This .22 rimfire 1911 that I did for a friend a few years back has been…. well, a pain. It just never worked. The floating chamber would lead-up in 5-8 rounds rendering the gun inoperable. We talked about it and Fil said he’d work with it on ammo selection, etc. I could not bring myself to believe that none of them ever worked and yet—there was nothing really evidently wrong with this one, although it was the only one I’d ever worked with. I thought the jump from the floating chamber to the barrel should have a revolver-like forcing cone, but it didn’t…. still I thought, it’s a Colt, they’ve made these by the train load and as far as I know they don’t have a rep for not working. We’re missing something.
Recently, a few years later, I visited Fil and the gun and…. it was still not working. I took it back and looked it over. I gave it that forcing cone—I went 4 degrees to .228 diameter, then 1 degree leade.
Halelujah, it works! First sixty rounds and no leading, cycle is brisker and lockback with six different loads is positive (it was intended and touted to recoil like a .45).
.22 bbl with floating chamber. In battery, it is forward. Upon firing, the rear piece becomes, essentially, a gas piston and cycles the slide positively even though it is not lighter than a standard .45 slide.
Floating chamber detail.
