Picking up a Colt 9mm 1911

by Scribe, Monday, November 28, 2016, 12:24 (2919 days ago)

Still have to wait for the paperwork

It's an 80 Series made between 1985-1990, I think.

I am not fond of arched mainspring housings and it might need more visible sights.

Anything else I should be wary of?

Scribe

everything...;-) feed ramp, extractor nt

by Rob Leahy ⌂ @, Prescott, Arizona, Monday, November 28, 2016, 13:54 (2919 days ago) @ Scribe

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--
Of the Troops & For the Troops

Hey Scribe

by Catoosa, Thursday, December 01, 2016, 10:36 (2916 days ago) @ Scribe

Full size or Commander?

If it's an alloy frame gun, the feed ramp will be subject to damage from some hollow point bullets, and POSSIBLY from some types of magazine followers. If the feed ramp has not been messed with, DO NOT polish it. That will remove the anodizing which is harder than the underlying alloy metal and affords some protection against scratches and gouges. Please don't ask me how I know this. Suffice to say, the best thing to do with an alloy frame is to leave it alone.

If you can find them, magazines with skirted followers that don't allow the rounds to nosedive into the feed ramp will help protect the frame and give more positive feeding. There are also magazines which have a crease in the front and a turned down area at the top which is supposed to guide the round away from the ramp. Can't remember what brand they are, but I think Dillon sells them. I've had good luck with Mec-Gar mags, too, but my treasured old LW Commander now gets only lead-bullet reloads and a carefully hoarded supply of Nyclad hollow points.

Probably best also to avoid any rounds with a short overall length. The 9mm round is shorter than the .45 acp round for which the 1911 was designed, and 9mm 1911 mags have to have a filler in them to keep the rounds from slopping back and forth under recoil. Short OAL rounds are bad to nosedive and hit the ramp. If you reload, by all means get a Lee factory crimp die and make sure the bullets are TIGHTLY crimped so that they do not push back into the case on feeding. This will quickly turn a mild reload into a little bomb - again, don't ask me how I know.

9mm 1911s are a bit tricky, but they are extremely pleasant guns to carry and shoot when you get things working right. My late-1960s vintage Commander was the first "modern" centerfire handgun I ever owned, and it was definitely a learning experience, but I still treasure the durned old thing because we went through some dark and snakey places together. It is semi-retired now, but then so am I. I expect that you will enjoy yours immensely.

Good luck!

GSC

Thanks!

by Scribe, Friday, December 02, 2016, 08:32 (2915 days ago) @ Catoosa

It's a full size, all-steel Government Model 1911. Between the peripheral neuropathy and the arthritis, I have become increasingly recoil shy. The 9mm in that size package should be a much softer-kicking handgun. Cheaper ammo, too. (I did hold a used stainless Springfield .45 for a long time before even looking at the Colt 9mm, however.)

Only comes with one mag, but I have my eye on some Mec-gar magazines online, still in the package. I will be trying all kinds of hardball rounds at first and then try some of the hollow-points later. Previous 9mms I have owned have been the CZ-75, High-Power, Sig Sauer 229, S&W 39,and a Llama that didn't even feed hardball. It's ramp looked like an escalator.

I hope to shoot the Colt for the first time Saturday as it is already paid for and I am still waiting for the paperwork to go through. If not, I will still have my house gun with me for practice -- a heavy barrel S&W Model 10. And my junky guns -- Enfield Tanker model (.38 S&W) and a Colt Target Model Police Positive (.32).

Scribe

Thanks!

by Catoosa, Sunday, December 04, 2016, 20:31 (2913 days ago) @ Scribe

Roger the arthritis, roger the P/N. I still like my .45s but I have gotten two .38 Supers in the last couple of years for that reason.

You should have no problem with the feed ramp in a steel frame gun. That Colt should handle +P 9mm nicely if you need a little extra juice.

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