After my ammunition issues and subsequent damage (currently minor but subject to further deterioration) to my Springfield Armoury 1911 .45 ACP, I decided that it was time to start investing in a new competition pistol (my Springfield was bought second hand in early 2015 and I have put over 3,000 rounds per year through it, so it was only a matter of time before it needed replacing).
I needed a 1911 platform to shoot IPSC Classic (single stack) Division and wanted a .45, as I prefer it to the 9mm (I do have a Kimber Stainless II 9mm that I continue to tinker with in an effort to get the accuracy I obtain from my .45). A look at what was available locally was not promising.
Apart from pistols selling for over NZ$3,500 (out of the question for my budget) there was a dearth of .45 1911's available (the memory of those three Taurus PT 1911's I saw in Paul's Pistols and Pawn that day in Huntsville AL all for US$499 haunted me). The closest I could find was a second hand Ruger 1911 for NZ$1700.
Then I found an importer/retailer with a Tanfoglio Witness 1911 .45 Custom for just NZ$1400. Although I prefer stainless I was happy to get a blue steel gun at this price, and the advertised wood grips are one thing I have always desired for a 1911 (not for this gun though). This importer is a supplier to my LGS so I called in and enquired about getting one.
Ten days later (two weekends caused a delay in the necessary paperwork) and it arrived. At first look the wood grips looked plastic, but that turned out just to be the finish. When removed from the grip frame they are definitely wood. And my LGS owner told me that he could have sold it already to a shooter from around 2 hours away who called in while passing that morning looking for a 1911 .45!
With adjustable sights (something the second hand Ruger lacked), extended slide release and ambi safety I saved several hundred dollars on competition upgrades right there. The trigger is crisp, if a little heavy for competition work (about 5 1/2 Ib), and the trigger reset was easily adjusted in less than 5 minutes with the allen key supplied in the box.
In my parts box were the disconnector and sear from my Norinco Ranger, which I had replaced in late 2017 with polished EGW parts, so I set about giving them a polish up and reinstalling them back in the Ranger along with the original mainspring. The result is not quite as good as those EGW parts but very nice for the intended use of this gun. The EGW parts, along with a matching polished hammer (the Ranger is built like a Chinese tank and I just couldn't get the EGW hammer to work with the Rangers' safeties) and the 17 Ib mainspring, will be installed in the Tanfoglio in the coming days.
Those wooden grips are also destined for the Ranger, which will now be relegated to Wild Bunch duty only (my SA can fill in as a backup competition gun). The Tanfoglio will be fitted with a set of Double Alpha grips (I just love the feel and have them on both my main competition 1911's) as well as a blued magwell in the coming weeks. And I am looking to import several EGW thick/angled bushings (my SA has a bull barrel/bushingless set up and I am convinced that is why I get such good accuracy from it
so want to see if these bushing make any difference). I am still tossing up putting the SA bull barrel into the Tanfoglio, as the SA barrel is still in very good condition. One advantage of doing so is I will also be able to swap over the recoil reducing spring system as well.
One issue I had initially. That right side safety has a small tab on the front that slides in a slot on the extended sear pin. All of my experiences with ambi safeties is with those where you remove the right side first and then take out the left safety to remove the grip tang. Some unproductive time on YouTube (couldn't find a video where they stripped beyond the slide although a heap of 1911 air pistol videos) and a little bit of very gentle tugging on the left side safety and I worked out the procedure on this pistol is reversed from the one I'm used to.
I am shooting minor PF in my next two competitions (January and February 2019). With luck this pistol will be ready for the March competition (which I am match director of
). If not there is at least one more comp left in the Springfield (once I get the slide rail straightened) and the March event is major PF friendly.
It is a project that is still continuing.
I needed a 1911 platform to shoot IPSC Classic (single stack) Division and wanted a .45, as I prefer it to the 9mm (I do have a Kimber Stainless II 9mm that I continue to tinker with in an effort to get the accuracy I obtain from my .45). A look at what was available locally was not promising.
Apart from pistols selling for over NZ$3,500 (out of the question for my budget) there was a dearth of .45 1911's available (the memory of those three Taurus PT 1911's I saw in Paul's Pistols and Pawn that day in Huntsville AL all for US$499 haunted me). The closest I could find was a second hand Ruger 1911 for NZ$1700.
Then I found an importer/retailer with a Tanfoglio Witness 1911 .45 Custom for just NZ$1400. Although I prefer stainless I was happy to get a blue steel gun at this price, and the advertised wood grips are one thing I have always desired for a 1911 (not for this gun though). This importer is a supplier to my LGS so I called in and enquired about getting one.
Ten days later (two weekends caused a delay in the necessary paperwork) and it arrived. At first look the wood grips looked plastic, but that turned out just to be the finish. When removed from the grip frame they are definitely wood. And my LGS owner told me that he could have sold it already to a shooter from around 2 hours away who called in while passing that morning looking for a 1911 .45!
With adjustable sights (something the second hand Ruger lacked), extended slide release and ambi safety I saved several hundred dollars on competition upgrades right there. The trigger is crisp, if a little heavy for competition work (about 5 1/2 Ib), and the trigger reset was easily adjusted in less than 5 minutes with the allen key supplied in the box.
In my parts box were the disconnector and sear from my Norinco Ranger, which I had replaced in late 2017 with polished EGW parts, so I set about giving them a polish up and reinstalling them back in the Ranger along with the original mainspring. The result is not quite as good as those EGW parts but very nice for the intended use of this gun. The EGW parts, along with a matching polished hammer (the Ranger is built like a Chinese tank and I just couldn't get the EGW hammer to work with the Rangers' safeties) and the 17 Ib mainspring, will be installed in the Tanfoglio in the coming days.
Those wooden grips are also destined for the Ranger, which will now be relegated to Wild Bunch duty only (my SA can fill in as a backup competition gun). The Tanfoglio will be fitted with a set of Double Alpha grips (I just love the feel and have them on both my main competition 1911's) as well as a blued magwell in the coming weeks. And I am looking to import several EGW thick/angled bushings (my SA has a bull barrel/bushingless set up and I am convinced that is why I get such good accuracy from it

One issue I had initially. That right side safety has a small tab on the front that slides in a slot on the extended sear pin. All of my experiences with ambi safeties is with those where you remove the right side first and then take out the left safety to remove the grip tang. Some unproductive time on YouTube (couldn't find a video where they stripped beyond the slide although a heap of 1911 air pistol videos) and a little bit of very gentle tugging on the left side safety and I worked out the procedure on this pistol is reversed from the one I'm used to.
I am shooting minor PF in my next two competitions (January and February 2019). With luck this pistol will be ready for the March competition (which I am match director of

It is a project that is still continuing.