Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "How To Disassemble and Clean Your 1911" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/how-to-disassemble-and-clean-your-1911/.


That's a good video! I've never used a 1911 with a two-part guide rod before. Why would that be a thing?
The thing that is crazy about that is it is just not hard to disassemble a 1911 with a full length guide rod. I have one in my Ronin and my RO.A two-piece guide rod is easier to disassemble/assemble than a one-piece full-length one.
The military issue M1911A1s I used while in active duty did not require a tool (e.g., bushing wrench) to disassemble.That’s one thing I never really got about the 1911s. Seems they all take some sort of tool to disassemble. I have a Kimber 1911. It’s bushingless, but it takes that forementioned paperclip or something like it to take it down. You’d think after all these years, they’d put out a 1911 that didn’t take a tool to disassemble.
The military issue M1911A1s I used while in active duty did not require a tool (e.g., bushing wrench) to disassemble.
TrueWhen they were as loose as the Government issue you don’t need a bushing wrench.
Good video, should help some folks out, especially those new to 1911’s.
Like an AK, original 1911's were purposely designed that way.That’s one thing I never really got about the 1911s. Seems they all take some sort of tool to disassemble. I have a Kimber 1911. It’s bushingless, but it takes that forementioned paperclip or something like it to take it down. You’d think after all these years, they’d put out a 1911 that didn’t take a tool to disassemble.
i have 1, 1911 with a long guide rod, i cannot recall which one right now.I bought a 1911 once that came with a two piece guide rod. I started to clean it after the first shooting and discovered that the guide rod had come loose and was about half unscrewed.It never went back into the gun.
I hate a full length guide rod. It serves no real purpose. The only thing it does is make the gun harder to field strip. If I get a 1911 that has one, it comes out and gets replaced with the short G.I. style.
The only 1911 I own with a captive recoil spring is an old SA Ultra-Compact. It requires a small plastic piece that fits on the guide rod to field strip. Thankfully, when I asked, SA was kind enough to send me two of them free of charge.
However, the gun is still such a PITA to field strip that a very rarely shoot it.![]()
I wouldn't mind have a two part guide rod for my compact Springfield. Wonder if there is such an animal.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "How To Disassemble and Clean Your 1911" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/how-to-disassemble-and-clean-your-1911/.
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i have 1, 1911 with a long guide rod, i cannot recall which one right now.
i find it easy to remove the spring from the front, then the guide rod comes out like an ordinary one would.
i think my Sig STX has a guide rod that comes in 2 pieces, and yeah, it'll start to come apart, but not fully.
i don't know why they did that.
yup, it does, and it's not a long rod either..
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