I have no experience with the legendary Colt . 45 pistols, but I have been wanting to try one out. Turns out a friend of mine has one and he brought it over to see if I could help him with it. I like the slim feel and I know these are basically good guns with a big punch when they work. This one does not, and it has had less than a box of shells through it since he bought it new.
I have found some disassembly/reassembly instructions on the 'net, so I can handle that part, but I wanted to ask you guys about this problem before I started:
The gun has that goofy (if you are a Glock guy like me) "grip safety" along with the traditional thumb safety. The hammer is currently fully cocked and the trigger will not depress no matter what he or I try (safety off, grip safety fully depressed, magazine inserted/removed, etc. etc. ). It is locked up. This is his "problem" and why he brought it to me hoping I knew something about 1911-style pistols.
I am going to disassemble then reassemble the gun to see what I find. Anything I should try first or watch for? Is this a common problem? Or is there some secret safety device that I cannot figure out?
It is definitely at the other end of the spectrum from a Glock as far as "point and shoot" simplicity, but I can see where it would be ideal for ccw given the slim, compact lines compared to the bulkier Glock. Not to mention the power of the . 45 ACP over even the . 40 S&W.
I have found some disassembly/reassembly instructions on the 'net, so I can handle that part, but I wanted to ask you guys about this problem before I started:
The gun has that goofy (if you are a Glock guy like me) "grip safety" along with the traditional thumb safety. The hammer is currently fully cocked and the trigger will not depress no matter what he or I try (safety off, grip safety fully depressed, magazine inserted/removed, etc. etc. ). It is locked up. This is his "problem" and why he brought it to me hoping I knew something about 1911-style pistols.
I am going to disassemble then reassemble the gun to see what I find. Anything I should try first or watch for? Is this a common problem? Or is there some secret safety device that I cannot figure out?

It is definitely at the other end of the spectrum from a Glock as far as "point and shoot" simplicity, but I can see where it would be ideal for ccw given the slim, compact lines compared to the bulkier Glock. Not to mention the power of the . 45 ACP over even the . 40 S&W.