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One Piece Or Two Peice Guide Rod Ambi Saftey Or Single


johnny1gun

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Trying to finish up my RO. What a learning experience. I have heard not to buy ambi safeties because they work themselves out. Ive also heard just buy a one piece guide rods. That two piece will come loose. Would love to here what the Enos universe thinks of these things since i have no experience with either. This gun is for competition only. Thanks for the help and Merry Christmas!

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My competition 1911 style guns have 2 piece guide rods for ease of disassembly in the field. Most of them have ambi safeties so I can keep the safety on during transfer to WHO. I have had a safety break but I also had what I though was a 1 piece tungsten guide rod come apart. Most 1 piece GR's are going to take some sort of takedown tool but the choice is really yours.

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For a carry gun there's a valid reason to go with a standard safety, not extended/ambi/or paddle type.

For a Match Gun FWIW I like an Ed Brown Ambi and, I know I'm departing the norm, a Standard Length Recoil Spring Guide.

For me it's a matter of how the front sight tracks. I tried all the different variations of Full Length Guide Rods for a decade and came back to the Original as the extra weight up front did little for me to help in recoil and invariably led to a slight dipping of the muzzle. I couldn't get the dip out regardless of weight of recoil spring, as usually the lighter the recoil spring the less the muzzle will dip.

So I settled on less weight up front and then played with different weights of Recoil Springs until I found the right combo, Std Guide/14-15# Spring in a .45 1911.

I use the same set up for a .40 2011 LImited Gun also.

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For a carry gun there's a valid reason to go with a standard safety, not extended/ambi/or paddle type.

For a Match Gun FWIW I like an Ed Brown Ambi and, I know I'm departing the norm, a Standard Length Recoil Spring Guide.

For me it's a matter of how the front sight tracks. I tried all the different variations of Full Length Guide Rods for a decade and came back to the Original as the extra weight up front did little for me to help in recoil and invariably led to a slight dipping of the muzzle. I couldn't get the dip out regardless of weight of recoil spring, as usually the lighter the recoil spring the less the muzzle will dip.

So I settled on less weight up front and then played with different weights of Recoil Springs until I found the right combo, Std Guide/14-15# Spring in a .45 1911.

I use the same set up for a .40 2011 LImited Gun also.

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