The 1911 market is, to me, amazing. If you had asked me in, say 1979, whether I thought the 1911 would be one of the best-selling guns in the world in 2011, I would have laughed hysterically and said absolutely not. Yet here we are. In any market this large, there are multiple drivers — 1911-based guns continue to own the competition market; the fact that high level law enforcement and the military continue to demand and use 1911s is clearly a factor; Kimber's brilliant marketing strategy, which basically sold 1911s the way a clothing retailer would sell this year's fashion hits, changed the baseline; again, Kimber's relentless selling to their own base market (essentially following Glock's lead on that) made other manufacturers follow suit...the result is a much more manufacturer-centric market than back in the early days of 1911s, where we pretty much didn't distinguish between models since we were having them all rebuilt anyway...it was a Wilson gun or a Swenson gun or a Plaxco gun, built on something or other; NOT a Colt, Springfield or Nornico.
Finally, the gun is damn near perfect, especially in its ergonomics. When I was running the NSSF media program, we used to do a sneaky thing with our students. We'd start them on 9mm Glocks. Halfway through the day we'd shift them to 1911s, and — as if by hand of the occult! — their scores suddenly soared!
Like the 10/22 and the AR platform, 1911s are adult male Barbies, capable of being dressed up any way the customer wants. Look at how much of the Midway USA and Brownell's catalogs are devoted to 1911 parts.
I continue to find the gun fascinating...a good 1911 is more than the sum of its parts. As much as I love cowboy guns, if I just open the safe and pick a gun to go shoot, it will always be a 1911. If indeed Quinn the Eskimo descends from the skies with phasers blazing and I have to run out of my bunker with only one pistol, it'll be a 1911 .45ACP. The 2 guns that mean the most to me in the world, guns that I believe I will take with me to the grave, are my father's 1911A1 Remington Rand and my aging Wilson/Colt 1911 competition gun with its hundreds of thousands of rounds through it. Not many guns inspire those kinds of feelings...
Michael B