I picked up a CAI 1911 style .45 last night. This is a GI 1911. I plan to do some considerable upgrades to it. Anyone have suggenstions for drop in parts? Brownwells? Midway?
What about a gunsmith in DFW that can work on the slide? I'm thinkin dovetail some night sights and open up the ejection port some.
Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated. I will probably spend some time over on the 1911 forums too.
I've never done a prject like this, and I'm pretty excited about it.
Project Gun
Moderator: carlson1
Re: Project Gun
Congrats and have fun. Brownells or Midway would be my first choice for parts.
Since AR-15's are "Barbies for Men", my daughter says 1911's are "Barbie - The Classic Edition".

It's truly an addiction.
Since AR-15's are "Barbies for Men", my daughter says 1911's are "Barbie - The Classic Edition".

It's truly an addiction.
Last edited by Lodge2004 on Sat Feb 07, 2009 11:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Project Gun
I think that Brownells has a more extensive selection of tools for this job than does Midway; parts as well - YEMV.
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Re: Project Gun
The biggest problem with a 1911 project is there are so many manufacturer's to choose from :-)
I highly recommend Brownells for both parts and tech support.
I'm no expert, so here are my "opinions":
Note, not all 'drop in' parts are drop-in. And some 'gunsmith only parts' may drop in. For brands, you can't go wrong with Wilson or Ed Brown, but there are a host of other companies that make excellent parts as well. For 1911 hammers and sears I always buy Chip McCormick. Note also, there are some incompatibilities (fortunately not many):
beavertail grips: Wilson & Brown make different beavertails (not drop in) that require filing the back of the frame to fit. Once cut for one style, the other won't work.
barrels: there are 3 'ramp' types:
# original GI, aka non-ramped - where the frame and barrel form the feed ramp
# wilson fully-ramped - requires a GI frame to be machined for this to fit
# clark fully-ramped - requires a GI frame to be machined for this to fit (aka Para ramp)
Most of the bigger barrel makers can supply a barrel with any of the 3 ramp types.
If I were to build a 1911 from parts, this is what I would pick:
barrel - clark/para ramp. BarSto or Storm Lake
hammer/sear - chip McCormick
beavertail - ed brown
magazines - PSI-ACT or Tripp Cobra
sights - EGW or Dawson fibre
sprints - Wolff
all other parts - wilson or ed brown
I highly recommend Brownells for both parts and tech support.
I'm no expert, so here are my "opinions":
Note, not all 'drop in' parts are drop-in. And some 'gunsmith only parts' may drop in. For brands, you can't go wrong with Wilson or Ed Brown, but there are a host of other companies that make excellent parts as well. For 1911 hammers and sears I always buy Chip McCormick. Note also, there are some incompatibilities (fortunately not many):
beavertail grips: Wilson & Brown make different beavertails (not drop in) that require filing the back of the frame to fit. Once cut for one style, the other won't work.
barrels: there are 3 'ramp' types:
# original GI, aka non-ramped - where the frame and barrel form the feed ramp
# wilson fully-ramped - requires a GI frame to be machined for this to fit
# clark fully-ramped - requires a GI frame to be machined for this to fit (aka Para ramp)
Most of the bigger barrel makers can supply a barrel with any of the 3 ramp types.
If I were to build a 1911 from parts, this is what I would pick:
barrel - clark/para ramp. BarSto or Storm Lake
hammer/sear - chip McCormick
beavertail - ed brown
magazines - PSI-ACT or Tripp Cobra
sights - EGW or Dawson fibre
sprints - Wolff
all other parts - wilson or ed brown
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Re: Project Gun
Check these guys out for gunsmithing. I hear they are good people, located in Roanoke.
http://www.advancedgunworks.com/index.php
http://www.advancedgunworks.com/index.php
Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday. John Wayne
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Re: Project Gun
Thanks for all the good tips and suggestions. Great video AndyC. I've never stripped a 1911 down all the way before.
I'm beginning to realize that this project could have a high price tag. I want to make it nice, but I don't want to spend so much that I could have gone and bought a nice Baer... I also don't want to buy top of the line components and add them to a cheap cast frame and slide.
I am definintly learning a lot about the inner workings of the gun.
I'm beginning to realize that this project could have a high price tag. I want to make it nice, but I don't want to spend so much that I could have gone and bought a nice Baer... I also don't want to buy top of the line components and add them to a cheap cast frame and slide.
I am definintly learning a lot about the inner workings of the gun.