I tell what's really frustrating! Is to have a 1911 act up AFTER the break in period!
You just never know I guess. 


Most of these issues will work out as it breaks in.occasionally an extractor might need tweaking.
I tell what's really frustrating! Is to have a 1911 act up AFTER the break in period!You just never know I guess.
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When Colt, Remington Rand, Ithaca, Union Switch and Signal, and Singer delivered all those 1911s to Uncle Sam, did they come with instructions to break each one in with 500 rounds?
I love these 1911 threads
Why would anyone choose a lower capacity heavier firearm except for nostalgic reasons? Regardless of reliability.
Ok collecting is a different matter but depending on a gun for EDC reliability, weight and size are very important factors to consider.
Ok, so a few questions on this break in.
1) why is it a break in period? What's the difference between that and shooting?
2) what if it's still having some problems after the 501 shot? Then what? Another 100? 500? Where does the break in start and stop?
Ouch. Poking the beehive there!
There's a lot of people that worship at the altar of John Moses Browning and will not carry anything he didn't make. Some take it one step further and won't carry any 1911 with options that he didn't install on the first 1911. So no modern sights or bevertails or ambi safeties or even extended safeties. This is what I find absolutely ridiculous.
Weight is something that's different for everyone. And capacity. ....well there's a lot of people here who carry J frames as a main EDC.
Reasons are plentiful and I'm fine with 99% of them. The only ones that drive me nuts are the ones based on emotion and not facts
Agreed. That's why it's a good idea to bring many mags and different ammo.I think that the break-in period is not for the firearm but for the owner.
If there is some sort of manufacturing defect with a new firearm or magazine you should be able to determine that very quickly - unless it is some sort of materials defect which doesn't affect performance until something cracks etc making the defect apparent.
I don't think there is any particular number necessary - depending on your level of proficiency etc anywhere between 50 and 500 rounds should determine whether or not you are comfortable with and have learned how to operate your firearm. Of course if you are experiencing user induced stoppages resulting from improper grip (limp wristing or thumb on the slide stop for example) and you blame it on the firearm without considering other factors (user error, bad ammo) then you are wasting time and ammo.
Of course there may be individual firearms or even entire product runs of firearms which are made either with a lower quality finish and or slightly out of spec which may work better and better the more rounds are run through it as the parts wear together - how long that takes depends entirely on the materials in question and the severity of the issue. I would think that a bur left on a polymer that wears against a metal part would not take as long as a metal bur wearing against similar metal for example.
It is also entirely possible that any number of people have personally experienced issues in their first few hundred rounds which were caused by their unfamiliarity with the firearm but which they ascribed to the firearm "breaking-in" without ever being aware that is was really the user becoming familiar with the firearm.
A good way to test that would be to take a firearm which you had lots of problems with early on - but no longer have any issue with - and let a new shooter try it out and see if they have the same problems you did when it was new.