Norinco 1911 Pistols

deadlydelta

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Hey,

I was looking at buying a Norinco M-1911 A1 two tone 45acp pistol but it looks like everyone is sold out.
I can't seem to find any Norinco 1911 in 45acp available or in stock. I check EE and there wasn't any for sale.

Does anyone know if we are expecting another shipment coming in soon or am I $hit out of luck???
 
There's a lot of those pistols out there...if there's not one on the EE today, there will be one soon...

FWIW, good choice. I got mine years ago, and it just keeps going...not pretty, but goes bang every time...
 
Very nice COLT M1991A1 for sale on EE right now....seems a low count count.... and a set of factory (or other) grips may be more appealing....but I'd snatch that one up....appears original from owner.....harder to find...just a thought...

Hey,

I was looking at buying a Norinco M-1911 A1 two tone 45acp pistol but it looks like everyone is sold out.
I can't seem to find any Norinco 1911 in 45acp available or in stock. I check EE and there wasn't any for sale.

Does anyone know if we are expecting another shipment coming in soon or am I $hit out of luck???
 
I've had ten or so pass through over the years. Full size and commander, 9mm and 45acp. All functioned fine, never had any parts break. A little trigger work can go a long way on most of them. Because of the fairly loose tolerences, most won't be tack drivers, but for general purposes are accurate enough. And for the money, they are hard to beat.
Kind of cool thing about 1911's, you can go from crazy inexpensive right up through the stratosphere. Something for everyone.
 
I bought one of the basic GI style ones for $250 new a few years ago. Great gun. I spent some time on the trigger with a stone though.

They come up on the EE all the time.
 
Got two. Both are .45 ACP. A Government model and a two tone Sport. Put a GSG .22 conversion in the two tone and put Rosewood grips on the Government model. Both are excellent value for the money. Can't comment on availability because I haven't been looking lately. Got both of these around 10 years ago.
 
I have two. One is stock except for the grips, and t’other is a project for accurizing with the info in kuhnhausen’s book.
 
I have one; all satin chrome, with target adjustable rear sight. Stock, except for some nice looking Rosewood grips I just got for it. Have yet to shoot it with those grips; but from a practical stand point, the hard rubber checkered grips are hard to beat.

I bought it lightly used at a dealer, in the original box, with all the original accessories and manual; and it still had some brown grease inside it. I think the previous owner was likely frustrated with the sight as the gun was shooting way off point of aim, and it took me a lot of head scratching to figure out how the adjustments actually worked. It shoots right on now!!!

A couple of other modifications I did; the slide was rubbing on the the dust cover (front portion of the frame), so I had to give the inside of the slide a bit of relief with the die-grinder; I used red-lead as a tracing agent to mark the high spots; not a difficult fix, but it ran fine as it was. Mine has very tight tolerances frame to slide. I like it.

The other issue is fairly common in Nork 1911s; frequently the slide would fail to lock open after the last shot. I was advised by members here that it was likely "bad" Nork mags; I tried other mags, and same issue. Turned out that the tip of the mag release that engages the mag follower was a bit short. I built it up with TIG, and reprofiled it to engage the follower, but not interfere with the projectile on loaded rounds. All mags, Norks included now work flawlessly.

Since then, I have done quite a few of these for other members; I do it no charge BTW (I'm an engineer, and don't do much tool and die work anymore, so it keeps my skills sharp LOL).
 
I have one; all satin chrome, with target adjustable rear sight. Stock, except for some nice looking Rosewood grips I just got for it. Have yet to shoot it with those grips; but from a practical stand point, the hard rubber checkered grips are hard to beat.

I bought it lightly used at a dealer, in the original box, with all the original accessories and manual; and it still had some brown grease inside it. I think the previous owner was likely frustrated with the sight as the gun was shooting way off point of aim, and it took me a lot of head scratching to figure out how the adjustments actually worked. It shoots right on now!!!

A couple of other modifications I did; the slide was rubbing on the the dust cover (front portion of the frame), so I had to give the inside of the slide a bit of relief with the die-grinder; I used red-lead as a tracing agent to mark the high spots; not a difficult fix, but it ran fine as it was. Mine has very tight tolerances frame to slide. I like it.

The other issue is fairly common in Nork 1911s; frequently the slide would fail to lock open after the last shot. I was advised by members here that it was likely "bad" Nork mags; I tried other mags, and same issue. Turned out that the tip of the mag release that engages the mag follower was a bit short. I built it up with TIG, and reprofiled it to engage the follower, but not interfere with the projectile on loaded rounds. All mags, Norks included now work flawlessly.

Since then, I have done quite a few of these for other members; I do it no charge BTW (I'm an engineer, and don't do much tool and die work anymore, so it keeps my skills sharp LOL).

Now that is an encouraging write-up! You likely shoved a couple guys off the fence with that one! Damn fine of you to offer the work too...that is way solid.
 
I got a clean one [ no markings except 45 cal / serial # ] from Canada Ammo a few months ago. GI VERSION. It came in a box with a xtra mag. Plactic grips which were broken and no instruction book.Cost was $380.00. I put a set of wood grips on a gave it a good cleaning.No issues and shoots great.
 
I got a clean one [ no markings except 45 cal / serial # ] from Canada Ammo a few months ago. GI VERSION. It came in a box with a xtra mag. Plactic grips which were broken and no instruction book.Cost was $380.00. I put a set of wood grips on a gave it a good cleaning.No issues and shoots great.

I got the GI version a few years ago when they were $299. Been a good pistol. You didn't miss much with the instruction book. My plastic grip cracked within a week, wood grips from ebay and it's better than new. More reliable than some that cost 4 times more. Seems to be made out of high quality materials, unlike some other Norinco products. I'm not buying any more Norinco products though.
 
I have a two-tone Norc 1911. I had to do a good bit of work to mine including filing down the front of the link pin arms to get the thing to stop snapping links and slide stops.
 
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