Entertaining.
A 1911 was the 1st big semi I ever shot...well for about 6 rounds, then it jammed. But it was a range pistol in West Ed so perhaps that is an answer in itself.
I think I am prejudiced against the 1911 because of all the BS that gets thrown about when they get discussed. John Browning is a god...blah, blah, blah.
The 1st gun I could afford was a Norcinco made Tok ( hence the moniker). Everyone knows they are junk right? Oh but historically they are a simplified 1911 with a racy cartridge, so how do the 1911 boys get away with slagging them. POS even though the caliber can be changed in about 45 seconds; like click, clack, clunk...done. Can a 1911 even be stripped that fast?
That being said my moniker is slightly out of date as I've not shot that pistol in a while.
It just erks me when someone slags all other competing designs because they like a particular type.
Friendly joshing is fine but seriously...hardcore 1911 guys are like hardcore Harley guys, you don't really believe your own BS do you?
The next pistol I but will likely be a real Colt SAA; I've 3 old Colts now, so it can't be said I hate Colts.
If there's one thing I can't stand it's intolerant people, I just want to smash them! A little humour to finish things off with
I don't think anyone is slagging other designs here; for the most part they are actually stating their case for the 1911 and saying shoot what feels right for you. So it's quite the opposite in fact. I am seeing lots of 1911 slagging here though.
There are tons of great designs out there and great designers. Glock is certainly one of them. They are durable, well designed and simple to maintain.
In choosing any pistol it helps to define what its primary use will be and what you want it to do for you. That will help narrow down your short-list.
The 19/2011 pattern pistol is the most popular platform in IPSC competition because it is the one that has stood up the best over time. When you have guns shooting anywhere from 10,000 to 100,000 rounds a year or more, it had better be pretty durable. This kind of hard use is going to show up any design flaws in a hurry, and if anything else had the balance of durability, functionality, ergonomics and trigger that these pistols have proven themselves to have over time then you'd better believe we'd be using it.
Is it the perfect gun choice for all uses? No, of course not. Is it an old technology? Yes and no. If you are talking about an old GI .45 then yes, it's definitely dated. If you are talking about a modern version with modern metallurgy and design/fit tolerance then it is a much more evolved animal. Same basic design, but updated. I would like to ditch that stupid grip safety though. I always deactivate my comp guns. If you are thinking in terms of duty guns, the 1911 is no longer a wise choice in our modern world. Single action triggers and legal systems do not a happy mixture make.
BTW: I can take a 1911 down to the small bits in less than a minute. Just sayin'....























































