April 04, 2020, 06:19 PM
bendableDid we reach the pinnacle of semi-automatic handgun design 109 years ago?
I have my eye on the new Springfield armory Ronin in .45 acp, have half of the funds , I gotta wait for a while for the local stores to get them in.
April 04, 2020, 09:33 PM
RobC2Mr. Miyagi says, "Same, but different"
April 08, 2020, 10:24 AM
92fstechA short excerpt from the book "G-Man" by Stephen Hunter (one of the Bob Lee Swagger novels) which I am currently reading. I came across this last night and thought it appropriate for this thread:
His fingers knew it immediately. As a design, the thing was one of many masterpieces that had tumbled from the brain of John M. Browning before World War I, so perfect in conception and execution, such a chord of power and grace and genius of operation that even now, more than a century after its year of adaptation in 1911, it was the standard sidearm of many of the world's elite units. Nothing plastic, nothing sleek and streamlined, with a huge magazine of smaller cartridges, could really replace if for the trained man.April 08, 2020, 04:08 PM
gwdex[QUOTE]Originally posted by 92fstech:
No matter how hard I try, I just can't find a weapon that works better for me than the 1911.
Great pistol! I, to this day, regret the time I sold my 1970 Blued Series 70, Mark IV Gold Cup. Loved that pistol. Bought brand new for $ 160.00 !! I'll bet a similar used one today would fetch $ 1,500.00 in good condition.
Oh well, guess we all have firearms sales we regret!!
Greg
P220 SAS Nitron
P225
P226
April 08, 2020, 04:37 PM
SgtGoldWhat's the story on that government marked 1911? It looks pristine.
quote:
Originally posted by RobC2:
Mr. Miyagi says, "Same, but different"
April 08, 2020, 05:21 PM
RogueJSKIt's a 100 Year Anniversary commemorative Colt 1911, part of a limited edition run they did in 2011.
April 08, 2020, 07:36 PM
RogueJSKThe "pristine government marked 1911" that SgtGold was asking about, in the post above mine.