It's a heavy all-steel rugged pistol that is very comfortable to shoot. That is a good price. A little internet research shows that parts are available, and not as hard to find as comments would suggest. Just don't dry fire it and you will probably never need replacement parts.
He will buy more guns in his lifetime. Let him buy his own Kimber or whatever.
Speaking of Kimber, I hear it said on the forums that Kimber makes a nice gun but has poor customer service. I am sure Colt has a customer service department too, but I wouldn't know. I've had two Colt's 1911s for...
I have both a .380 Colt Gov't model (8 rounds), and a S&W model 36 (5 rounds).
I made the decision on which one I could shoot better on the first shot. If it happens, it will go down at close range. Once you fire a shot at someone, they're not going to hang around like a range silhouette to...
It's a movie thing to show the actor and the gun
It isn't a "shooting position" at all. The only reason he is holding the gun that way is because the director told him to, so the gun and the actor are in the same frame, and at a dramatic angle. The director called for it. It is called "scene...
I doubt you're going to "hot rod" anything with a case capacity of about one grain of any kind of powder. Most max loads for .25 ACP are what? Maybe 1.1 grains?
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