Xander
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
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hang on i got the tea sauce on the in the show notes here but again this one's this one's all steel so do we have the there's a link in the show notes this one's only in nine that 45 they only make a double stack in nine yep that's i mean it's super common now like i mean the the uh you know staccato doesn't make a 45 anymore
Yeah.
But again, this one, this one's, this one's, this one's, this one is a steel frame as opposed to an alloy frame.
And again, there's nothing that I'm, I'm not, I'm not going to, you know, if they, if someone wanted to go the, the bull armory route and start making a, a full polymer frame, 1911, um,
you know, the, you, there's, there's lots of options to make them light.
And once you start making a double stack, you know, you don't need to go towards the purest.
All I want is, is that single action trigger pull, uh, for a, uh, for, for, and, and, and a, a modern capacity.
And I think that that would compete with all of the plastic fantastics that are in the, in the carry market today.
But the big thing I've got is a fairly crappy commercial.
Because granted, some of the military 1911s had some really awful triggers on them.
But pretty much you're rolling off the assembly line.
Entry-level 1911 triggers are going to beat a lot of the slicked-up competition striker-fired guns.
as far as the trigger pull goes.
And that's the key that I'm getting at is, again, I'm going at the fact that we're in an age where when you're taking a new shooter to the range and you hand them a 1911, they may have never pulled a single action trigger.
They've never pulled a trigger that felt like that before in their life.
And so many of them are just like, oh, my God.
I'll tell them.
Here, hand them the empty gun, point that down range and pull the trigger.
The trigger is going to feel different than what you felt before.