I bought my first handgun it's a federal 1911A1 .45.
Then i asked a friend to buy me 100 rounds of .45 acp, he got me the ones that has "45 auto AP 13" written under them, they're full metal by the way,
IM NEW TO GUNS, so i tried loading the bullet in the chamber it fits well. I can't try them out yet because the range is far from my place and i live in a city i'm going there next week. THE PROBLEM IS THIS: when i tried to fit the bullet through the barrel (bullet's pointed part first into barrel , barrel's end outside the gun) it won't fit and is tight!
I tried doing the same thing with a hollow point and it fit right. Did My friend get me the wrong ammo or this is only normal with FMJs? I really don't understand... I FEAR THESE ROUNDS MIGHT END UP STUCK IN MY BARREL.
Please help me i don't want to look like a complete idiot in the firing range with my friends next week bringing the wrong ammo. Thank you so much and Godbless America!
No offense, but, yours is one of the scariest posts I've read on anybody's internet gun forum in years - Years! Sounds like you're really in, 'over your head', my friend.
Your 1911 appears to be an old, late 60's - early 70's vintage, 'Federal Ordinance' pistol. You might want to have it checked out by a competent 1911 mechanic BEFORE you start shooting it.
If the ammo is marked, 'AP' then, yes, it probably is armor-piercing. (Better you should put it on the shelf as a collector's item; and go out, again, and buy some conventional 45 Auto ammo from Wal-Mart.)
Right now you're toying around with a real gun, and real ammo. THIS is never a smart thing to do. I don't know where to tell you to begin? It's certainly not with trying to squeeze fit bullets into the muzzle, though. I worked with the Boy Scouts of America for years; and during this time I never found a better place to begin firearm training than with the memorization of, 'Cooper Four Rules Of Firearm Safety'. I'll list them for you here:
1. The gun is
ALWAYS loaded!
2. Never allow the muzzle to point at - or, even, so much as sweep across -
ANYTHING you are unwilling to see destroyed!
3. Never put your finger inside the trigger guard until
AFTER you have made a conscious decision to fire!
4.
CLEARLY identify your target, the target's backstop, and what is beyond!
Don’t embellish these rules. They are what they are for good reasons! In order for firearm safety rules to become truly effective they must stop being just rules, and become a
PROFOUND PERSONAL HABITS, instead.
If you want to really learn how to handle that, '45' I'll give you the phone number for NRA Firearms Training; they can put you in touch with any number of local firearms instructors.
http://training.nra.org/ (Bottom of page)
Another good way to familiarize yourself with your new handgun is to attend IDPA orientation and practice sessions.
http://www.idpa.com/ Now how about making an older firearms instructor very happy, and stop fooling around with a deadly weapon about which you know next to nothing. By the way, thanks for having the vision to ask for help! Good luck!