shelby said:Get yourself a (new or used) Colt. You will end up buying one sooner or later anyway.
+1
I'll chime in and say get a Colt Series '70 Gold Cup National Match.
shelby said:Get yourself a (new or used) Colt. You will end up buying one sooner or later anyway.
titleist said:o.k; the gold cup was mentioned. i know a guy who has one. it is about 20 years old and in good condition. how much is it worth?
Hitzy said:STI trojan is great, $1300 or so.
Para LTC is nice for about $900. Commander sized with ramped barrel.
Well, seeing how you are a gunsmith, I have no doubt that you LOVE Paras and Norincos. After all, there's never a shortage of things that needed to be fixed on those guns7x61 said:I'm solidly with Hitzy on this oneI consider these two my top choices right now, and I see about 60 1911's a year through here
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Others are OK, but these two are head and shoulders above their competition in their particular price ranges. Nothing in the $900 price range is even close to the Para, and you have to pay hundreds more to get equivalent value to the STI Trojan. Now, in the under $500 bracket, NOTHING is close to the Norinco, in fact you have to go well over $600...
Gunnar
www.armco-guns.com
NAA said:If it's an original Series '70 and in the overall condition as the one in the above pic, expect to pay at least $1,000. But I think $1,900 is way too much as in the above post. But the bottom line is it's worth as much as you are willing to pay for it at the time...![]()
hunter64 said:My 2 cents. As canuck44 said save your money and buy a norinco. I am the perfect example. I bought a springfield 3 years ago and after 4 boxes of ammo and the best i could do was 4-5" at 25 yards with handloads. I bought a manual on how to 'smith the .45 and did the trigger myself. I am mechanically in mind and if i did something wrong (as long as it is safe, book goes thru that) then that is a learning expense. I tightened the slide, installed a barrel bushing and match trigger and had a gunsmith install a good front sight and I put on a decent adj. rear sight. With the exact same handloads that group has shrunk to 1.5" at 25 yards or basically 1 ragged hole for 2 clips worth of ammo.
My son wanted a commander version for his 16th birthday. So I decided on a Norinco. The trigger was about the same as the springfield out of the box and after 5 boxes of ammo the best handloads were averaging 4-5" at 25 yards, same as my pistol did. We did the work on his and that little commander will do the exact same as my springfield now.
Neither pistol has ever had a failure to feed or eject. The springfield broke a slide stop and the norinco did also, other than that no other problems. I have put thru 3500 in the springfield and my son has 1400 round count on his so far.
So I would buy the norinco, virtually the same kind of quality as my springfield and have a gunsmith do all the work that I did (if your not inclined) and you will end up with a great 1911 for the same cost as a springfield and you will do hell to a lonnie sized target instead of doing hell to a 6" pie plate.
Or you could buy the norinco and keep it stock and buy a commander version and keep it stock and have 2 1911's for the price of one springfield more or less.
Or buy the norinco and buy a progressive loader for about $100 more than the difference.
Dragoon said:If money is no object, how about this NAA 1911? Only $19,500.00 USD!![]()
http://www.gunsamerica.com/guns/976666900.htm
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GrantR said:This is a "nice 1911" ... it's gonna be 92 years old next year ..... personal sidearm of Canadian Army officers in both World Wars ...
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(No, you can't have it!)
GrantR said:This is a "nice 1911" ... it's gonna be 92 years old next year ..... personal sidearm of Canadian Army officers in both World Wars ...
![]()
(No, you can't have it!)
NAA said:Nice 1911 indeed! Sure is in nice shape for a veteran of two
World Wars. Must not have seen much 'action'...![]()




























