Kimber.
They do make a nice looking pistol.
However you're paying a primum price.
I bought a Kimber Pro Tac II .45 in 2015
Carried it EDC for years.
The stories of the 45 having issues are true or at least I can say I had those issues as well. That is until about 5K rounds, Then things started to loosen and smooth up. Jams became less frequent. Same with misfeeds. and returns to battery.
I now have about 15K though it and it's my favorite pistol to shoot. But that seems to be the "break in period" for these guns. One has to wonder why the premium price if Kimber isn't going to finish lap instead of making the customer do it.
However, the frame is aluminum and the slide is steel so there may have been some minor galling on the first 5K.
I hear good things about their 9mm 2011. And watch the reviews on YouTube, but you don't really know if they are absolutely telling the truth because of bias or paid endorsement. Though the more legit ones will tell you if they are or aren't. For some reason Kimber 2011's don't have that same issue/reputation.
Anyhoo. Can't help you on 9mm Kimbers.
Kimber 45. Keep them wet. During break in, oil the slide nearly every other magazine.
So there's one massive pain in the seat.
The other one is Kimber often has some goofy proprietary tool you have to use to break down the pistol. And often they are a pain to use. Mine you need a small allen wrench to hold back the recoil spring. Total pain.
https://www.1911ultratool.com/ Makes a magnetic tool for that. Doesn't wallow out that allen key hole, no risk of scratching, etc., easy, fast and simple.
You don't need to buy it it's 50 ish bucks, but it's nice. If worse comes to worse a small allen key or some thin diameter piano wire bent into a shallow "L" would do the trick for you.
So.
Looks 8.
Reliability 3. to finally 8*. Depends if you want to be frustrated that many days at the range. Oil. Lots of oil. Seem to be mag specific. No issues with 7-8 round mags of any make. However, with 10 round mags, there seems to be an almost constant issue. Dunno what it is. Same mags(Wilson) run great in my Dan Wesson. Dunno.
Ease of take down. 9. Same difficulty as a Glock. A couple of tricks you need to know, but they are almost intuitive, not counting the special tool you need, it's a 1911, there aren't going to be any surprises. Kimbers often use an external extractor, so there's that and don't know if you're the type to take it
all the way down.
Quirky. 7 Extra tools needed - yes. And that's an issue with some people and could be a serious inconvenience. That's the main reason it gets an 8 for reliability, if you do need to do a field strip, in the field, what if you don't have those tools. You have a paper weight. So in that aspect it's not an "all weather platform." Some what limited conditions until it's broken in.
Once broken in, a dream to shoot.
Cannot comment on their 9mm models.
Hope that helps.