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Alluminum or steel frame for 1911???
Posted on 2/12/13 at 9:35 pm
Posted on 2/12/13 at 9:35 pm
Obviously steel will take a much longer beating than alloy, my question is, how dependable are the new alloy frames. Anyone have any negative comments to say about them? Obviously they are lighter, so they will be easier to carry. All I have gathered is that if you want a 1911 to shoot a LOT, get steel, and vice versa for alluminum. Is this theory correct?
Guns in question are the kimber tactical custom 2 and the kimber custom tle2.
I like the looks of the tactical more, but undecided and thought I would ask around.
Thanks in advance.
Guns in question are the kimber tactical custom 2 and the kimber custom tle2.
I like the looks of the tactical more, but undecided and thought I would ask around.
Thanks in advance.
Posted on 2/12/13 at 9:38 pm to POONHOUND
You pretty much got the idea. I have both, but also had steel feed ramps installed in my alloy frames, to help with the pounding.
All steel will shoot slightly softer obviously.
All steel will shoot slightly softer obviously.
Posted on 2/12/13 at 9:42 pm to POONHOUND
I shot a 1911 without a steel frame for the first time the other day and was very pleasantly surprised
Posted on 2/12/13 at 10:00 pm to LouisianaChessie
I really want the alloy tactical one,but keep going back and
Forth.
May just get the tle 2 and upgrade the magwells.
Forth.
May just get the tle 2 and upgrade the magwells.
This post was edited on 2/12/13 at 10:02 pm
Posted on 2/12/13 at 10:03 pm to POONHOUND
quote:
Obviously they are lighter, so they will be easier to carry.
This is it. If you plan to carry it, snag an aluminum frame or a scandium frame from S&W. Actually the scandium frames are supposed to be a pretty amazing hybrid. Look up a little more info about them to see how rugged they are.
I think any 1911 should be able to handle a high round count with today's metal technology. I can personally say I've never seen a frame break on any gun.
Posted on 2/12/13 at 10:04 pm to chrisman17
Who installed them for you? How easy/hard of a process? Cost?
Thanks
Thanks
Posted on 2/12/13 at 10:06 pm to bapple
That's my thoughts as well. Just wanna make sure I'm not missing something and I know a lot of you guys are 1911 nuts, I have shot plenty, just not sure about a lot of the newer models and thier features.
Posted on 2/12/13 at 10:21 pm to POONHOUND
quote:
Who installed them for you? How easy/hard of a process? Cost? Thanks
The frame needs to be milled so its not something that can be done on the kitchen counter. Any competent 1911 smith can install them.
Do you need them? Really depends how much shooting you plan on doing. My advice would be to go ahead and shoot it first and worry about the steel feed ramp if you ever start eroding frame on the alloy.
Coincidentally, I've owned the two kimbers you are considering. Take it for what it's worth but the only two kimbers I would ever consider owning again is a series 1 or a early model TLE circa 2003.
Posted on 2/13/13 at 2:15 am to chrisman17
quote:
Coincidentally, I've owned the two kimbers you are considering. Take it for what it's worth but the only two kimbers I would ever consider owning again is a series 1 or a early model TLE circa 2003.
Unreal. I've always kinda thought the kimbers were more about the show but I just don't have enough experience with them. I'd be interested as to why you feel this way.
This post was edited on 2/13/13 at 2:16 am
Posted on 2/13/13 at 7:27 am to LouisianaChessie
quote:
Unreal. I've always kinda thought the kimbers were more about the show but I just don't have enough experience with them. I'd be interested as to why you feel this way.
I've owned 4 in the past 15 years or so. A series 1 which was one of the best 1911s for the price I have ever owned. A TLE/RL which was the next best(the only issue with it was a grip bushing that stripped from the frame first time out, kimber fixed it), a Pro TLE II which went back to kimber two times both on my time b/c barrel wasn't properly timed which caused the slide to not come into battery every time, and a Pro Tactical which had an external extractor(kimber produced them very briefly). That gun couldn't run a mag of anything with out FTF or FTE. Which is the reason they dropped external extractors pretty quickly.
It just seems like kimber is more about the number of diffferent models they can create rather then making two or three models that just run.
Posted on 2/13/13 at 10:31 am to chrisman17
I believe I am going to go with the tactical custom 2 hd. It has the features I want and it's steel.
Posted on 2/13/13 at 12:31 pm to POONHOUND
quote:
Obviously they are lighter, so they will be easier to carry. All I have gathered is that if you want a 1911 to shoot a LOT, get steel, and vice versa for alluminum. Is this theory correct?
I think you've got a good handle on the situation!
I'm really hoping that after Ruger gets their 1911 Commander up and running, they'll next make an alloy version. No rumours to that effect, just me hoping they do it.
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