Is This A Better 1911?

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июн 2024
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    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yes, this channel is created and managed by Hickok45 and John, mainly John. The video clips on this channel are segments of videos taken from videos originally posted on the Hickok45 RUclips channel. John always includes a link to the original video from which the clip is taken.
    Hickok45 videos are filmed on my own private shooting range and property by trained professionals for educational and entertainment purposes only, with emphasis on firearms safety and responsible gun ownership. We are NOT in the business of selling firearms or performing modifications on them. Do not attempt to copy at home anything you see in our videos. Firearms can be extremely dangerous if not used safely.

Комментарии • 223

  • @fredshebester-wg4vb
    @fredshebester-wg4vb 26 дней назад +67

    The man was a genius! Thank you, Mr. Browning for giving me years of shooting joy.

  • @tpelle2
    @tpelle2 22 дня назад +45

    John Browning's was actually working under contract to FN, and his main contribution to the Hi-Power was the trigger mechanism, including the magazine disconnect as called for in the French Army specification. Browning's design was a single-stack magazine holding 10 rounds, and it was hammerless and striker-fired! Dieudonne Saive was the actual project leader for the HI Power. The double-stack magazine was his design.
    The double-stack mag was actually a serious point of contention between Saive and Browning. Browning maintained that Saive's design would never work. Saive actually took a pistol of Browning's design being built under license by FN (It was either a .32 ACP or .380 ACP blowback pistol), cut the grip and mag well up, welded new pieces on to widen it in order to get it to work with his own double-stack magazine design, and shipped it to Browning in Utah, for Browning to test. Browning then conceded that he was wrong, and Saive's design for the double-stack magazine was sound. The innovation that Saive made to the double-stack magazine was to make the top part of the magazine tapered the way they are all commonly made today.
    After Browning's death (He actually suffered a fatal heart attack in his shop at FN when working on the Hi Power project.) Saive further modified Browning's trigger mechanism to use a conventional hammer and "normal" firing pin instead of a striker.
    Just think. If not for Browning's death and Saive's redesign, we would have had a high capacity 9mm striker-fired pistol in 1935. Take that, Glock.

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 21 день назад +4

      good info i’ve never heard of the French man. Yea I’m a big fan of Browning not so much Glock.

    • @tpelle2
      @tpelle2 20 дней назад +7

      @@craigthescott5074 If "French man" refers to Dieudonne Saive, he was not French. He was Belgian. French was, and still is, one of the three official languages spoken in Belgium still today.
      It was a kind of personality quirk of Browning's that he concentrated purely on the design of his gun, and didn't want to have anything to do with manufacturing. If you study Mr. Browning you will see a pattern that he actually hand built all of the prototypes of his designs, he then marketed them to a particular manufacturer such as Colt or Winchester or FN, but then it was up to them to figure out how they were going to make it. (Browning could actually make parts by hand that were impossible or uneconomical to make on the machinery of the day.)
      At one point Browning had licensed FN to manufacture a small blowback pistol. Dieudonne Saive was a new hire in FN’s production engineering department at the time, and was assigned the task to figure out how to make this pistol. After I studying the hand made prototype, he determined that if he slightly modified Browning's design it could then be manufactured economically, so he modified the design. Subsequently Browning himself visited FN for discussions on future work. He asked if they had that new blowback pistol in production, and they retrieved one off of the production line to show to Browning. Browning immediately picked out Saive's modifications, and asked to speak to the man who did this - Browning seemed to be offended. After Saive related his reasons for making the changes, Browning approved of them. From that point on, Browning and Saive developed a good working relationship.
      Later in his career, after WWII, Saive went on to design the FN FAL rifle. There are similarities in the way the bolt locks up on it that are lifted right out of the Hi Power.

