I have three 1911's I carry often. I have a custom, a Kimber and a S&W 1911Sc. I am finding that my favorite is to carry is the S&W 1911Sc. Lightweight and accurate.
My choice was partially by price and by History. I had limited funds, about $700. And found a plain Jane Colt Government model that came in just under my limits, but that was close to ten years ago. Just wanted the "The Real McCoy", so to speak. bought it for bowling pin shooting, and have never looked backed. First round out of the barrel at 20ft was dead center. But really just about any of the good brands will be a great gun. I think it just comes down to preferrence like some people like a Ford over a Chevy, or visa versa.
What are you going to use the 1911 for? Will it be a carry gun, home defense, range shooter, all the above?
Also, keep in mind that the grip angle between a 1911 and a Glock is very different. I find that if I switch from my 1911 to a Glock I have to be mindful not to shoot high because my muscles are trained for the more vertical grip on the 1911. For me I could not easily switch back and forth between the two platforms but YMMV.
love, there are many good pistols out there now. I would take a deep breath and make sure that the 1911 is what you want. Then I would look for features rather than make and model and allow software to make your decision.
A few points that I can make without making your eyes glaze over in 1911 geekery:
1. If you can get the Modern Technique of the Pistol by Greg Morrison I would look at the features that Gunsite deems necessary, optional and unwanted.
2. Reliability trumps everything else. You want a gun that runs.
3. Remember that JMB designed the gun to be a certain size. Once others start screwing with his work, the function can down south quickly, especially from positions of distress, e.g. rolling around on the gun where you would be in a fight.
+1 for the Kimber! I have a Pro Carry that I purchased used for $600 and itis sweet! I also recently bought a used Sig GSR for $700 an love it too! I prefer to buy used 1911's when possible to get past the break in frustration or factory repair on a new gun! (AS LONG AS THEY ARE IN GOOD SHAPE!) You also save $$$$$$ off new price!
kimber all the way. traded my taurus pt1911 for one. never looked back. had some chances to trade away the kimber for other stuff but have so far held on to it. the basic modals run around 800 bucks new about 650ish used if you can find one. There was a nice one for sale in the classifieds for 750 i think. ive concidered trading mine for it.
The Pro Carry has a 4" barrel - I do not have any good ideas for an alloy frame full size 1911.
Finally, I am ambivalent about the Taurus PT-1911. They come with lots of features and are very reasonably priced. However, the ones I have dry fired had triggers that did not impress me....I am not opposed to shooting a gun with just an OK trigger but I have a Glock for that.
I recommend you go down to Bradis and buy the used Kimber Super Match we have on the shelf for under $1000. It's so sexy and in such nice shape that *I* was gazing at it lustfully the other day!
I bought a used S&W, 645, for about $400.00 SEVERAL years ago,
just to get into the .45 game, and I love it. Full size, steel and shoots
GREAT..... added adj. sights....
My first pistol was a colt 1911 and it was a great gun, but I ended up selling it as a newly wed when bills came in. I also had a Para Ordnance P-14 that was pretty sweet, but I sold it for something else. Both of those were great guns.
I've already owned two 1911's but I still read these threads because there's always something knew to learn about them.
I held a RIA Tactical and Springfield Loaded side by side and I really couldn't feel or see much difference other than the price tag. The triggers on them were both light and clean. I was impressed by both, but the Springfield loaded models are crazy expensive these days and the parkerized one is hard to find for less than $750 new.
For the money I'd buy a Springfield mil-spec or a RIA tactical.
Last time I looked RIA Tactical models (better sights, guide rod, wider safety) went for $430 + 20 shipping + FFL fee. So for under $500 you could have a nice 1911. All these ads I see for used guns with a $5 beat up holster and an extra $10 magazine for over $500 are a joke. Spend your money more wisely than that. The springfield mil-specs shouldn't cost more than $650 out the door.
Remington R1.....about 600 brand new, work excellent, and they are based on the same design of WW2 1911's....the hammer wont even fall of half cock when u pull the trigger like modern 1911's.....remingtons first 1911 in about 70 years but still excellent quality shooter
You can't go wrong with a Kimber. You may spend a little more, but just like anything else, you get what you pay for. Also, they will retain their value better than other guns, so you make up some of the expense on the other side of ownership.