I've always loved the 1911, largely due to my dad's nightstand Colt. I received an early-model Para-Ordnance for my 18th birthday back when I was young and impressionable by what I read in gun magazines.
Now that I'm older and impressionable, I found myself ogling Kimbers after a recent range session. I couldn't get over how well the new Super Carry fit my hand and after a week of stalling, I gave into my impulses for once and walked out with my new baby.
It's going to be an agonizing week or so before I can carve out the time to get back to the range, so I took some pictures to tide me over.
If I had a gun for every ace I have drawn, I could arm a town the size of Abilene.
Backslider wrote:I gave into my impulses for once and walked out with my new baby.
Resistance is futile.
Congrats on a great gun !
Looks like you also picked up a Wilson Mag..good decision.
What about a holster? Any ideas yet?
Be sure to give us a range report.
All y'all be sure to also check out Cobra Mags. I bought 3 of them for my 5" Springfield, and they are great magazines... ...a little pricey, but well worth the cost in my opinion.
Order them with these followers:
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
Backslider wrote:I gave into my impulses for once and walked out with my new baby.
Resistance is futile.
Congrats on a great gun !
Looks like you also picked up a Wilson Mag..good decision.
What about a holster? Any ideas yet?
Be sure to give us a range report.
All y'all be sure to also check out Cobra Mags. I bought 3 of them for my 5" Springfield, and they are great magazines... ...a little pricey, but well worth the cost in my opinion.
Order them with these followers:
I agree. Cobra mags are great - check them out as well.
“If you try to shoot me, I will have to shoot you back, and I promise you I won’t miss!”
The Annoyed Man wrote:
All y'all be sure to also check out Cobra Mags. I bought 3 of them for my 5" Springfield, and they are great magazines... ...a little pricey, but well worth the cost in my opinion.
Order them with these followers:
I'm gonna raise the "new guy" flag (for me, not TAM) on this one.
Why would you want what appears to be a plastic follower?
Faced with the option, I would have bypassed that and gone for stainless steel. Seeing a respected forum member recommend those makes me question my logic.
Thanks.
Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence. - John Adams
Pawpaw1 wrote:
Why would you want what appears to be a plastic follower?
I know this question is directed to TAM but here's my take, maybe TAM can confirm or deny.
Plastic followers glide more smoothly inside the steel magazine.
Here's a snipit taken from Wilson Combat... Fiber-Fill Nylon Self-Lubricating Follower Provides Smooth Round Feeding
Also, the follower in TAM's picture is "taller" than most steel followers which is more stable
and not susceptible to "tipping" forward or rearward inside the magazine resulting in more
reliable feeding.
Backslider wrote:I gave into my impulses for once and walked out with my new baby.
Resistance is futile.
Congrats on a great gun !
Looks like you also picked up a Wilson Mag..good decision.
What about a holster? Any ideas yet?
Be sure to give us a range report.
Thanks! I actually got both a 47D and a 500 (the Elite Tactical Magazine) because I wasn't sure which baseplate I'd like better. So far I like the ETM, but I will also take a look at the Cobras.
I'm stumped on holsters so far. I'm going to start with a belt and go from there.
If I had a gun for every ace I have drawn, I could arm a town the size of Abilene.
Pawpaw1 wrote:
Why would you want what appears to be a plastic follower?
I know this question is directed to TAM but here's my take, maybe TAM can confirm or deny.
Plastic followers glide more smoothly inside the steel magazine.
Here's a snipit taken from Wilson Combat... Fiber-Fill Nylon Self-Lubricating Follower Provides Smooth Round Feeding
Also, the follower in TAM's picture is "taller" than most steel followers which is more stable
and not susceptible to "tipping" forward or rearward inside the magazine resulting in more
reliable feeding.
What say you TAM?
Thank you.
While everything you said makes sense, what about the follower breaking? I can think of several things that MIGHT cause a plastic follower to break... dropping the weapon (heaven forbid), spring tension + the impact of firing the weapon, etc.
Again, I'm not nit picking. Just trying to learn.
Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence. - John Adams
What a beautiful 1911. That baby belongs in a museum, as it is certainly a work of art.
“While the people are virtuous they cannot be subdued; but when once they lose their virtue then will be ready to surrender their liberties to the first external or internal invader.” ― Samuel Adams
USA1 beat me to it, but the self-lubricating and "anti-tipping" characteristics are exactly the reason I like this follower. I suppose that, over time, the follower may eventually wear out (but so do metal followers). If it does wear out, a replacement costs $6.95. That seems pretty reasonable to me for what is a relatively low production item. And, Tripp Research, the manufacturers of Cobra Mags, does offer other all steel followers of a more traditional design for the same price. But since these are the ones that they include in their very high quality magazines, there must be a reason for that since price does not appear to be an issue.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions, that I wish it to be always kept alive. It will often be exercised when wrong, but better so than not to be exercised at all. I like a little rebellion now and then. It is like a storm in the atmosphere. -Thomas Jefferson