My Kimber Team Match II is excellent. Early on, after I bought it, it had a little hissy-fit with extracting the odd spent casing. A bit of time, over a cup of coffee or two and I had it solved. Oh, it is a 9mm. One other thing I have discovered is this .... when you run in to a problem, the best advice I can give is to ignore all the armchair experts, 95% couldn't boil water without burning it.

Specifically the Raptor. I love the look of them, but what exactly makes this an $1800 gun?
Obviously it's just the internet, but I regularly read complaints of Kimber's overall reliability, yet they seem to command top dollar. Anyone able to shed some light on this for me?
So many shooters are wedded to the 1911 platform that the evolution of semi-auto handguns is lost on them.

and yet no firsthand nuggets to pass along.... no sources sited as gospel?
just opinions on a gun people dont own?
ill listen to people that have one before i listen to the rabble that parrots what they hear.
Aniest-"The biggest thing is that the newest makes and models of the Kimber 1911 are not of the precise machining, best metals and highest quality control of years ago. At one time Kimber was one of the premier makes of the 1911 platform. However, they have kept that old reputation and price while their quality has declined."
Please provide your source for this statement.
Specifically the Raptor. I love the look of them, but what exactly makes this an $1800 gun?
Obviously it's just the internet, but I regularly read complaints of Kimber's overall reliability, yet they seem to command top dollar. Anyone able to shed some light on this for me?
The biggest thing is that the newest makes and models of the Kimber 1911 are not of the precise machining, best metals and highest quality control of years ago. At one time Kimber was one of the premier makes of the 1911 platform. However, they have kept that old reputation and price while their quality has declined.
If someone offered me a 10-15 year old pristine Kimber new in the box, one left in the back of the gun store's vault by mistake, I'd pay the new prices for that one... but not a new one.
And that brings up the next issue: you can have an amazing older Kimber and end up replacing internals with poor replacements from Kimber too. That sucks... a lot.
... and yet revolvers for carry, target shooting and hunting are still selling well. Imagine that.![]()
You know grumpyold, I spent 10 minutes typing out a fifty sentence, six paragraph explanation on Kimber Stainless Traget II 1911 in 9mm ownership for close to two decades... who has lost the round count too long ago, worn out too many springs and gotten blisters from the progressive reloader handle... how the last Kimber replacement parts done by the gunsmith were wearing 200-225% faster... how the price of Kimbers haven't gone down, that's for sure... about talking to people at my shooting ranges and clubs about the new faster wear on the Kimber I noted, people who shoot enough to wear out internals, who said Sig and Kimber 1911s are not up to quality... how I was personally the source of my own opinion based on observation and trusted advice.
And I figured you can either take my word for it... Or not.
That is the choice of each person who reads this. I'd rather spend time reloading more 9mm to shoot with the Kimber than be here feeling like I have to prove my proof because I feel like my opinion is not respected.
... but that is just my opinion. Going to go verify the powder throw on the progressive for a new batch of 115gr 9mm now...
I LOVE autos but I also like revolvers because they don't spit my brass all over the place, especially when you're on a dirt range with tons of brass laying around. Also revolvers don't have safeties and they're dead reliable and if round fails to fire just pull the trigger again.
Same thing with auto rifles vs. bolt/lever, and at the range nobody likes hot brass flying at them!
Kimber 1911 pistols are better than most and although the internet stories of problems abound it is pretty interesting to note that they are also probably the largest manufacturer of 1911 type pistols around https://www.shootingindustry.com/u-s-firearms-industry-today-2015/ as such many problems does not necessarily mean that their failure rate is any higher than any other manufacturer. My experience with running them on commercial ranges is that they are more durable than other big name 1911s.
In my opinion the quality control of Kimber has not changed over the years, they had some early problems with extractors, and barrel steel, but they seem to have corrected the systemic issues.
As for pricing, I believe that they are competitively priced with other models that share similar features. Fancy checkering, milling and polishing all add $$ to the retail price.
It's like I said in an earlier post in this topic, and the Shooting Centre added information, it comes down to the numbers. When your selling this volume of 1911's what really is your fail rate when you crunch the numbers. If you look at with out a bias or preferred result, or internet nonsense, Kimber's are no better or worse then any other brand on the market.Kimber put out 146,000 handguns in 2013!!!!!!!!!
holy hell!



























