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GunBugBit

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Posts posted by GunBugBit

  1. I do prefer the 2011’s thicker grip but still enjoy shooting the 1911’s, especially an older Springfield TRP and the DW PM-9.  Nowadays my club match stages aren’t single stack or revolver friendly, so I shoot mostly limited.

  2. Good to hear!  And yes, thanks to all who commented.  I’ve learned a lot reading what others are doing with their Prodigys.  It’s been an enjoyable project and now mine is set up to my liking.

  3. 5 hours ago, CHA-LEE said:

    The heavier the recoil spring the more abrupt the stop is when the slide snaps forward. The harder is slams closed the more everything moves around during that event.

     

    In my 9mm LO blasters I am using a 7lb recoil spring.

    Hmm, yes, my PM-9s work great with 7# springs, which I sometimes use when shooting a slightly lighter load.

     

    It’s the slide slamming home when my finger might already have released the trigger that I wonder about.  I’m not positive my finger can beat the slide cycle time, but maybe.

  4. On 2/27/2024 at 6:57 AM, Dr Mitch said:

    I think the Prodigy is turning the 1911 (via 2011) back into America’s gun.  People are learning how they operate and how to work on them again.  It’s wonderful.

    Agree!  And plenty of younger generation gunsmiths getting bench time with these guns, keeping the knowledge base healthy.

  5. On 2/14/2024 at 8:39 PM, Sarge said:

    I’m admittedly not a gunsmith but I found some things on my prodigy that are not so easily fixed as they were in this thread. Probably has a lot to do with cerakote thickness etc but still.

     EGW ignition kit

    Sear would not fit in my frame at all without a lot of sanding in a very confined space and polished the sides of the sear.

    17# mainspring barely made a dent in proven ammo with stock FP. I bought a Cheely extended FP to put in but I still thought stock should have worked.

    Disconnector took a ton of polishing to fit in the frame.

    Hammer strut pin hole is so big that pin just slides through and falls out. Now to order a pin kit and hope it fits through the strut.

     

    EGW GUIDE ROD ASSY is practically a press fit in the slide. Takes light taps with a hammer to install and remove.

     

    As far as EGW keeping items in stock, forget about it. Been waiting several weeks for an MSH. Thinking about getting stainless and painting it black

     

    It seems the Prodigys vary enough from gun to gun that there’s no one upgrade recipe for all of them.  No surprise because 1911 parts almost always require at least a little fitting.

     

    One thing that might be consistent - the slide and frame seem to have less space between them - specifically, the gap between the disco track and the flat frame surface where the disco pokes out - than on a lot of other 1911/2011-style guns.  I think this is why so many report the slide hanging up on the disco.

     

    Is it like this with yours?

  6. Last Saturday, I had one and only one half cock during a sixth range session in a row.  I was shooting with some other people and at about 150 rounds (all good up to that point), I said, “Now I’m gonna try to induce half cock.”

     

    So I did doubles as fast as I could and sure enough, I got one to happen.

     

    This is with an Extreme Engineering disconnector in the Prodigy.  Also, I had reduced over-cock to a small amount.  These two changes didn’t hurt anything.

     

    I think there is a timing thing going on, and the recoil spring is the main driver of slide cycle timing, so that’s why I’m thinking about it.  But I won’t be surprised if this isn’t solvable with a different spring weight.

     

    Feeding, extraction and ejection remain 100% reliable.

  7. Good stuff Charlie.

     

    One thing I’m wondering is how much the recoil spring is a factor in my situation.  I’m using a 9#.

     

    Before weighing some slides recently, I was pretty sure the Prodigy slide was heavier than the PM-9 slide.  I weighed three slides and got these readings:

     

    PM-9:  13.5oz

    Prodigy:  12.7oz

    Nemesis:  11.1oz

     

    I use an 8# spring for the PM-9 and never have issues (after I worked out a magazine-related problem).

     

    I haven’t yet tried an 8# spring in the Prodigy, but probably will next range session.

     

  8. 1 minute ago, Racinready300ex said:

    How would the sear escape? There is a spring holding pressure on it. Unless the sear spring is set really light.

    I wonder the same.  I know I’ve had my issue when there was plenty of sear leg leaf spring pressure.  The possible explanation is that when executing fast doubles, there is a small timing window where the shooter’s finger is setting up a situation that results in the half-cock when over-cock distance is excessive.

     

    That’s all I can think of for now.

  9. Sure, other things usually do explain it.

     

    A common complaint about the Prodigy is the slide hanging up on the disconnector.  I think this is because the gap between the slide and frame is less than on some other guns.

     

    This would tend to make the slide push the hammer back a bit more than on other guns.  And so the full cock hammer hooks stay a greater distance away from the sear nose while the slide cycles, giving the sear more opportunity to free-float and escape the full cock hooks when a bump happens at just the wrong time.  I read a gunsmith’s description of this once but had forgot about it until now.

     

    The fix is to take down the surface where the hammer glides on the disconnector track.  Not so much that the sear nose can’t catch the hammer hooks, of course.

  10. On 2/16/2024 at 9:39 PM, yigal said:

    This disco urgently needs polishing. 🤣  Which company's part? It doesn't look like casting. The part looks good quality. but unfinished.

    Because of all these problems, 6 years ago I managed to perfect the trigger system of the 1911 and it works for me in both guns with the trigger weight of 550 grams in one and 650 in the other without change.

    The picture is from a web site, not pics of my own.  They are Extreme Engineering disconnectors in the pic.  Mine looked the same until I polished.  Their statement that they pre-polish is false.

  11. On 2/4/2024 at 5:32 PM, 392heminut said:

    If you think it might be an issue then a piece of 600 grit wet or dry paper wrapped around a toothpick would be sufficient to clean it out of the hole.

    I did address the disconnector hole in a similar fashion when I first got the pistol, but only a small amount.  I’ll probably do a little more polishing.

     

    It could very well be that a lighter disconnector is needed.  The neck of the Extreme Race Disconnector will contact the walls of the hole very little due to the cutouts, leaving minimal surfaces touching the hole walls, thereby reducing friction.  The cutouts also reduce weight of course.

     

    I received two of the Extreme discos yesterday so I’ll be trying one soon.

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