    • @LaughingMan44
      @LaughingMan44 20 дней назад +4

      @@tpelle2 Interesting, sounds like Saive doesn't get the credit he deserves

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 20 дней назад +1

      @@tpelle2 Awsome History thank you. I actually love FN products also. I own a class three copy of the FN FAL made by Springfield Armory called the SAR 48. I also love the new weapons made by FN, I personally think they may be better than HK which I also collect.

    • @edwardsallow6518
      @edwardsallow6518 20 дней назад +1

      @@tpelle2 Belgium isn’t really a nation though it’s just two pieces of France and the Netherlands smashed together and referred to as one , there’s even two smaller parts of it that are German in language and ethnicity

  • @tanker335
    @tanker335 26 дней назад +78

    I still remember the serial number to my 1911 I was issued back in the 80's. 117689. So if anyone runs across it, give me a holler!

    • @FishKepr
      @FishKepr 26 дней назад +5

      Did you ever reach out to the CMP or post that on their 1911 forum?

    • @tanker335
      @tanker335 26 дней назад +10

      @@FishKepr I wasn't aware such a thing existed. I assume it's probably part of a Toyota exhaust system by now.

    • @tanker335
      @tanker335 26 дней назад

      @@wyomarine6341 We had to sign out our weapons from the company arms room and writing down the serial number was step one followed by your name, rank etc. It was the only weapon issued to me besides crew served weapons like the 240's and M-2. I didn't touch an M-16 until probably my third year in and that was only because we used them occasionally at a mini tank range as a stand in for the main gun.

    • @FishKepr
      @FishKepr 26 дней назад +8

      @@tanker335 To be fair don’t get your hopes up. Lots of former soldiers have sent serial numbers to the CMP and I only know of one case where the managed to track down a dispositioned 1911. To their credit they traced who they sold it to and asked the recipient to transfer it to him. They sent another 1911 to the first buyer as a replacement. This was a few years ago. I got mine in the first round of this release, a 1943 Remington Rand with a matching slide.

    • @tanker335
      @tanker335 25 дней назад +3

      @@FishKepr I'm not literally looking for it.

  • @ladonnaghareeb4609
    @ladonnaghareeb4609 26 дней назад +30

    My husband owns both. He's known to carry the HiPower IWB and loves it. He's small framed and still conceals it. Has thin grips and extender thumb safety. It's his Farorite 9mm. His 1911 is 45 of course lol. God Bless John Browning!

  • @VivereLiberumSeuMori
    @VivereLiberumSeuMori 25 дней назад +14

    The Browning Hi-Power is the first 9mm I ever fired as a kid. My Dad still has it and its just an absolute masterpiece of a weapon. John Browning was an amazing man

  • @stalwart263
    @stalwart263 20 дней назад +10

    I carried the Hi Power for years in the British Army. Excellent gun!

  • @robertbenson9797
    @robertbenson9797 26 дней назад +16

    Excellent video about two of the most iconic handguns, ever.
    One interesting fact about the P-35 Hi-Power, it was used by BOTH Allies and Axis forces in WWII.
    Shortly before the start of the war, FN Herstal in Belgium , signed a licensing agreement with the Inglis Company in Canada. After Nazi forces occupied Belgium, Inglis was producing the Hi-Power for Commonwealth countries (mostly Canada).
    John Browning was truly a firearm genius. Thank you for showing two of his best!

    • @russellweber3466
      @russellweber3466 23 дня назад

      There were no nazi's in ww2, members of the NSDAP never referred to themselves as that slur, nor do tea party members refer to themselves as tea baggers nor do Catholics in the Latin rite refer to themselves as papists, but guess what tribe of (goblins) came up with those slurs.

