What’s the Quality difference between Wilson combat 1911 and a Springfield 1911 TPR?
I think the last three new in the box 1911 pistols I've bought have all been Colts. First was a Colt Defender in .45 ACP, second was a Colt XSE Commander in .38 Super, and the most recent, was a Colt Wiley Clapp CCO in .45 ACP. The Defender, to my surprise, and the WC CCO, both ran perfectly from the box even using the factory supplied magazines. The XSE Commander had some kind of factory lube on the slide rails of the receiver, that had softened the factory applied CeraKote finish of the frame. As I initially shot the pistol, the CeraKote began to come off the frame rails in oily balls that quickly slowed the slide, and jammed the gun. As soon as I recognized the problem, and scraped the slide rails clean of Cerkote, the gun ran just fine from then on. With 1911 pistols it is very improtant that they be properly lubed, and that the extractor be properly tensioned to allow the pistols to run. If you initially check these two things prior to shooting your new 1911 pistol, you will find that they are as dependable as any other design.First post...please be nice!
I've owned a lot of guns, and I've never had a 1911 run perfectly out of the box...which is frustrating as nearly all of my polymer combat guns run great.
I have NOT had anything nicer than a Dan Wesson. I'm beginning to doubt the design. I'm tempted to pickup a Nighthawk or a Springfield Professional (custom shop mode). What can I expect from those?