Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Ayoob’s Top 1911 Hacks” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/ayoob-the-1911-mistake-trainers-tried-to-teach-me/.


I file a small shallow groove in the face of the slide lock, where the plunger rides when the slide lock is pushed into the frame.I keep a guitar pic around to use the way you use a pen to avoid the idiot scratch.
I keep a guitar pic around to use the way you use a pen to avoid the idiot scratch.
In 1966 I was assigned to a unit where the 1911 was the designated sidearm. All on duty members of the unit carried a 1911 every day, every shift, around the clock. There was also a policy that each individual must meet the military qualification requirements of "Expert Marksman" with the 1911. Those that did not score expert at the gun range swept parking lots till they qualified. With the help of an understanding NCO (and some pine tar) I scored expert on my third try. Over the years I have owned and carried a variety of pistols, but I always came back to the 1911. The only thing that is even a distant second is the Browning High Power.My first acquaintance with the 1911 was in 1957, when I was "drafted" into the Ft. Belvoir, VA, pistol team. Our 1911s were old, worn beaters that rattled when you shook them. You had to make sure that you got the same one every time, because they were highly idiosyncratic. The post teams we competed against were equally handicapped, so it was a fair competition.