Still goes BANG!

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  • Scott Gahimer
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 899

    #1

    Still goes BANG!

    This mid-1943 Colt has seen better days. But she still fires. Ran 50 rounds through it today. From 25 ft., with no sights remaining, it still grouped really well.






    Solutions for M1911 Buyers & Sellers
  • SloopJohnB
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 1395

    #2
    Amazing Scott. From the looks of the outside, one would think the internals were toast.

    Comment

    • Scott Gahimer
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2009
      • 899

      #3
      Don't have any more real information. I bought it at a gun show a few weeks ago, just as a conversation piece. The slide would cycle, so I was pretty sure it would still function. The bore was just about grown shut with corrosion. Started out just driving a wooden dowel through it, chipping away. Then, drove a wad of Big Frontier through it until I thought it was safe (enough) to shoot. Had to use a rubber mallet to drive the mag in and out to begin with. After 50 rounds, it now goes in and out better.

      I used relatively light-loaded lead semi-wadcutters. The feed ramp and chamber are still pretty crusty, so it required some manual assistance most of the time to get it to fully feed and sometimes eject. I think fully loaded ball would have cycled better, but I wanted to use the lighter loads to begin with.

      I don't think the corrosion is due to being submerged. I think it is a dig up, or was simply stored somewhere like an old, damp barn, garage, basement, etc. Internal surfaces are bad, too, but not as bad as the external. I didn't bother to detail strip it. I just field-stripped it, did some cleaning and put it back together. I decided not to replace anything. Plan to leave it just like I got it.

      The thumb safety, MSH, hammer, barrel and stocks are not original to the pistol. Flannery barrel, Ithaca thumb safety and MSH. Hammer? Not enough left to say for sure. Korean War stocks. It did not have a magazine when I got it...probably because one wouldn't go in. One grip screw bushing, 2 grip screws and the stocks were changed after the pistol was recovered IMO.

      I'm confident no one had tried to fire the pistol since it was recovered...until I fired it today. The barrel and mag well were just too over grown with corrosion. I show about 40 photos of the pistol and all the internals on my site, but here are a few.









      Solutions for M1911 Buyers & Sellers

      Comment

      • FLATLOCK
        Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 41

        #4
        Do you have any history on the Colt Scott ? It reminds me of some photos I have seen in the past of crash site recoveries and battlefield finds .

        Comment

        • FLATLOCK
          Member
          • Sep 2009
          • 41

          #5
          Looks like you were answering my question while I was asking it ! Thanks for posting the information and great photos ! Very interesting !

          Comment

          • ignats
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2009
            • 241

            #6
            Wonder what it would look like after Dave had it awhile?

            Comment

            • Richard H Brown Jr
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2010
              • 445

              #7
              You mean AFTER he comes out of a dead faint. and says "Uh, that's gonna take a bit of time and a LOT of money."

              RHB

              Comment

              • westgard
                Senior Member
                • Jan 2010
                • 172

                #8
                you've got guts to shoot that!

                Comment

                • p246
                  Senior Member
                  • Mar 2013
                  • 2216

                  #9
                  Gives new meaning to "that old wore out 1911" does it rattle when u shake it:-)

                  Comment

                  • joem
                    Senior Member, Deceased
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 11835

                    #10
                    That's pretty cool. I hope you got it for a good price.

                    Comment

                    • Duane Hansen
                      Senior Member
                      • Sep 2009
                      • 992

                      #11
                      Nice Scott, Looks just like the old US&S pistol that John Holbrook has. John got his to shoot too. I notice the Colt is in the US&S serial number range too. John's was found in the wall of an old barn that was being demolished. It was put there when a GI brought it home from WWII. So, 60 plus years in a damp old barn will leave them looking just like your Colt.

                      One more interesting thing. When they get this bad, it is almost impossible to stop the continued deterioration.
                      Last edited by Duane Hansen; 06-15-2013, 08:27.

                      Comment

                      • LAH
                        Senior Member
                        • Aug 2011
                        • 238

                        #12
                        sorta like mine...1103459


                        but it don't go bang anymore.

                        Comment

                        • FinLaw
                          Junior Member
                          • Jun 2013
                          • 12

                          #13
                          Those have no collector value.

                          Comment

                          • Johnny P
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 6260

                            #14
                            Originally posted by FinLaw
                            Those have no collector value.
                            Those are very valuable to the collectors that like their pistol to show some history and character. No safe queens for them.

                            Comment

                            • Duane Hansen
                              Senior Member
                              • Sep 2009
                              • 992

                              #15
                              Originally posted by FinLaw
                              Those have no collector value.
                              Was that a question or a declarative statement?

                              Comment

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