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Thread: Guns Guns and MORE Guns
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06-12-2022, 02:04 AM #1
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06-12-2022, 03:32 AM #2
- Join Date
- Mar 2012
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- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
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Thanked: 3228
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06-12-2022, 05:30 AM #3
Vietnamese, Bob...
"Vietnam War Members of the 'Rhades' hill tribe who are of short stature and their tall American military instructor - 1962"
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06-12-2022, 11:46 PM #4
Most all the tank crews I dealt with had grease guns. Plenty of room for the old tin gun
“ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”
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06-19-2022, 02:27 AM #5
- Join Date
- May 2022
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- Texas
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- 57
Thanked: 5Sticking up another 1911 here, still hoping to generate some interest in 1911-guns generally. This one is a "real" 1911, a term which has come to mean a entire genre of handguns, some of which stray pretty far from the original.
I love 1911s. Grew up around them. Shot several different relatives' 1911s when I was a kid. Back then if one admired the design he acquired a commercial Colt Government Model or else a surplus U.S. contract 1911 or 1911A1. That's all there was and was what my extended family owned and shot. For my own 21st birthday I purchased this Colt Model 1911 in Fort Worth, Texas at Weber's Jewelry & Loan in 1978 for $140. Couldn't afford a new Colt Government Model which was $279 at the time if I recall correctly. Didn't matter as I wanted a 1911 and wanted to work on a budding U. S. military small arms collection so this one suited. The price wasn't that great of a deal at that time.
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It's a mongrel Augusta Arsenal rebuild of a 1918 Colt. It was shabby and worn out when I got it. I shot the livin' hooey out of it for many years, subjected it to copious quantities of handloaded .45 ammunition, both mild and wild (when I was young and dumb), and toted it, both for personal protection and afield when hiking. I changed out recoil springs infrequently when the whim struck me and kept it cleaned and lubricated. That's all. It's never bobbled, not with weird bullet shapes and weights, powder puff handloads, nuclear-powered handloads or filthy cheap-o Russian Wolf steel cased ammo. It's always fed and functioned with everything. Perhaps loosy-goosey has some value. The pistol groups decently, will put a magazine full inside one of the old 2 lb. coffee can lids at 25 yards if I'm in a shooting humor.
It's said that the early Colt and U. S. contract 1911s ought not be fired as their metallurgy and heat treatment was primitive compared with post World War II Colts. I never heard of any of that until the rise of the internet firearms forum, a source that frequently is inhabited by timorous ditherers. Claims are now made that the old slides can crack. It was too late for this one for I subjected it to hard use and didn't honor it with a well earned "semi-retirement" until 2008 when its front sight went AWOL during a range trip. It never cracked, but was 90 years old that year so the "warranty had expired." I replaced the front sight and gave it an opportunity to "slow down" due to its advanced age.
It still goes to the range for "exercise" on occasion, cracking be hanged.
The first holster with which I equipped myself for use with this pistol is an original World War I M1916 leather holster manufactured by Warren Leather Goods Co. and dated 1918. This stuff was once cheap at gun shows and I got this holster for $5 not long after acquiring the pistol. I'd march about our old family place on hunts and hikes wearing the holstered pistol. Soon got some better holsters, but have kept this holster long enough to become "collectible in its own right.
Last edited by noelekal; 06-19-2022 at 02:29 AM.
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sharptonn (06-19-2022)
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06-19-2022, 02:59 AM #6
Nice! I always wanted a 1911. AND a Hi-Power as well. Convinced I wasn't meant to have those.
Too rich for my blood. Boy! You paid a pile for that in '78!
I always resist calibers I don't have. Nothing .45
I AM nostalgic on those 1911's, though.
My grandad had one I think was a Singer. My Brother absconded with it and the Colt Woodsman (and more) on the day of the funeral.
No. We don't talk much..
Anyhoo, I grew up around them too. I remember the small-town cops all had them.
Hammer was always back with a leather strap in there. Fascinated me.
By then, it was ingrained you only pulled the hammer back if you intended to shoot.
Otherwise, it was down.
Finally had the huevos to ask Mutt Barlow (DS working the football game security)what was up with the hammer back.
He explained the grip safety to me. I said 'OH'.
I figure it to be the only firearm that should shoot that ,45ACP, although lots do.
Anyhoo, I did acquire a nice '38 Woodsman. One down!
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06-19-2022, 05:15 AM #7
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- Mar 2012
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- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
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Thanked: 3228The Colt I get nostalgic over is the Python. It was one of the first pistols I bought when I got into handgun shooting in the early 70s. The fit and finish was top notch. The bluing was to die for as was the trigger. Looks aside, it shot like a dream with both 38 wad cutter target loads and and full house 357 rounds. Very happy to have been able to own and use one.
BobLife is a terminal illness in the end