This year is the hundredth anniversary of John Moses Browning’s Colt M1911 automatic pistol, the basis of pretty much every automatic handgun. The design is so successful that, to the untrained eye, a .45 automatic manufactured today will look very much the original 1911. Here, for example is my own Kimber .45, purchased in the mid-1990s:
Compare this to the original M1911, and the even closer (and only slightly revised) M1911A from 1926:
The M1911 deign has really stood the test of time. You’d be hard-pressed to find a device of similar complexity still in common use today that hasn’t undergone radical modification. Hats off to the far-sighted shade of John Moses Browning.
Tags: Guns, handguns, John Moses Browning, Kimber .45, M1911, M1911A
Thanks for the link. Unlike what some may think, I own other handguns and carry them regularly. However, I am partial to the 1911 and that is what I compete with because they are the absolute best for speed, accuracy and reliability.
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Amazing, when you remember the HiPower was his design also — that’s another fine weapon that’s been around almost as long.
I’m pretty partial to my own Beretta 92FS, and my Sigs in 9 mm, but the M1911 in .45 is still the gold standard.
Don’t forget the BMG both .30 and .50
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