  • @user-tr3py5nz2j
    @user-tr3py5nz2j 26 дней назад +16

    I loved both those firearms when I was in the US Army back in the 70’s. The .45, of course, was the official pistol I carried for most purposes. Loved its beefiness in my hands. Almost felt like a toy to me whereas many other guys complained it was too heavy, too large and too much recoil. The HP came into my possession when I was in Nam. I bought it from a guy who was returning stateside. I wasn’t “officially” authorized to carry a sidearm, but I felt naked without some weapon other than a fighting knife. Anyway, I had the High Power through my tour and loved it with its greater magazine capacity and its “heft.” I had to turn it in when I left Nam as it was actually an Australian weapon. I tried to bring it home legally, but I couldn’t get the right paperwork for it. I could have tried smuggling it out in my baggage, but if I was caught, my military time would have been “unpleasant “ with a court martial on my record. Too many guys got court martialed trying to smuggle stuff out of Nam in their baggage, like weapons, explosives, and drugs, and I did not want to take that chance to end up in Long Bihn Jail or Ft. Leavenworth. But, in the long run, it didn’t matter. I eventually bought a sweet S&W 9mm. that fit my hand perfectly. Thanks for this video. It brought back a few nice memories. If I were a younger man, I might see about buying one of each of these handguns for the pleasant memories I have of them. Browning did do a fine job designing these pieces.

    • @alertgasper
      @alertgasper 25 дней назад +3

      smuggling home the "liberated" goods was a habit from WW2 that extended thru Korea, but you're correct about getting caught. Even with the GCA'68, it wasn't worth losing an HDC in hindsight. Plenty of grandfathered guns still floating around.

    • @jimeckenrode1271
      @jimeckenrode1271 25 дней назад +3

      Thank you for your service

  • @Jaxon1776
    @Jaxon1776 26 дней назад +20

    I have one High Power made in Belgium. That's all I need. I have 1911's from Colt, Springfield, Kimber, Dan Wesson and Wilson Combat. My favorite is my plain Jane Colt 1911A1 with a spur hammer and short series 70 trigger. I just love the classic looks of the gun carried in WWII. Proud Fudd.

  • @kicker7872
    @kicker7872 26 дней назад +12

    I used the HP35 in the British Army I loved that pistol!

  • @craigthescott5074
    @craigthescott5074 21 день назад +3

    I own and have owned many 1911’s and i’m John Moses Browning’s biggest fan. But i’ve never owned a Browning High Power. Rumor is he liked his High Power more than his 1911 design. One thing is not rumor John Browning is the Einstein of gun designers.

  • @bobbressi5414
    @bobbressi5414 26 дней назад +7

    Having owned both it is hard to pick a favorite. They are both excellent weapons. I suppose the HP gets the edge due to its capacity and an integral feed ramp on the barrel. Still I am a fan of the older design as well

  • @MikeSiemens88
    @MikeSiemens88 25 дней назад +3

    On my 2nd posting to Germany during the Cold War with Canadian Forces I was issued a High Power. Ours were license manufactured by Inglis Canada. They've been only recently replaced as the standard handgun of the CF.

  • @peteengard9966
    @peteengard9966 26 дней назад +6

    The 1911 I was issued in the early 80s was a little worn out. The top slide was so worn it didn't lock back but it could hit the targets out to 100 yards like no tomorrow. Fantastic weapon. My neighbor had a Belgian made high power that was a joy to shoot.

  • @chavitacanta008
    @chavitacanta008 26 дней назад +4

    Can you imagine a duell with Hickok ? 1911’s at at two hundred paces !

  • @dslewis01
    @dslewis01 26 дней назад +5

    The High Power is an absolutely beautiful pistol; the ergonomics are spot-on, IMHO.

  • @w.gordonfocht9671
    @w.gordonfocht9671 26 дней назад +9

    '' I'm not likely to mix up the parts... i have a little bit of experience w/ these"'... under-statement of the wk.. LOL.

  • @henryrodgers1752
    @henryrodgers1752 26 дней назад +16

    Not going to talk about the 1911 trigger vs. the Hi-Power trigger in a short video, I suppose. That’s the real difference which makes the 1911 a marksman’s pistol.

    • @samanthamalikov7157
      @samanthamalikov7157 25 дней назад +4

      The Hi-Power is better in every way.

