought for free. These were very old when i got them & immediatly rebuilt them with tripp followers/springs.

If i had to buy new magazines today i would just get the Tripp magazine, simple solution for a magazine with removable base plate, easier to clean.
If i wanted a flush fit 9 rnd magazine the metalform or meggar magazines worked, i would get the metalform since i can easily install their bumber pads if needed in the future.

Factory ammo for 38 super is expensive, cheap target stuff seems to be .35/rnd at the cheapest place i found it including shipping, magtech or Fiocchi
Reloading 38 super with new brass costs me.30/rnd for the first load. After the first load i disregard the cost of the brass & then it costs me .15/rnd

Costs per round:
brass: .149--free freight
bullet; .109--free freight
primer; .028 to .03/rnd mail order vs local price
Powder; .014 to .016/rnd mail order vs local price

local purchase of power & primers .304/rnd vs .30/rnd mail order powder & primers

Once you disregard the price of the brass after the first load you can easily save money vs buying factory.

Ok i didn't figure my time into the reloading costs but that doesn't matter to me.




 
To clarify my earlier comments:
The 9rnd metalform magazines that i bought & worked from day one had the welded base + round top metal followers.
I bought/installed their rubber bumper pads from Brownells, it was the cheapest solution for a working magazine with bumper pads installed.
The older metalform ones had orange plastic followers & about 10 of them came with a pistol i bought for free. These were very old when i got them & immediatly rebuilt them with tripp followers/springs.

If i had to buy new magazines today i would just get the Tripp magazine, simple solution for a magazine with removable base plate, easier to clean.
If i wanted a flush fit 9 rnd magazine the metalform or meggar magazines worked, i would get the metalform since i can easily install their bumber pads if needed in the future.

Factory ammo for 38 super is expensive, cheap target stuff seems to be .35/rnd at the cheapest place i found it including shipping, magtech or Fiocchi
Reloading 38 super with new brass costs me.30/rnd for the first load. After the first load i disregard the cost of the brass & then it costs me .15/rnd

Costs per round:
brass: .149--free freight
bullet; .109--free freight
primer; .028 to .03/rnd mail order vs local price
Powder; .014 to .016/rnd mail order vs local price

local purchase of power & primers .304/rnd vs .30/rnd mail order powder & primers

Once you disregard the price of the brass after the first load you can easily save money vs buying factory.

Ok i didn't figure my time into the reloading costs but that doesn't matter to me.

Awesome, thats what i was looking for. What dies are you using, and type of press?
 
For the last 5 years I have used a Wilson Combat Ultra Light Carry chambered in .38 Super as my primary carry gun. My favorite mags are Checkmate welded flush base plate-10 rounders for the mag in the gun, and WC ETM's after that.....the Checkmate's are super reliable, and flush fit, but hard to seat with the slide forward. The WC ETM's are also super reliable, and easier to seat if the slide is in battery. I carry WC 124gr XTP's ( they run 1370 fps out of my gun), and practice with whatever is cheapest.

This blaster has been super reliable, VERY accurate, easy to carry, and easy to get FAST hits, both close and far. Whats not to love?

YMMV,

Best,

Will

Thanks for the feedback. What kind of holster are you using, and what do you do with your spare mag? Im very excited to get into the 38 super
 
I generally carry IWB, using either a Milt Sparks Summer Special or a Alessi GWH. I generally carry a spare mag in a JH Kydex OWB mag holder. Around the farm I have a custom 'Tanker Style' chest holster that I used quite a bit.

Best,

Will

Nice, i also just acquired a Springfield armory "full rail" operator, and am having difficulty finding a nice kydex holster for it....
 
When I shot USPSA single stack my go to mags were always Tripp brand. They have worked with no headaches in literally every gun I've tried them in. As far as ammo, in 38 super or supercomp, you are better off loading your own. If you have to buy it Atlanta arms 38 super is great though.
 
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