I just returned from a four day defensive handgun course at Front Sight in Nevada. I took my box stock Norinco .45 two-tone. I used the stock mags too. 600 rounds of factory hardball (no reloads allowed) and 0 malfunctions. The edges are sharp on the Norcs. All the drills beat up my hands pretty bad.
As for the gun, it goes bang every time. It will put three rounds touching at 15 meters with factory hardball. I shoot cast out of it without any malfunctions with the same level of accuracy. It needs a trigger job. Other than that, I guess I got a good one. Seems that my shooting buddies that have one got a good one too. Someone in Nevada nicknamed my gun "The Boat". (Chinese Junk -best shooting pun I've heard in a very long time)
Your mileage may vary. And I guess that's the problem with Norcs. "Like a box of chocolates..." It may be my imagination, but perhaps the level of quality control in Norc products is becoming more consistent? (Notice I didn't say better)
I'll just keep shooting the hell out of it. Once in a while I clean it. It hasn't been dirty enough to malfunction yet.
Here's a comment from my daughter, who accompanied me to Front Sight with her Husband. They rented guns. She shot a .45, her hubby shot a .40 glock. They could not take the rented guns back to the hotel room, so I lent her my gun one night so she could practice her drills. Her rented gun was a springfield with about a gajillion rounds through it that was as smooth as silk. Her remarks on drills with my Norc: Your gun is nasty. It's sharp, tight and bites me. Racking the slide in type one, two, and three malfunctions chewed up my fingers. (Front Sight teaches over the top hold for racking the slide as opposed to the slingshot method).
Now I get to brag- my daughter has been shooting since she was 5 years old (she's 27 now). In the final day skill assessment, she shot all the stages from 3 meters to 15 meters with no deductions for accuracy! She was over time on a few stages, but overall, she beat her Dad soundly!!! The best compliment a teacher can receive is for the skill of the student to surpass that of the teacher.