- Joined
- Oct 22, 2014
- Messages
- 11,946
Form, going to disagree with you on quite a bit of this. 40k without a cleaning and any maintenance or lubrication and not a single malfunction would be an impressive feat.
Where did I state that the pistol wasn’t lubed?
Even a rank beginner can look at the carbon build up and know without question, that wasn’t from 10,000 rounds.
I would like to see how your round count was tracked. Is this verifiable?
Verifiable to you? No. Tracked as in 40+ 1,000 round ammo cans, yes.
You should believe whatever you want. What any person can see, is that the pistols being shown have far more use on them than most have shot or seen shot. You don’t magically get a near 1/4” of carbon build up by shooting a few boxes of ammo with a wipe down every day.
Even just with ammo variation, you would be likely to have at least a single failure of some kind. FTF, FTE, light primer strike.
Who said anything about ammo variation? Why make things up when you don’t know?
The ammo type is written on the targets.
I do believe the 10k without lubrication but 40k plus is unlikely.
Again- you came up with the idea that the pistol wasn’t lubed.
2011’s need lube, they are not Glocks that generally work fine dry. However, the Staccato C and CS are not 2011’s, and from what I have seen, they handle being dry about as well as any service pistol.
Additionally, do you honestly think the bulk of 1911 and 2011 on the market could do half of that performance consistently?
Why do I care about the bulk of the 1911 and 2011 market? I showed pictures of a Springfield Professional, and a Staccato after people started the talk about them and reliability. The OP asked about the Staccato C or CS- both of those pistols are very reliable, and in a lot of use have proven to be as reliable as most any other legitimate duty pistol. So too the HD.
A handful of P’s-

Here’s another extremely reliable service 1911-

This pistol was used to make GM in USPSA Single Stack- it looks a bit more worn now. That was at about 12,000 ish rounds and had not had a malfunction with WCC or Federal 230gr ball, nor Federal 230gr HST. It’s not a super fan of 185hr SWC with some mags, some mags it’s good.
Previous G17. Probably at around the 40k to 60,000 round mark. It started having trigger failures (modded) at 86,000 +/- rounds that was never able to be remedied. Before that, it had 2, maybe 3 malfunctions in over 80k rounds. It was retired having lived a good life.


This should be a Gen 3, G19 and this would have been around 30,000 rounds-

Please provide what else the thumb safety is for besides drop safety.
Human safety.
Snag safety.
External object safety.
Carless handling safety.
Same as safeties on rifles, carbines, and shotguns.
Thumb safeties on a 1911/2011 have literally nothing to do with drop safety. That is the firing pin and luring pin spring in series 70, and the disconnector in series 80’s.
The overwhelming majority of respectable handgun trainers consider it a major point of failure for users when under stress.
Do they now? Who are the overwhelming majority of respectable handgun trainers? And what makes them respectable? How do you know that they are correct?
I mean…. Hundreds of thousands of competitors, and hundreds of thousands of soldiers are using pistols with manual thumb safeties… and not “dying in da streets”….
But here’s a logical question- how is that the M4/AR15 has no hindrance with a thumb safety, with any modicum of skill people do not “fumble” it or forget it, they are used in extremely stressful situations every single day… and yet, a safety that functions the exact same way on a pistol is just so hard to use…?
Additionally, respectable figures in the gun industry (not hunting, but specifically gun) are consistently against them or at the minimum would not use them unless using a 1911/2011 or single action (TRex arms, Honest Outlaw, Garand Thumb).
Those are your respectable figures?
They, along with others, consistently see shooters in classes draw, point, fail to depress the safety, and are unable to fire. References: Warrior Poet Society, T. Rex, Sage Dynamics, and more.
Again, if YouTube paid content “influencers” with low to mediocre skill levels is where you choose to get your information, that is on you. I choose to get my information from doing, and pallets of ammo.
What data do you have that counters all of their first hand experiences watching shooters fail?
Data? They for the most part do not provide “data”. Nor have I- to be clear. However, I get my information by doing- not being told what happens. For almost 20 years I have averaged between 30,000 and 80,000 pistol rounds a year, worn out multiple Glocks, Sig P226’s, Beretta M9’s, 1911’s (top ends), Sig M18 and M17’s, S&W M&P’s, CZ Shadow 2’s… and probably more I am forgetting. The entire time others were around me doing the same, at similar levels. I do not need to ask Garand Thumb what a Staccato does or does not do.
Beyond that, why is it that so many people wear it like a badge of honor that they are so inept, so scared, and so incompetent with guns? If that is what they really think about their ability- why don’t they just get truly trained so they aren’t bumbling boobs.
While I certainly have not shot 60k through a single pistol, I do shoot often. I have shot a decent selection of handguns. I do actually research. Resulting to insult is generally a sign of a weak argument.
Please quote where insulted you. “Ignorance” isn’t an insult.
However, it is nothing that I pointed out multiple errors in your original post, and instead of acknowledging them- you shift to other things, and talk about “well experts know”.
I called 1911s and 2011s finicky compared to Glocks because they are. You will be hard pressed to find a firearm instructor who would ever recommend 1911s for serious usage (CCW, duty, etc.).
Really? You need to get off the YouTube/instagram gun world and broaden your shooting view. There are a lot of “serious” gun people using 1911 and 2011’s, and they are being carried by more “serious” gun users now than they were 20 years ago.
This is especially true due to the fact that a ton of 1911s people will buy are cheap and poorly made.
What does that have to do with the OP? The OP asked about the C and CS model Staccato’s. They are extremely good pistols.
The average person will not invest in higher end models that can run better. So again, please provide evidence supporting why firearms trainers do not recommend 1911s.
What? Why would I “supply evidence supporting why firearms trainers do not recommend 1911’s”?
Additionally, multiple gun channels have performed all kinds of stress test to pretty much every modern handgun. 2011s/1911s are some of the worst performers when introduced to dirt, sand, dust, mud, water, cold temps, etc.
Sweet baby Jesus…
Poor fundamentals and form will not make someone shoot better with a 1911/2011. If someone is not a good shooter, a lighter trigger won’t make them better. A good shooter will likely improve with the lighter trigger and low muzzle flip. Unless you are implying that the 2011s will mask things such as jerking the trigger in which case I could believe that to some extent.
So you mean that they shoot them better….
1911’s and 2011’ are such an advantage, that action competition bodies had to make pistol divisions specifically to exclude them from competing so people had a place to use polymer striker fired and DA/SA guns. Saying that they aren’t an advantage in hitting things at speed is ridiculous.
However, it is not the trigger (or not the main thing) that makes 1911’s and 2011’s the highest performing pistols made- it is the grip. Especially the 1911.