My new Colt 1911 tactical pistol

I just picked this up last night and my horrendous picture taking abilities do not do it justice. My camera would not focus correctly and now lies somewhere in my backyard as my wife watched in horror as I winged it into the woods. Oh well.

As to the pistol, I have never been so happy about a piece of metal. Add Grant’s perfect timing on my DG-18 which came today and life is good.

This started life as a Colt Series 70 reissue and all that survives of it are the frame, slide and a couple of minor parts. I combed the net for 1911 info and ideas and incorporated some into my pistol. Other ideas came from my gunsmiths. This pistol will be on their new website introducing their new shop so I’ll leave the detail photos to them.

The parts list is as follows:

-frame and slide: Colt
-safety: EB Tactical
-grip safety: EB Memorygroove
-trigger: EGW solid
-sear: EGW
-firing pin stop: EGW
-disconnect: Colt
-plunger tube: Colt
-guide rod: Wilson SS FL (yes, full length)
-hammer: C&S Ultra Lite
-mag catch: Wilson
-ejector: King’s
-bushing: Kart
-barrel: Kart NM
-slide stop: EGW
-extractor: Wilson BP
-sights: Heinie Str 8 night sights
-magwell: S&A arched
-grips: VZ black canvas
-light rail: Caspian
-light: SF X200B w/DG18 switch

Again, I wish I had better pics because this pistol is all about the details:
-complete dehorn
-flatten and serrate top of slide
-front cocking serrations
-crown barrel 11 degrees
-lower and flare ejection port
-checker slide stop
-serrate rear of slide
-cut back and re-radius trigger
-mag catch is slanted and checkered
-mag well has flats machined on sides, factory checkering removed and recheckered to match front strap checkering. Also, lanyard hole machined into mag well. This is pretty amazing and I couldn’t get a good pick of it.
-left top of grip safety is scalloped for thumb safety manipulation
-firing pin stop retainer on left of slide. Usually for competition pistols, detent keeps firing pin stop from locking up pistol if it breaks in half. I was told that Bill Wilson did this in the early 1980’s.
-Caspian rail pinned and welded on. Was not truly 1913 spec and a lot of work went into it.
-finish is matte blue for now. There are so many interesting finishes coming out now that I will shoot this thing all fall and decide on a finish during the winter.

I just want to thank Jody and John for all of their work. They have made 2 1911s, one Rem 700 and 9 ARs for me. Like I said before, much better pics of this thing will be on their new business website for Jo-Jo’s Gunworks in Southington, CT very soon. Enjoy my modest pics for now. :cool:

Very nice, but too pretty. It needs some character marks.

Interesting. I have never seen or heard of.:confused: If the FPS breaks, isnt the gun a paper weight anyhow? I’ve never heard of one breaking?

I ended up putting a bunch of rounds through my 1911 today with the TPD class graduating next week. (steel was set too heavy for 9mm to knock over) I really miss shooting it, now to see how bad my wrist hurts tomorrow. Getting older sucks:mad:

Looks like an awesome pistol. Great pictures too, I don’t know why you got mad at your camera.

Absolutely stunning.

1911’s just don’t get any better than that.

I really love the S&A magwell re-contouring.

There’s only one word that comes to mind when I look at that. That word is beautiful. Very nice!

As I said somewhere else, I took 32 pics total and only these came out. Damn auto focus kept fixating on what was behind the pistol. Wife found the camera. Don’t think Nikon had this in mind for warranty work. :eek:

Just shoot down at the table or put up a backdrop so the camera won’t try to focus a much greater distance than your object.
The one shot where the front sight is in focus and the hammer is not is from having the aperture opened rather than stopped down to f16 that gives a greater depth of field, ie. longer span in focus.

Oh… nice pistol BTW.
I have a 1991A1 in the works myself.

That is a great looking pistol.
Whoever did the work is a very skilled craftsman.

I wondered what is pinned at the rear of the slide? I haven’t seen that before.

That’s a beautiful pistol.

It’s not really pinned it is a small hex head that is detented into the side of the of the oversize firing pin stop. In the rare occurance that the firing pin stop cracks it drops down and the gun becomes a paperweight that screw stops the firing pin stop from moving ever, in the early days of race/open IPSC gun building it was all the rage.

As the people who know me can attest, I’m not big on 1911s.

However, this one makes my nipples hard.

If it cracks horizontally below the detent, what keeps it from falling down?
I think cohiba got milked for a few unnecessary bucks.

Ah, no. I requested it as I saw the pistol of a pretty famous competition shooter sitting on the their gunsmithing bench one day. All of his pistols have it but again, he shoots VERY high round counts.

It is a custom feature on a very high end pistol. Since this is probably the last 1911 I’ll have made for myself, I was very picky on parts and features. While the detent has gotten most of the attention, its the magwell that will really impress folks once better pics are available. :cool:

Don’t like 1911’s??? GET OUT YOU HOMO! :smiley:

C4

Sorry, I thought is was a feature that was “sold” to you.

I love 1911s, have handled, shot, sold, owned, and still own some real good ones. I never fit in with the 1911 crowd though. I’ll spend hours fitting a barrel, but there is nothing impressive to me about something as meaningless as the fit of an extended magwell. :wink:

Its in the eye of the beholder:)

That is one of the best looking pistols I have ever seen.

Very beautiful!

I’d like a rail added to my 92fs. I hope that isn’t blasphemy around here- at least it isn’t a PX4!! :smiley:

That’s a beautiful Colt!

Beautiful!!
Very nice.