SA 1911's
Moderator: carlson1
The SA 1911A1 GI model uses a titanium firing pin with a heavy spring, combined with a standard grip safety and a manual thumb safety. This prevents the weapon from firing because of being dropped on the hammer with the hammer down and the safety disengaged. It actually meets CA specs for a single-action semi-atomatic pistol (I think that's a drop of 11 feet onto a hard surface on the hammer with a round in the chamber and no discharge from the drop).
It also has the integral key-lock in the mainspring housing that can be engaged to disable the weapon even if all of the others safeties are disengaged.
OTOH, it's a 1911A1. It won't "go off" by itself, and if the safeties are engaged, it's one of the safest firearms around - provided that the PRIMARY safety (your grey matter) is engaged when the weapon is armed...
It also has the integral key-lock in the mainspring housing that can be engaged to disable the weapon even if all of the others safeties are disengaged.
OTOH, it's a 1911A1. It won't "go off" by itself, and if the safeties are engaged, it's one of the safest firearms around - provided that the PRIMARY safety (your grey matter) is engaged when the weapon is armed...
Off-topic but also note that, if the key lock offends your sensibilities, the mainspring housing and spring are easily replaced with "regular" ones, totally eliminating the lock. You can find step-by-step instrutions with pictures at one of the 1911 forum web sites. I only mention this in case you are looking at a Springfield and are put off by the lock thing - no need to be.
Retractable claws; the *original* concealed carry