@That Guy let me know if this is better. I did throw a set of Rogers grips on the Classic.
Saw this at the LGS for a hilariously low price. Had to bring it home.
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Oops. I never answered this. When this pistol was built, the round butt on the 1911 was still a few years in the future. I had already spent some time with two Colt CCOs and two Baer Stingers as well as a handful of Defenders and Officer's ACP models. What I took from those is I preferred the Government Model length frame in terms of how well I shot the pistol. The Bobtail was an attempt to make the longer grip frame more concealable without sacrificing how it shot in my hands. For the most part, it was a success as it eliminates the same point the round butt does. Of course, the round butt is a simpler solution, not requiring the change to the Officer's ACP mainspring. As such, the Bobtail has faded away. But it did well for the time and the pistol is still very usable. The one issue is the magazine well opening is limited by the Bobtail. If you are used to a large magazine opening, the Bobtail is not for you.
The story behind the pistol itself is a weird one. I bought it from a friend who hates front strap traction treatments; he is kinda famous for this in the 1911 world. John had done little to it before it came to me, mostly fitting the grip safety and sights it still wears and doing an action job. The front strap, of course, was unmolested and the pistol was blued. At that time, I could take or leave various traction treatments. That all changed on hot, humid day when I drew the pistol, and it slipped from my hand and ended up in a stream. Once I recovered the pistol and got my daughter to stop laughing at me, I decided it was never happening again (the pistol flying into the stream as I keep doing stuff that makes my daughter laugh) and the front strap was going to be checkered. I decided on 20 lpi as it was the stickiest at the time. Since John was going to be doing the checkering and a refinish was going to be required, I decided to see if it could be made easier to conceal. Hence the Bobtail. At the time, I was also remembering it had been dumped into the stream and decided the finish needed to be better than bluing. John was working on various projects with George Smith at EGW at the time, and that pistol ended up being one of test guns for the EGW version of nitride, E-Treat.
While both the Bobtail and E-Treat have faded away, the pistol itself is a great tool.
Colt Series 80 by John Harrison.
John is a maestro.
Nothing so needs reforming as other people's habits - Mark Twain
Tact is the knack of making a point without making an enemy / Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?