![]() |
| Home | Contact Us | Mission Statement | Forum Rules | Moderator Rules | Legal | HelpDesk | Our Guestbook | The M1911 Pistols Organization | Donations |
|
|||||||
| Register | Activate | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read | Statistics |
| Go to our Home Page | Go to our E-zine |
|
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
|
Please note that the forums in this category are to be used to ask questions or to show us pistols from these manufacturers. They can also be used to ask questions about the parts of a particular pistol from one of these manufacturers, as long as the question relates to the original parts.
Messages with questions for after-market parts, magazines, holsters, conversion kits, ammo etc. will be moved to the proper forum and a warning will be issued. IMPORTANT: In Photo-threads, each post should contain at least one picture of your own. Quoting a previous post, does not make your post compliant with that requirement. Photo threads are NOT for chatting. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
||||
|
Do you have any pics. Without seeing the brass, there could be a number of causes.
How old is the recoil spring? Consider a change out if you haven't for a while. How clean is the chamber? Are the dents caused by the firearm or when it lands on the concrete floor? (let some eject on grass) I hope this helps. |
|
||||
|
Everything in the gun is brand new. It's not caused by landing on the floor or by impacting a surface, I'm fairly certain, because the markings are highly consistant, and the walls/floor are both carpeted. And the chamber should be very clean, since it's only had 100 rounds through it, and has been cleaned two or three times.
|
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Wes, you are speaking of your WW1 Repro 1911 right? That being the case; you will experience dented or dinged brass. It is quite normal and is to be expected. The ejection port on your 1911 is not lowered and relieved; nor is it supposed to be. I would suggest that most all of that brass can be reloaded; but if you must have undented brass; you will have to get yourself a new Colt; not one modelled on the WW1 model. Colt and alll of the other manufacturers right on up through the world war two contracts had the smaller ejection port. Lowering and relieving that ejection port became big business for gunsmiths during the fifties, sixties, and into the seventies. By then, most manufacturers were offering models with those points already taken care of, and continue to do so today. Yours is as it should be for what it is.
|
|
#6
|
||||
|
||||
|
I have a Springfield WWII GI model with the small ejection port, and almost every ejected casing has a flat spot up at the cartridge neck. My gun smith says thats typical with the small ejection port. I haven't tried reloading any yet, but I've been told they should be okay after resizing. The only way you can stop the dinged brass is to open up the ejection port, and "I know" you don't want to do that to that Colt WWI replica.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Interesting Firearms-related sites |
|
| Cool Gunsite : http://www.coolgunsite.com/ - Cornered Cat : http://www.corneredcat.com/ | |
| Go to our Home Page | Go to our E-zine |
|
|
|