It’s inevitable that one day I’d compare a Springfield to a Kimber. I did not know it was going to cause me to buy several… although, I suspect I would have anyway.
In January I ordered my first Kimber Stainless II in 10mm. The only real complaints I had were that the slide rails had been bead blasted and every moving part on it was really gritty. Required a complete tear down and meticulous cleaning which took care of most of it but not all. After 50 rounds, you have to oil it because of breaking in those bead blasted slide rails, flush the gunk out.
I had also ordered a Springfield Loaded in 45. It was pretty gritty too but not near as bad as the Kimber was. Fit and finish was pretty good but it was the CA compliant model so the main spring caused all the action to be a little heavier. That was fine. I could fix that swapping the spring and housing out with a standard set. Sat in my safe untouched for a while, unfired.
Shortly after I received the Springfield, I saw the same Kimber Stainless II in 45, so I bought it too. Surprisingly, everything was nice and smooth on it. Like the first 2, fitment was pretty good. I decided I wanted to do a comparison between the Loaded and the Stainless II. Long story short, Kimber had the upper hand across the board.
Some of the comparison was unfair as I said, the Loaded was a CA model. Some of it was justified though. Simple things like radius on the hammer where it roll up under the slide. Trigger was a little smoother. Forward motion of the slide where it contacts the disconnector was smoother. Fitment was a tiny bit tighter. The big one was the Loaded was shooting 6” high at 25 yards.
Long story short, I halted any further comparison and I sent it back to Springfield for warranty work. It’s still with Springfield. It’s only been a couple weeks though. I expect it back in a week or two.
Meantime, Anniversary rolled around and wife wanted to buy me a new gun. Despite the minor flaws with the 10mm Kimber Stainless II, I ordered another. This one was between the other two Kimbers in overall smoothness. It did come with some obvious signs of filing during fitment of the slide to the frame. Even the bead blast finish didn’t hide it. Not horrible but still there. This gun has never been fired yet. Was just received this week. No ammo available to run it. I’ll have to load some.
While I was waiting for that last Kimber, I found another Springfield Loaded. Ended up paying $157 less than the first one. Today, I picked that one up. Also brought the Kimber 45 with me and headed over to the father in law’s.
The new Loaded was tight, like, super tight. I expect after breakin, it should be a solid shooter. We only got to shoot one mag each due to the rain. Not really aiming at anything special just function testing. The Kimber, despite only having just half a box of ammo through it, ram fine. The Springfield had 3 FTF and didn’t lock the slide on the last round. That prompted me to disassemble it and look deeper.
Turns out, there are numbers hand engraved on the bottom of the slide. Those numbers have raised edges, which have to pass right over the disconnector. It’s causing enough drag that the slide doesn’t have enough umph to strip a round about half the time. That’s got to be fixed before it ruins the top of the disconnector. It’s got constant upward pressure on it and those engravings a chewing away at it. I think it may be going back to Springfield as well but the jury is still deliberating on that. I’d like to at least do a quick accuracy test before I call them.
Picture of the stupidness…
View attachment 26934
That area should be pretty smooth given what it does.
It actually pains me a bit to have to write this stuff as I am a big fan of Springfield Armory but these are some pretty big blunders in my book.