sandflea316 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 I remember when i first started USPSA over ten years ago i started with a glock 35 in Limited major. Lusted over all the the cool race guns like a Dawson tuned STI Edge. The Edge was a great base gun to build a limited major race gun. STI quality fell off and they rebranded to Staccato and dropped the Edge. Along came Springfield and a cheaper 2011 pistol. Price was right amd i snatch one up as a base to build up. Barrel accuracy out of the box is great. Replaced the grip,added svi ignition kit, atlas safety and tool-less guide rod, red dirt trigger and nitro fin. New cerakote and TiN small parts Not sure how the Turkish 2011s are as a base to build but i think the Prodigy is an awesome entry level 2011 and a good base to build off of. Something the STI Edge was back in the day Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yigal Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 I also liked this gun. And I know it's made of good metal. and is an excellent basis for improvements. Regarding Turkish products, I personally would not touch them. I remember Toyota cars, which were assembled in Turkey and would fall apart on the road within a year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheSandMan491 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 Springfield's always had decent barrels, but I worry about shoooters dropping $1,200 on a prodigy and an additional $2,000 on upgrades. In the Edge days (when I started as well) it was a trigger job (on stock, tool steel components) away from being match-ready. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandflea316 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 5 minutes ago, TheSandMan491 said: Springfield's always had decent barrels, but I worry about shoooters dropping $1,200 on a prodigy and an additional $2,000 on upgrades. In the Edge days (when I started as well) it was a trigger job (on stock, tool steel components) away from being match-ready. I think you can get away with dropping in an ignition kit and tune and have a good shooting pistol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arcsign Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 That color scheme came out great! As far as the upgrades go… I think I’m going to run mine mostly as-is (replaced mag catch button with one tapped for a button extension), maybe add a magwell, for the time being and see how it goes. May also give a shot at very lightly polishing/sanding/deburring stock parts (no power tools, just high 1000+ grit sandpaper and 0000 steel wool to smooth things out)… though, even 250 rounds in it already feels smoother, and trigger feels better than it did out of the box… Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zzt Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 13 hours ago, TheSandMan491 said: Springfield's always had decent barrels, but I worry about shoooters dropping $1,200 on a prodigy and an additional $2,000 on upgrades. In the Edge days (when I started as well) it was a trigger job (on stock, tool steel components) away from being match-ready. If you drop an extra $2k you end up with a fully hand fit custom gun. I don't think it is necessary. SA uses good MIM internals in their guns. There are a boatload of SA 1911s at the club. I tell them to put 500 rounds through the gun so the trigger pull smooths out. Don't bother replacing anything (except ILS back in the day) until stuff wears out. You'll get at least 20k rounds through before you have to address anything. One shooter just polished the sear, hammer hooks and disco, then adjusted the sear spring. Smooth 2 lb. pull. If you want to upgrade the ignition kit to EGW, it is simple. Or, just buy the gun and base package from Briley. For around $1550 they go over the gun, install EGW ignition parts and refit the thumb safety. You get a gun that runs 100%. I'm probably going to buy a Prodigy just to tinker with. I want to see if a Cheely e2 grip fits without mods. I can pull from the parts bins and swap stuff out to see if there is any meaningful improvement. After I'm done tinkering, I'll probably put it back to stock and sell it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandflea316 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 6 minutes ago, zzt said: If you drop an extra $2k you end up with a fully hand fit custom gun. I don't think it is necessary. SA uses good MIM internals in their guns. There are a boatload of SA 1911s at the club. I tell them to put 500 rounds through the gun so the trigger pull smooths out. Don't bother replacing anything (except ILS back in the day) until stuff wears out. You'll get at least 20k rounds through before you have to address anything. One shooter just polished the sear, hammer hooks and disco, then adjusted the sear spring. Smooth 2 lb. pull. If you want to upgrade the ignition kit to EGW, it is simple. Or, just buy the gun and base package from Briley. For around $1550 they go over the gun, install EGW ignition parts and refit the thumb safety. You get a gun that runs 100%. I'm probably going to buy a Prodigy just to tinker with. I want to see if a Cheely e2 grip fits without mods. I can pull from the parts bins and swap stuff out to see if there is any meaningful improvement. After I'm done tinkering, I'll probably put it back to stock and sell it. The Cheely should fit without major mods. My LSI Outlaw grip was spec'ed to my SVI Infinity frame and i had to do some minor filing to