16 July 2010, 18:35
HammerLeft-hand 1911 pistol ?
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Randall, Safari Arms, perhaps others made some true left-hand 1911 pistols in times past.
Have owned and shot them.
Given that today there must be umpteen variations of the 1911 from Officers, Commanders, Gov't, Long Slides, Bobtails, and all the hybrid combinations conceivable thereof made and for some pretty small niche markets...
Given how much modern manufacturing technology makes small dedicated runs more efficient and economical than they used to be...
When can we expect to see a true left-hand 1911 45 back on the market ?
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16 July 2010, 18:40
GeorgeSI doubt it will be anytime soon; manufacturers seem reluctant to expand product lines in this economy.
George
16 July 2010, 18:46
Hammer.
quote:
... manufacturers seem reluctant to expand product lines in this economy.
Just heard Obama say that everything was fine with the economy.
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16 July 2010, 20:21
GeorgeSIf you're living off the taxpayer, it is.
George
16 July 2010, 21:45
Hammer.
Everyone on the internet says I am the last non-believer.
That everyone else has accepted Obama as their one and only and that the economy is booming. Biden has confirmed it.
Back to the left-hand 1911...
Seems like all the long gun makers have lefties in their stables now.
Anschutz
Benelli
Beretta
Blaser
Browning
Granite Mountain
Montana
Remington
Ruger
Sako
Savage
Shilen
STAG Arms
Tikka
Remington
Weatherby
Winchester
etc
Don't need all the 1911 makers to make a lefty. Just one will do. For now.
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27 September 2010, 05:58
Nanook 450Besides an ambi safety, what are you looking for - a left handed mag release and the ejection port on the left side?
I think the ejection to the right is no problem - and I've adapeted to the mag relase and have an ambi-safety on both my 1911s. . .
27 September 2010, 16:48
x-ringHammer,
I have one of the aforementioned Randall .45's.
(I don't care for all the 'pimp' scroll work, but it was already done--I wasn't going to pass on it because of it).
In any case, I'm glad I got it--but frankly when I go to the range or carry--I usually pick something else. Okay...truth is, I hardly EVER shoot it.
Old habits die hard. I've adapted to shooting RH pistols with my left hand. So when I shoot something left-handed or modified to shoot 'semi-left' it feels as if I'm learning some of the mechanics of shooting all over again.
If I did it often it would be a different story.
As w/ Nanook--I have modified a few of my pistols (a match .45 in particular) with a LH mag release and have an ambi-safety. Makes it a bit more LH friendly to shoot. But again, not all my pistols are modified this way, so switching back and forth takes some getting used to. It's all about the motor skills and habits right?
Adapting to LH rifles wasn't a big deal--and can shoot either without having to 'think' about it. The skills with a pistol (for me) haven't transferred so easily.
The more I do this, the more I value simplicity and consistency. My LH Randall doesn't really fit in either of those categories--but in this case--it just doesn't matter. I think most of us own a firearm or two for reasons other than their function as a 'tool'. The Randall is one of those for me.
One man's experience...
01 October 2010, 03:49
FLBillThe most important change no one's mentioned here seems to me to be the rifling twist--
Standard-LH- pulls the gun away from the lefty paw.
The RH twist of the KKM barrel on my favorite 1911 pushes into my hand, just like the LH does for the rightys.
It just feels better in rapid - and seems more controllable.
01 October 2010, 17:07
Chuck1911I highly suspect you will see some short runs of LH 1911s before the end of 2011.

Chuck
01 October 2010, 17:32
HammerI have both conventional 1911 and Randall left-hand 1911 pistols.
Have gone through Gunsite training with both.
Can handle either, but prefer the true left-hand version.
As far as case ejection goes, prefer the left-hand as fewer hot ejected cases go down my shirt.
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