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Hany

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Posts posted by Hany

  1. Thanks for the replies, I ran into a NIB one at a friends gunshop, and it did indeed have a "flair" at the muzzle....so perhaps they made them more than one way?

    But seeing one new in box, at least confirmed for me, that the used one I saw was all factory.

     

    👍👍

  2. Guys, I saw a benelli  m2, with interchangeable chokes. The barrel has a fairly Substantial "flair" at the muzzle to accommodate the choke....Is this "normal" ie Factory? Just curious as I have only had cylinder bore M1 in years past.

     

    Thanks in advance 

     

     

  3. I took Bill Wilson's advice from his "Combat Auto" book decades ago, and settled on .468-.469, and oal of 1,250 and it has worked in all pistols including Sig p220's that often wouldnt accept anything longer than 1.265 or so (sometimes less) depending on the bullet ogive.

  4. I remember the titanium hammers of the 90's and their "superior lock time". They just didn't hold up.  Caspian made titanium frames for a while, with mixed success, but other than cost, galling was a serious issue.  All in all, good steel, that has been ported/lightened/hollowed, seems to hold up much better

  5. I too have used Unique in .45 Colt and .44 special for years...In .45 I usually use 8.5g, although I often go higher in my 25-5 smith..

    However, I have substituted Universal and gotten great results  To achieve same velocity as Unique, the charge weight can vary .2-.4 of a grain. 

    Just as accurate and a little cleaner, and meters better.

    John Linebaugh who is naturally associated with "MAGNUM" big bores has written that the revolver he shoots and carries most is a 25-5! loaded with a 260g at approx 900fps. I think he favors 231, somewhere around 8g, but that you will have to do a little research to confirm. good luck 

  6. With Dan Wesson, I ordered direct from them on Dept. Letterhead.  This was 5-6 years ago, I think I got it in a month or so.  It was a solid pistol, if you want hicap, Im notnseeing anything better in the "under 2k range" than a Staccato...as Trace said...but If I was in the market for an single stack carry pistol in .45, DW is a solid pick.

  7. Thanks for the answer!   I gotta say the Steel frame has been intriguing me since the SHOT show... I carried, and Instructed with a standard PPQ for all of 2016, (added a straight apex trigger) shot 24k rounds through it that year and still like the gun, though I have moved on to other projects...   for me, I think the PPQ SF Pro, with just a straight Apex trigger sounds just about perfect to me.  

  8. For the POI issues, have you tried the Wilson rear sight? It comes in two heights. One is made for the dovetail FO front, and the other is made for the old style integral models.  Perhaps the lower one for the Integral sight might bring down your POI.  Might be worth a try. 

  9. Its a nice setup if you like to "roll" the trigger all the way from front to back.  I carried my duty glocks that way for years... Also it was good insurance against the trigger return spring breaking, which was a fairly common problem.  However I no longer manipulate the trigger that way.  For the last 6 years or so I shoot "press to wall-break" so the two stage trigger is now actually preferable for me.  Finally, the broken trigger return spring issue is pretty much resolved.  Hope that helps.

  10. Mine has worked well from day one, except it doesn't like soft training ammo (like pmc 115g), Runs perfectly with a variety of duty ammo. Trigger is good enough, but I will probably tune it a tad. Kept sights the same, and added VZ "frag" grips and a SA magwell, and have been instructing with it, (my rehab gun) as my elbow heals from surgery 4 months ago. It has been a god send. Good luck. I really think the DW line are the best bang for the buck in a 1911.... somewhat like les baers were 20 years ago.

  11. Well, I had my '94 vintage single stack refinished in Ionbond top and HC frame, about 7 or 8 years ago. No problems at all since then. Neither rail surface has any appreciable wear, which is not a surprise since the rails where they "interact" are always lubed with grease. No galling or oxidation so far...even though mine is finished in "reverse" to what you are planning, there is no reason that the result will be any different. Benny Hill made me a great railed caspian framed, two-tone single stack about 2-3 years ago with identical finish, and results were again excellent. Smooth and hard wearing...hope this helps.

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