Anyone have an experience with the German GSG 1911 in 22 LR or the comparable Rock River 22 LR 1911 for plinking? Pictures and budget minded alternatives always welcome. Thank you!
First off, I think we have a mis-identification or possibly... I'm at a loss for gun #2. I'm thinking that you meant Rock
Island Armory which is quite a bit different than
Rock River and on the other end of the price/quality spectrum. I'm not aware of Rock River building or offering a .22cal 1911 pistol but I'm certainly listening if they do.
As to the GSG 1911-22, it's both good & bad. If you want a budget plinker that looks and has the size of a GI 1911, this one fills that role. You can also use many 1911-specific parts with it and a few small boutique accessory makers offer parts specific to this pistol. (GSG does indeed make the Sig branded 1911-22 pistol... as I recall, the Sig is offered with different finish coatings and grips, but is otherwise typically just a GSG 1911-22 with a higher price tag... of course, it should be backed with Sig warranty/service if that matters to you.)
My GSG 1911-22 likes a strong ammo to run reliably all the time these days, but the 5,500 round thrashing that I did to it in the first year I got it was with Federal 550-round 36-grain plated bulk packs before the Sandy Hook massacre deleted rimfire from the market. It's reliability with the cheap bulk ammo was very, very good but I'll make no bones when I also say that the cheap bulk ammo
before Sandy Hook was a higher quality of ammo across the board, and I'll stick to that position regardless of any other opinions.
Ran well, was decently accurate for plinking and the trigger was acceptable for a low-end priced pistol. And my goal was to shoot this sucker to failure within the 2-year offered warranty but the rimfire crisis ended that quest before the gun itself could fail.
The negatives... there are plenty, but NONE are deal breakers if a fun plinker at a low price is your end game. Accuracy cannot possibly match up with many/most classic rimfire pistols made before the age of the "duty pistol trainers" that have only recently shown up in the market. Quite simply, before the cheap M&P, the cheap Sig Mosquito, the cheap Walther P-22 and Ruger SR-22 and others...
almost all rimfire semi-auto pistols had a fixed barrel that was a solid unit and part of the frame (or part of the serialized upper assembly in the case of the excellent Ruger Standard/Mark-series of pistols.)
The GSG 1911-22 has a barrel that is connected to the frame with a cross pin and a hex bolt. When you take this pistol apart for cleaning, expect 20-30 rounds that shoot a noticeably loose group before it settles in and gets a little more consistent. And if you have any expectations that a GSG 1911-22 will hang with a Colt Woodsman, Ruger Mark ___, S&W 41, S&&W 2206/622/422, Browning Buckmark/Challenger, Hi-Standard or any of the classic .22cal pistols, (or any of the Bullseye-capable grade serious conversions like a Marvel or Ciener) then you've set your sights too high because it won't do that.
The finish on the GSG 1911-22 is the epitome of cheap. The slide is zamak and it feels like it. The frame is heavy and solid but there's no reason to expect high quality precision parts inside of it. The sights work well but they are cheaper than you've maybe ever seen. They are plastic and held with a set-screw and I'd be extremely careful with them. Frankly, I wouldn't leave this pistol inside a car in direct sunlight with these sights.
The magazines are extremely heavy and add heft to the pistol, and they are of VERY solid construction, are easy to load and work very well. The magazine disconnect safety is ultra-cheap and clunky and I eliminated mine in the first week, you simply need to source a GI mainspring housing.
These guns are fun and kids would surely enjoy them a lot, but if you were raised on the above mentioned kinds of .22 pistols, the GSG 1911-22 isn't likely to impress you, unless you drop small change on one and it brings smiles on a range day.