cosmicnoob.blogg.se

Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing
Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing






  1. #Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing full
  2. #Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing trial
  3. #Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing series

However this pistol isn’t really marketed or offered as a precision target piece. On the shooting range, the sight picture is a bit “bulky.” The sights are large and easy to pick up, but will hinder precision. Overall however the R1 succeeds in giving off the appearance of an old-school, USGI 1911 save for a few quirks. The key word is ‘appear’ and they are so heavily varnished that it’s easy to mistake them for plastic. The double-diamond grips appear to be wood. The barrel bushing is, strangely enough, stainless. There is a tiny notch in the top of the chamber to act as a loaded chamber indicator. The mainspring housing is flat, steel, and has vertical serrations. Though present on the 1911A1, short triggers have fallen out of favor with most shooters. The trigger is aluminum and, rather oddly, a short trigger. Despite this, it is tasteful rather than the ugly billboard rollmarks seen on many 1911s these days. Rollmarks are tasteful with the pistol’s name on the right side near the muzzle, and a large company name on the left. The finish is bluing that appears to be more black, but is durable and has stood up to repeated use.

remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing

The sights are large, white three-dot sights that offer good visibility and durability over precision accuracy. This Remington R1, like many basic 1911s, has an appearance reminiscent of a surplus USGI pistol but does not accurately mimic one. It isn’t too obvious at first glance, but there are casting lines on the frame and rough marks that haven’t been fully polished out. 45 ACP and priced as a more budget friendly 1911.

#Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing full

The variant reviewed here is the basic ‘USGI’ model - a no-frills, full sized, blued 1911 with wood grips and chambered in. Even the slides and frames vary, with more expensive variants featuring forged frames, with less-expensive variants having cast frames. A variety of designs have since been offered including tactical models with threaded barrels and VZ grips, long slide variants, officer’s models, and commemorative editions, all in a variety of finishes and calibers. With the 100-year anniversary of John Browning’s now timeless design approaching, Remington introduced their line of 1911s in 2010, dubbed the R1 1911, to cash in on the craze. This company was spun off decades before and Remington themselves wouldn’t produce another 1911 until earlier this decade Enter the R1 1911 Though there exist World War Two-era M1911A1 pistols with the Remington name, these were produced by the unrelated Remington-Rand Typewriter Company. Post-war, Remington produced the Model 51 in a variety of calibers as a compact pistol up until the start of World War Two. Remington was instead contracted to build the M1917 rifle for the Army and, in a fit of irony, also received a contract to produce M1911 pistols. Soon after however, the United States declared war on the Central Powers and the contract was cancelled before any could be built. (Photo: Francis Borek)īoth the Navy and Marine Corps were suitably impressed with Pedersen’s design, and placed a contract with Remington in 1917.

remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing

What you get inside big green box is a R1, two 8-round mags, and manual.

#Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing series

It used a “hesitation-locked” system and would become the basis of the successful Model 51 series of pistols. To the amazement of the Marine Corps, renowned gun designer John Pedersen whipped up a self-loader chambered in. However they could plainly see that the future of side arms lay in self-loading pistols and both branches began to put out feelers.

#Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing trial

Backgroundĭuring the First World War, the US Army adopted the 1911 design from Colt after a very lengthy trial program, but the Navy and Marine Corps weren’t too impressed and decided to stick with revolvers. Remington is no stranger to John Browning’s masterpiece handgun, the 1911 pistol, and their R1 1911 handgun in. Yet there is a beacon of hope for the company, a design Remington flirted with during one of mankind’s darkest hours that, like a phoenix, could prove to be a (partial) rebirth of the brand. It cannot be argued that many of the Freedom Group’s decisions have proven to be quite contentious (and garnered a seemingly unending string of bad press). Perhaps it’s the controversy over the Model 700’s trigger design? Maybe it’s disappointment over the Bushmaster ACR? Or it could be anger over the closure of the Marlin factory and the precipitous decline in quality? Think of Remington, and what pops into your mind? Chances are it’s not something good. Remington’s R1 is a no-frills design that stays true to the original (more or less).








Remington rand 1911a1 checkered mainspring housing