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 21 день назад +1

      ⁠@@samanthamalikov7157not really the 9mm was inferior to the 45 back then, bullet technology wasn’t what it is now. The 1911’s trigger is a masterpiece in its own right. Let’s put it this way there’s at least 20 manufacturers making 1911’s and. 2011’s. Very few make the High Power. And nobody shoots competition with high powers many use the 1911 and 2011’s.

    • @Mitsurifan357
      @Mitsurifan357 17 дней назад

      @@craigthescott5074hi power is a cheaper more compact 2011. It just never had a following in the states. Wait until you tell a 2011 user they could’ve spent $500 on a hi power instead of 2,000 on an overpriced 2011. Watch their heads explode lol

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 17 дней назад +1

      @@Mitsurifan357 Actually a really good competition 2011 is more like $3500 and up. Don’t get me wrong I love everything made by the master John Browning but the high power doesn’t hold a candle to the 1911 much less a 2011. Also what makes a 1911 and 2011 great for competition is the trigger the gun can be shot very fast and very precise. The high power trigger just isn’t close.

  • @AlejandroBraga-hl1oo
    @AlejandroBraga-hl1oo 26 дней назад +13

    One of the best of all time

  • @rodolforivero7282
    @rodolforivero7282 20 дней назад +3

    Sr. SAIVE, ud fué un gran armero.
    Pero si se recibe una opinión de un genio como Browning, quiere decir que le prestaba atención y confianza en su trabajo.
    Volviendo a estas dos pistolas, y después de haber usado a las dos en servicio policial, digo con firmeza total, que con cualquiera de las 2 y a mis 73 años, que no pregunto cuantos son, sino que vayan saliendo.
    Dos obras de arte. Cada una con su estilo dieron por años seguridad, confiabilidad, precisión, fortaleza, y son armas de combate.
    No esos "arbolitos de Navidad" llenas de firuletes que poco suman si van a ser para armas de servicio militar/policial.
    Sr. John M. Browning ud y Don Gaston Glock cambiaron la historia de las pistolas.
    Ruger el de los revólveres...❤

  • @richardaustinaustin1890
    @richardaustinaustin1890 26 дней назад +6

    I know next to nothing about firearms, apart from what I have “learned “ from the likes of this channel. Living in the U.K., it’s probably going to stay that way, but these are two of my favourites. To me, they are the iconic handguns. Thank you sir

    • @PalKrammer
      @PalKrammer 25 дней назад +1

      Are you alowed to own and shoot an Enfield rifle? Those are loved by many. Though I'll say the Enfield models and variations seem more confusing than Mercedes Benz model numbers.

    • @howardadams9103
      @howardadams9103 9 дней назад +1

      Yes in the UK, Bolt action rifles are still legal on a firearms certificate

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke 26 дней назад +3

    How can a true Browning follower not have *AT LEAST* one of each?!? Thanks for sharing, Hickok45!

  • @tonyb3864
    @tonyb3864 26 дней назад +5

    Both are masterpieces of engineering. John M. Browning was a genius. I prefer the 1911 in the Lord's caliber. I noticed you smelling the Gunsmoke. I love the smell of smokeless powder too. It smells like freedom. 🇺🇲❤️

  • @dobermanpac1064
    @dobermanpac1064 26 дней назад +9

    Boy you guys are slacking…no table cover 😂

  • @Maurice895
    @Maurice895 26 дней назад +6

    I used to have an Hi Power clone by FEG.

  • @dongarnier5890
    @dongarnier5890 23 дня назад +1

    Being Canadian, and newly back into shooting sports, I was lucky to obtain both a Remington Rand 1911 A1 and a HiPower from 1965(by the serial number), before the handgun freeze. The 1911 was a collector piece stored in oil, so it took some time to clean it up properly to attempt to fire it. It shoots flawlessly! The HiPower is so nice, I haven't fired it yet as I need time to sit down and familiarize myself with it. Beautiful firearm, but not so sure I like the short sticky thumb safety or the magazine disconnect safety. I like the feel and the workings of the 1911. Everything seems "just right".

