CraigC
Sixgun Nut
The devil is in the details and details are what sets the USFA's apart from all the rest. Those details obviously matter to some folks and they're willing to pay for it. The smoothness on the inside of a USFA is a tribute to their machine work, not some unnecessary anal retentive need to polish everything. If a USFA was as rough on the inside as a Colt, it wouldn't function. I will tell you this, it results in an extremely smooth action that feels like a precision instrument. Virtually any Colt or replica benefits greatly from a professional action job. I've spent more time stoning the action of a Colt New Frontier than I ever did on a Uberti. Totally unnecessary on a USFA. A tuned Colt feels much like a tuned Uberti to me. A late model USFA with new springs feels very different.