You are 100 percent right about how the trigger is far superior on a Series 70 vs Series 80. I am a trigger snob, so both of my Colt 1911's are the solid, short-trigger Series 70. Once you shoot one, you will understand why.
All nice pistols , but that blueing on that 76 ❤️ 👍 and u just saved me a lot of headaches, now I know to buy one from 1976 or older ! Thanks a lot appreciate ur videos so much ! And that bushing I never knew about , u taught me something new thank u
Yes I know they started getting shotty in the late 70s. Usually the general rule of thumb is to look at the size of the roll marks. Larger ones will always look nicer. I do not own the small roll mark gold cup. I borrowed it literally for you to see the difference. They are still nice but just not quite as nice as the older ones
I have a large roll mark Series 70 mounted to a Hardwick-made Essex Arms frame . On the right it just reads "Colt Competition" in small lettering. It came with a collet bushing, but I did some research and heard some scary things about them breaking or that once you take them off you ruin the tension or something as such, and replaced it with a 10-8 performance bushing. I also turned it back to the G.I. guide rod and plug configuration as well because I hated the two piece guide rod when disassembling. I still have the collet bushing as well because now I have a spare part. I will say maybe I was wrong to change it out. I did put a couple hundred rounds through her and nothing happened. I just dont know how old my slide is because it has large roll marks as mentioned, but the finish isn't mirror-like.
Great channel. Can you tell us about the new Colt 1911 pistols? Their website doesn't have much detailed information on them. Are they all forged parts or a combination of forged, cast and mim? Overall fit and finish?
The frame and slides on the new ones are forged. Some internal parts are mim. What folks do not understand is that mim Parts are not always bad. They just hear the word mim and assume it is bad. The quality control and fit and finish to the new Colts are not up to the standard as the old ones are. The blue finish is not even close. They are not bad guns but they are not any better than a Springfield for example and you are paying for the name. I am a die hard Colt guy but they have gone down hill since 40 years ago. I hope this opinion helps. I have several videos on various colts
Interesting & informative comparison vid; thanks! BTW, I bought a NEW (N.O.S.) G.C. - N.M. Mk IV, 70 just last year. It was still in the factory blue-box, wrapped in the factory oily bag, with the trigger tag still attached to the trig guard! But unlike yours, mine has a 3-hole trigger, and rosewood (vs. walnut) grips. Obviously it's never been fired (outside the factory) awesome! 👍 But my point/question is: I thought my pistol (being a series 70) would've had the collet bushing, but it didn't. I was quite surprised by that, so I found a new collet bushing on-line and installed it. I can't say my group improved that much afterwards, but I'll still keep the collet bushing in the pistol as it's my understanding one should have been with it... correct? No 'Colt rattle' in my pistol, so I'm probably pretty lucky with that. So far, I only put 50 rds through it... 🤣
Watch this video. I made it just for you. It explains in depth a few things you questioned. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE--k7hIl3MW9c.html
I own a 45 colt 70 series stain less satin steel that color changes silver to gold depending on sun light,that is limited edition,never been fired original box and it’s a beauty
I've never seen somebody disassemble a Series 70 without pushing the slide back a 1/2 inch to relieve the pressure on the collet before turning the bushing.
@@TerryBenton Thanks for the reply. Were the Gold Cup's all steel and serrated or checkered? I think the one on mine was made by pachmayr. It has a rubber checkered layer. Thanks again for your time.
Nice comparison but not 100% accurate. That 1976 model is a royal blue finish. The other two are just your standard blue. You would have to compare it to a newer Gold Cup or a 1911 Royal Blue Classic they offer now.