I imagine the Heinie Ledge would look pretty close to this. Especially with the back overhang cut off.
Last edited by Tokarev; 10-16-2019 at 07:43 PM.
Let's try that photo again.
This is a pistol worked over by Jason Burton. He says the rear sight is one he uses on 1911s.
Last edited by Tokarev; 10-17-2019 at 05:34 AM.
Have you been visiting "Louder than Words" ? Man, some great work to view over there.
Here's a Heinie gun from back in the day. I don't believe he's building guns any longer.
I find it interesting that he moved the rear sight forward a bit and recessed the overhang into the slide rather than blending it into the back. I like it.
A pistol with a bobbed hammer and what appears to be the Heinie Ledge rear.
I have admired HP's like forever and sold off all but one. I disliked sights which had a high position on the slide because, for me, they detracted from the pistol's smooth lines. The HP has a super strong hammer spring. Some claim the reason is that this pistol was a European military weapon. Note this. The slide is light weight. The heavy heavy spring assists in retarding slide velocity. Hammer spring weight is the essential element in slowing down slide backward movement. Recoil spring weight is secondary. So be careful when replacing the original hammer spring with a lighter one. Also, consider using standard pressure ammo, not +P.