WildBill wrote:It seems to me that a pistol magazine is a pretty simple piece of equipment - just some sheet metal, a spring and follower. What is it about Tripp or Wilson that make their magazines superior to the OEM versions. I don't mean that they are better because they work, but what is it about the design, materials, workmanship or assembly that makes them more reliable? Have any ideas?
It's mostly that they are
carefully made, by people who are intimately involved in 1911 design, and incorporate a bunch of
small features that add up to a superior magazine. And, they are completely rebuildable with Tripp Research's OEM parts.
Virgil Tripp was involved in a lot of latter day 1911 development. Tripp Research was the developer of the modular 2011 frame now sold by STI. Virgil and his wife Shari renamed Tripp Research as STI. So they are the founders of STI International. Later, it was two friends of the Tripps—Dave and Shirley Skinner—bought STI from the Tripps and started building the company into what it is today. The Tripps reopened Tripp Research, and the rest is history. The name "STI" comes from "Strayer-Tripp, Inc."
Virgil Tripp realized early on that the weakest link in 1911 pistols is usually the magazine, and so he set about to build the very best magazine you can buy. So instead of getting a mass produced magazine that is simply etched with some big company's name, you're getting magazines that are made in small batches, by a true craftsman and master gunsmith. I had to actually wait for them to be manufactured when I ordered them the first time, so I don't think they keep a lot of inventory on hand. But the wait was only a couple of weeks or something like that.
Here's what the magazine looks like (8 rounder, they make other sizes too):
The magazine body is high quality stainless steel, and the witness holes actually line up with the cartridges (unlike some others I've seen). They have a polymer base pad which acts as a bump pad and protection from drops, and a 14 coil .042" spring. It has a hybrid polymer/stainless follower of Tripp's own design which is anti-tilt and self-lubricating:
The 8 rounder with the bump pad costs $36.95, so they are not
cheap, but they aren't outrageous either. I have been very satisfied with mine, and I've purchased them in Government length and Officer's length.
History of Tripp Research:
http://www.trippresearch.com/content/history.html
I've had Wilson Combat magazines fail. I've had Chip McCormick magazines fail. I've never had a Tripp Research magazine fail. I'm sure that there are other manufacturers out there who make good magazines, but I've never had the need to look any further than Tripp Research.
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