Those that are painstakingly assembled with high parts by a competent gunsmith, and those that aren't but still have the high price tag.
Problem is, there is no way to tell without detail stripping it and knowing what to look for.
It's not hard to learn what a good 1911 looks and feels like.
It is hard to learn how to make it that way. (Please please please, may I not screw up...)
"But I got a custom made Wilson Combat, T-Bolt"
Yeah, so? The worst guns in the basic armorers classes I took were Wilson Combats or Gold Cups or Nighthawks.... That multi-kilobuck price tag was no guarantee. I mean it could be good. Could.
January means more gun skool. Building again.
Google is using AI to spy on you without asking for you to opt-in
-
Lawrence has the details. You can turn the damn stuff off. And oh by the
way, they're getting sued over it.
2 hours ago

2 comments:
Korth?
Never seen one of those. In class or otherwise.
Post a Comment