6/22/2023 0 Comments Auto ordnance m1911a1 reviewIronically, most "modern" 1911s look like the original 1911 with a flat mainspring housing and a long trigger and double-diamond grips. The authentic "hump and a bump" sights are minimal, but to our military's way of thinking, if you needed or were down to just your pistol, the enemy was so close you probably didn't need sights at all. The slide serrations are vertical, and compared to "modern" 1911s, the ejection port is somewhat small. The new Inland Manufacturing jumped into the gunmaking business with an authentic 1945-era M1 Carbine, and it brings the same attention to detail to its 1911A1. Whether you compete in Wild Bunch stages at SASS events or just like historically accurate firearms, the 1911A1 is about as iconic an American firearm as you'll find. 45 ACP from Inland Manufacturing in Dayton, Ohio, is about as close to John Browning's 1911A1 as I've seen in a long time. However, even many 1911s advertised as being "a page out of history" aren't historically accurate. When it comes to 1911s, your two basic classes are "modern" and "original/retro." The "modern" field is crowded, the "retro" group not so much. (Taxonomy, if you didn't know, is the scientific classification of organisms by family, genus, species, etc.) When it comes to 1911s, consumers have a huge number of choices, but right now there isn't any good taxonomic classification of these pistols.
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