fit Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dapribek Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 Just curious if you have checked out the Stealth Arms Platypus? A double stack 9mm 1911that uses $25 Glock mags. I’ve had 2 custom STI 2011s and my Platty is very close to their quality at a fraction of the cost. I’ve already ordered a second one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandflea316 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 (edited) 1 hour ago, dapribek said: Just curious if you have checked out the Stealth Arms Platypus? A double stack 9mm 1911that uses $25 Glock mags. I’ve had 2 custom STI 2011s and my Platty is very close to their quality at a fraction of the cost. I’ve already ordered a second one. I looked at those. If one was heavily invested in glocks with a bunch of glocks mag, the Platypus is worth a look at. I have a whole bunch of 2011 mags and glocks mags. Only thing that kept me from it is the aluminum grip and lack of provision for a thumb rest. If I'm going with a metal grip I'd rather it be steel. I'll take a poly grip over aluminum. Plus is anyone using just stock mags or magpul 21 rd mags? If not a oem 17 rd mag, spring and follower, and extension is not really any cheaper than atlas 140mm mags Edited February 24 by sandflea316 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RJH Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 1 hour ago, dapribek said: Just curious if you have checked out the Stealth Arms Platypus? A double stack 9mm 1911that uses $25 Glock mags. I’ve had 2 custom STI 2011s and my Platty is very close to their quality at a fraction of the cost. I’ve already ordered a second one. The $25 Glock mags kind of lost their allure when you can get $40 prodigy mags and basically standard 2011 components. That's not to say the platypus is not a good gun but, I think most people would rather have a steel frame and standard 2011 bits Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
42ATK Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 Beautiful pistol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandflea316 Posted February 27 Author Share Posted February 27 (edited) Legit pics from my Cerakoter This is closer to the color in person than my previous pics Edited February 27 by sandflea316 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr Mitch Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 Agreed, this is a good thread topic. The Prodigy groups on FB have been extremely active since this gun was released, and sales are much stronger than anyone imagined. I bought one the day after they were released in 2022 as it happened to coincide with my birthday, and all the 5” guns produced were already sold out worldwide, so I bought a 4.25”. Thought it was a cool gun, didn’t really have anything to do with it, so put it in the safe, and 8 months later Limited Optics became a thing and now I shoot it all the time. I’d had a ton of race parts on hand from years of shooting Limited, so it cost me nothing to fill it up with premium parts and a gen 1 STI grip module and magwell. 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. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sandflea316 Posted February 27 Author Share Posted February 27 Also let me point out that there are cheaper options(i.e. the Turkish guns) available i don't think any of them have a plate system as good as the Springfield AOS. That alone is worth the extra cost. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
392heminut Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 2 hours ago, sandflea316 said: i don't think any of them have a plate system as good as the Springfield AOS. That alone is worth the extra cost. I agree! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arcsign Posted February 28 Share Posted February 28 The lighting looks like it makes a huge difference color-wise. Not sure I would have guessed that was the same gun. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ddc Posted February 28 Share Posted February 28 13 hours ago, 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. In my case that is so true. I've had a couple 1911s over the years but never spent any time really learning the system getting down into the nuts and bolts. Now that I've moved from a P320 CO to a 2011 LO I'm taking the time and it's been rewarding and just plain fun. I'm glad I made the switch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GunBugBit Posted February 29 Share Posted February 29 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. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billm67 Posted August 10 Share Posted August 10 I just got back from the first range session with my new 5" Prodigy. I wanted a gun built to shoot at steel matches. I have been shooting and wrenching on my own 1911's since the early 90's so I am capable of giving them a tune up. I used an EGW Prodigy Ignition Kit, Atlas gun works trigger and a Dawson Tool Less Guide rod. I have the proper tools/jigs to fit and polish a trigger and the kit parts in the EGW kit gave me a nice 3 pound trigger. Ran 200 rounds through it with two of my shooting buddies and we were all putting round after round in the same hole at 10 yards. Also hitting 8 inch gongs at 25 yards. Springfield has always built great 1911's and this one is pretty good out or the box. With a little tuning they can be great guns. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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