First off I just want to say to everyone, All my fellow Rangers and those of you I havent had much of a chance to correspond with yet, Hello. Sorry I am not on very much the last few months, I do come on here still all the time and read the forums but I just dont have the chance to reply and follow up on those replies. New job, injury, and family craziness (any free time is spent at the range or sleeping) has kept me from here. I am hopefully going to start making more time to visit with my other family here...
Anyway I have a question for all you gurus and longtime shooters, and maybe the newbies that know more than me, Why and how did the 1911 evolve to a flat mainspring housing? I got to shoot a Springfield GI at the little indoor range that is by my house this last weekend and found it way more comfortable to me cause of the Arched Mainspring than the standard flat. The 1911 seems to me, and many others, a very comfortable, easy (easier) to shoot accurately than many others, but I found the Arched mainspring fill my hand better than the standard (as of the last 15 years) flat, and helps me get back on target quicker.
All other guns, well most poly guns anyway, Glock, XD, M&P, FN FNP, they all have an arched back strap. Even the first pistol that I learned to shoot the Beretta M9 has a simi-arched back-strap. If I shoot my Kimber and then move right to my Glock I will shoot my Glock, high. So I have been thinking if I switch my mainspring out, they would be more similar than the polar opposites that they are now.
What are your thoughts to this? And if you know the reason for the flat mainspring please chime in. I heard Mr. Bane speak briefly on the podcast about this, which was odd cause it was something that I was thinking about.