I tried three different handloads and three different types of factory ammo for a total of six different loadings before SA worked on the pistol.
When it was shooting bad, the groups were about the same with either of the three shooters or the six different ammo types. What I'm trying to say is groups were the same regardless of ammo or shooter. That is what led me to believe the problem was real and centered on the gun instead of the ammo or shooter.
Now that it's working right, I've had two shooters and two types of ammo. The results were drastically better. Now when one of us shoots a mediocre or bad group, we question how we made an error or jerked the shot.
I don't mind a miss or a bad shot, but I'm not happy when nobody can shoot well with a particular gun (especially a new gun that's "competition ready") regardless of ammo type. I feel like I'm not getting effective practice in that situation. I'm just making noise and wasting primers, powder, bullets, and paper while eroding my confidence.
I like the 1911 style pistol. I like the looks and the feel of it. I just want one that's accurate enough for the types of shooting and plinking that we do. Now that mine's been repaired, I want to work on developing a load for it and working on my shooting technique with it. After reading some of the comments here and talking with various makers of 1911's, I am getting very interested in getting a top quality 1911 (leaning strongly towards a Les Baer based on what I've learned so far)
When it was shooting bad, the groups were about the same with either of the three shooters or the six different ammo types. What I'm trying to say is groups were the same regardless of ammo or shooter. That is what led me to believe the problem was real and centered on the gun instead of the ammo or shooter.
Now that it's working right, I've had two shooters and two types of ammo. The results were drastically better. Now when one of us shoots a mediocre or bad group, we question how we made an error or jerked the shot.
I don't mind a miss or a bad shot, but I'm not happy when nobody can shoot well with a particular gun (especially a new gun that's "competition ready") regardless of ammo type. I feel like I'm not getting effective practice in that situation. I'm just making noise and wasting primers, powder, bullets, and paper while eroding my confidence.
I like the 1911 style pistol. I like the looks and the feel of it. I just want one that's accurate enough for the types of shooting and plinking that we do. Now that mine's been repaired, I want to work on developing a load for it and working on my shooting technique with it. After reading some of the comments here and talking with various makers of 1911's, I am getting very interested in getting a top quality 1911 (leaning strongly towards a Les Baer based on what I've learned so far)
What kind of ammo were you using? A higher grade of ammo, like Federal match 185 gr. SWC will probably produce much tighter groups. Some reloads will produce nice groups. Run-of-the-mill 230 gr. ball ammo usually won't shoot that well out of the best match guns.
As I said back in my orginal post try some different ammo. How can you rate a gun (any gun) with only shooting one kind of ammo (handloads at that)? No desrespect to you or your loading ability which I am sure is fine. Just some guns do better with different ammo.
I have the SA A1 loaded and it's a tack driver, it cost less the Range Officer.
I went round and round with SW over a MP45. I shoot all kinds of factory ammo, hand loaded ammo, different weights, powders. SW put a new barrel in the gun and it was still sending shots all over.I sent if back several times, with targets compared to my other 45's. Their customer service was excellent and went above and beyond but the gun was what is was. Maybe a combat gun but certainly no target gun. I traded it and got a SA XDm 45 that will out shoot the MP any day.