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delta force pistol

Delta Force Pistol - Geo's book, Brothers of the Cloth, a true account of Special Forces soldiers, is now available for pre-order. You can buy it here.

I said that a person in a unit has leeway in the weaponry and battle kit they carry. I have to conclude that I don't know if or how this applies to our secondary weapon, the Browning M-1911 .45 ACP (Colt) pistol. The fact is, I have never in my 10 years in office known anyone or a situation where a person decided they wanted to carry a handgun other than the venerable 1911. I dare you to cancel the idea with the "no rule?"

Delta Force Pistol

Delta Force Pistol

I will tell you that it was very common to use a 1911 weapon that didn't have a cocking bar - such as the Caspian - but to carry a Beretta M9 or Sig Sauer... even though it was a government stock weapon - it just wasn't seen in the Delta . I will go so far as to assert that no conversation on this subject has ever reached my ears.

Delta Police Ask People Leave Their Replica Guns At Home

I digress from the clarification that 1911 is the actual brand name of the unit and its operators. There is no doubt that the 1911 pistol is relatively difficult to control, but there is no doubt about the pulling power. The weapon's reputation - it was even recognized by barrel hits at MARSOC, where it was chosen as the operator's secondary combat arm over the M9 Beretta.

My Delta 1911s were designed to meet grading standards before they were issued. I had optional modifications to my gun, such as a raised magazine and slide release buttons, which were more helpful to operate when wearing Nomex Pilots flight gloves. I had a thumb safety for both hands and a angled magazine that allowed for faster magazine changes. The trigger was no more than two pounds.

Other unit modifications and instructions are best left to nationally recognized pistol/M-1911 expert and former Delta Force operator Larry Allen Vickers for a comprehensive explanation. Larry and I return to the newly formed First Group of Special Forces (Airborne), where Larry, with his extraordinary insight into weaponry, helped the new organization by temporarily serving as the regiment's armorer. In a mutual respectful relationship, we have remained friends to this day.

Throw out what we can say about the weapon: this is an absolute hammer. The hammer was a nickname, along with "gets," that some men used for their M-1911 sidearms. It occurred to me one day that a man could actually drive nails with a gun and that the gun would probably be fine regardless, although this author denies the idea that you need to test this theory with your gun.

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The author shoots an M-1911 in Alaska during his Green Beret years. Note the shockingly weak grip in the left hand!

I can give my testimony about the pistol case, having inadvertently put my 1911 through an impromptu drop test. My hammer jumped high as I climbed to the fifth floor of a five-story building during an urban combat mission. My first (Winchester) ran out of ammo while shooting targets on the roof of a building. I tried to switch to my secondary (the M-1911) but only took a fistful of air and my dry base suddenly became a Louisville hickory slugger that I smashed into the base of my target's neck.

Once the building was secure, I set about finding and retrieving my gath in a mad rush. I found it on the concrete at the base of the building. The extent of the damage was the bulk of the escape. The weapon still worked flawlessly, although the armor was intended to secure the exit, as a broken exit would cause complete and immediate failure when the escapement fell.

Delta Force Pistol

The red arrows indicate the extent of the gun's static discharge - not to be confused with an extractor.

Wilson Combat G17 W/leopold Delta Force

Do not confuse the outlet with the extractor. The extractor grips the bottom of the brass sleeve and pulls it out of the chamber towards the rear of the carrier where the ejector is mounted. The extractor is the moving part that acts on the brass housing. The ejector is the static part that the brass housing acts on to eject it from the upper receiver. Both the extractor and the ejector work simultaneously in an active-passive role to clear the gun of spent brass casings.

It shows where the extractor grips the base of the brass cartridge case, ready to pull it back out of the chamber and toward the static ejector to eject it from the gun.

Yes, although I'm referring to not one, but two (at least?) 1911s that were mistakenly subjected to an impromptu drop test from a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter on the same airstrike mission. It was the venerable strike team of Alpha Saber Squadron that somehow lost control of two aircraft in 1911 when the helo caught fire on landing. Both guns were returned without any damage except to the egos involved with a commemorative cartoon created by yours truly, Squadron Cartoonist.

Okay, I have to admit that the A-Team actually took their target very quickly with the simulation pistols that fire slugs, but they only come with conversion kits for 9mm pistols - no conversion kits for the M-1911. The team placed their pistols in 1911 holsters and caught quick ropes about 60 feet off the ground. The 1911 is a bigger, thicker gun in profile, and the 9mm was loose in shallow holsters. A few guns fell and clattered to the ground.

Pistol Gun 9mm On Wooden Background. Black Metal Weapon, Automatic Handgun For Military And Security On A Vintage Table. Side View Stock Photo

The running joke was that Team A must have been stoned there in the helicopter to lose so many weapons in the same way. I was happy to remember the crew in the cartoon chronicles of the squadron just a piece of fur. All the A-Team bros took the cartoon laugh cure for what it's worth — except for the Grinch. The Grinch immediately wanted to kill me with his bare hands. He was a very mean man.

There's an artist for everything: Many 1911s failed to fire in the sandy atmosphere caused by Blackhawk helicopters during the Battle of the Black Sea in Mogadishu, Somalia in October 1993. The guns jammed so hard in the fine sand that they quickly slipped froze; There were not so many clamps and hammers to move them - they were little more than these masonry bricks.

A 1911 flashlight with an old fashioned flashlight, a full size hand flashlight before miniature firearm lights were made.

Delta Force Pistol

I distinctly remember hearing a report where Delta CSM Thomas S. was trying to engage a Somali militia fighter who (thought) was sneaking up on Tom's battle position. Tom took aim and pulled the trigger. The hammer fell in half and jammed. Tom immediately pulled the hammer back to the full position and pulled the trigger. Again, the hammer is stuck in a half-fall. Tom holstered his gun and raised a fragmentation grenade that destroyed the Somali fighter.

Why America's Most Elite Special Forces Love The Glock

In terms of manpower, the armored unit in Mogadishu showed me the gun of one of our Delta men who had been killed in battle: there was a hole the size of a little finger that went right through the hole, through which you could clearly see the hole. The hole was blown by an RPG that killed the brother.

The culprit RPG actually stands for Ruchnaya Protivotankovaya Grenata, Russian for: "Handheld Anti-Tank Grenade". The acronym RPG lends itself comfortably to the Western language rendering of Rocket Grenade - the Russian language lesson is now complete!

The Browning M-1911 .45 ACP pistol is a true workhorse of delta weapons. Some consider it a status symbol - not for me, but maybe for those whose brains work that way. Instead, I define the 1911 as the best weapon the unit chooses to accomplish the mission as they see it. Regardless of the extra work and effort required to harness the power of the weapon, the unit believes it is worth every effort.

Personally, I don't even own a 1911. I've found that Banzai attacks with human waves are much less common in the urban neighborhood I currently live in here in Albuquerque, New Mexico. For my personal protection, I carry the one and only handgun I have ever purchased - a Glock-17 that I purchased over 25 years ago. In defense of my home, well... the principle of machine firepower is definitely there and the same, though the details are sorely and grotesquely lacking.

How Army Special Forces Pulled A Sneaky To Get Glock Pistols

Pictured above is the author's Glock-17 with a rough checkered grip for long-term purchase, coiled well, weighted magazine butt covers, raised magazine and slide release, and a heavy-duty clip mounted to attach to concealed carry pants - no accessories, tactical ,

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