Is Dante’s handguns real? Has a .45 pistol been modified this way in real life?
Is Dante’s handguns real? Has a .45 pistol been modified this way in real life?
Longslide with a competition counterweight.
Longslide 1911s with rails and compensators attached to the rails.
Trigger looks fucked though. 1911s don't have pivot triggers.
Well. Other than the fake and gay da trigger I'd say its entirely possible
I know da 1911s exist but they're retarded so well pretend they dont for their on sake
They need more Power
.45 is easy enough to shoot.
.454 Casull will break your wrist if you're one of those Glass Wrist Joe's.
It's like comparing 9mm non +P to .357SIG
And sure, just look at the D.E. .50
460 e&I replicas when
Every modification is possible and has been done in one form or another. The most pressing variation is the left handed 1911, they are extremely rare.
The pivot trigger seems to be taken straight off a Double Eagle. Unless modified for double action I see no point.
The trigger looks like a pivot trigger but if you look at it closely in the bottom picture, it actually doesn't pivot and isn't even connected to the top in anyway. It pushes straight back
They look strongly based on 1911 pistols, but there's nothing *directly* analogous to them, they are pastiches of different features and ideas from various interpretations and versions of 1911s.
The particularly long slides, with accompanying longer barrels, together the long weights (?) on the frame, finishing in a set of compensators at the muzzle, is nothing that's directly available anywhere, but the concept is very much something you'd see on a dedicated target/sport shooting pistol.
The grip-frames show them bulging outwards, like you would see on a pistol that would take a double-stacked magazine, akin to a Browning Hi-Power, Cz-75, or Smith & Wesson 5906, these aren't features of typical 1911 pistols, as they use single-stack magazines, however there are 1911 style pistols which use such a setup.
Everything about these guns are highly customized and they have some unusual qualities, but they borrow a lot of real features and ideas, and looking at them, I don't see any reason why these pistols couldn't actually be made, if one really wanted to.
Who's talking about .454 Casull or .50AE? Is it even stated what these guns are chambered in? They don't look like they'd be in anything larger than what could fit in a typical .45ACP sized handgun, so they're likely something such as .45ACP, 10mm Auto, .45 Super, or maybe .38 Super, or something.
They're chambered in 45 N.G.
So the gunsmith (Nell Goldstein) made some wildcat round.
From the picture it just looks like 45ACP with maybe a slightly longer case.
.45 Super has identical outer case dimensions to .45ACP, but has a much stronger case web so it can be loaded to FAR higher pressures, I could imagine that it's something similar to that.
The garden variety .45ACP load is the 230gr going 850fps, .45 Super can push that same projectile to 1100fps, and with a lightweight .45 caliber projectile like of 180gr, it goes screaming out of there at 1300fps.
Imagine a slightly longer case like that, with room for more powder still, in some custom 1911-like pistol with a fully supported chamber, putting out a 230gr projectile at almost 1300fps, this hypothetical .45 cartridge fitting snugly between .45 Super and .45 Winchester Magnum
So... 460 rowland, then.
I suppose so.
What is the point of this post
>1911s don't have pivot triggers.
You can convert a 1911 into using a pivot trigger.
That kinda just looks like a pivot trigger jerry rigged onto the frame so it pushes the normal trigger.
Awful
That's more than just a pivot trigger conversion, that's a conversion to turn a 1911 into a DA/SA pistol.
I approve.
why?
Yo, didn't even pay closer attention. I thought is was Hellsing's .454 Casull at a glance. The fault in mistaken identity is my own.
Derp.
Cope, SAO fag.
For that pistol in particular? To give it a double-action.