  • @frankmartin8471
    @frankmartin8471 22 дня назад +2

    I'm fortunate enough to have both of these, the 1911 in .38 Super, so it's kind of extra special. The Hi-Power is a 1972 model that was fired so little that the blue isn't even worn off the firing pin. It's immaculate. John Moses Browning had a beautiful mind, and his firearms are works of art.

  • @coaltrain4423
    @coaltrain4423 21 день назад

    I can remember Hickok45’s first video.I was hooked.I won’t say that I have seen all of his videos,but I haven’t missed but a few. I try to keep up with him though.I’m sure he’s like family with everyone here,there’s nobody else that comes close to making videos like him. He’s taught a lot of folks how to be better marksmen,and just a whole lot about firearms period.We all love him and John.

  • @remaguire
    @remaguire 26 дней назад +23

    My Lord, Hickok! Those pistols look like toys in your hands!!!

    • @jeffpierce3436
      @jeffpierce3436 26 дней назад

      I was thinking the same thing! 😂

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack 26 дней назад

      ...seems normal to me.....of course I am 6' 6"...

    • @timkeller0000
      @timkeller0000 26 дней назад

      Came here to say this! Saw that in my feed and thought they looked like child versions

    • @kawikadee9670
      @kawikadee9670 26 дней назад

      I guess when you have catcher's mitts hands it's like that.

    • @martinswiney2192
      @martinswiney2192 26 дней назад

      They are toys. Really loud toys. Plus you could put somebodies eye out with em. 🇺🇸’Merica.

  • @Snuffy03
    @Snuffy03 21 день назад +1

    John Browning thought his P35 to be the apex of his handgun designs, wherein he corrected what he thought were shortcomings in the 1911. Notice he left off the grip safety, which he only added to the 1911 at the Army's insistance.

  • @muckiderhase157
    @muckiderhase157 26 дней назад +3

    The FN definitive was an improvement in every way.

  • @dillonc7955
    @dillonc7955 26 дней назад +3

    The standard Hi Power would almost beat the M1911 if it weren't for 1 kicker: the magazine disconnect. Having your pistol be rendered useless without the magazine limits what you can do in terms of dry firing and function checking. Once you have this removed, your HP is a lot more usable and feels like the trigger isn't as heavy post removal too.

  • @richardlahan7068
    @richardlahan7068 26 дней назад +2

    I have both. They are both great pistols.

  • @jimeckenrode1271
    @jimeckenrode1271 25 дней назад +2

    I would pick the Browning Hi Power as the very best handgun ever made.

  • @johnhayes8520
    @johnhayes8520 25 дней назад +1

    Carried a 1911 in the U.S. Army from 1984-1987, always enjoyed it in my hands.

  • @TocGan
    @TocGan 26 дней назад +2

    HP35 is an amazing handgun... 13 rounds in the 30's was a big thing... US didn't like 9mm and prefered .45acp... big deal... others countries think diferent... I prefered a 13 rounds in 9mm than a 7 rounds in .45... but against the 8 rounds Luger or 10 rounds P38... I probably pick the .45...

  • @stickfighter1038
    @stickfighter1038 18 дней назад +1

    A fan of both the 1911 and High Power designs. The magazine disconnect was my main complaint with the High Power.

  • @ms.annthrope415
    @ms.annthrope415 25 дней назад +1

    Thr Browining trigger system were designed to go around Colt's patent of the sliding stirrup trigger. Now that Colts patent has expired, if someone would redesign the BHP but using the stirrupt sliding trigger, eliminating the complex linkage to tril thr sewr, it would be a ground breaking improvement to thr BHP.

  • @JohnDoesItAll
    @JohnDoesItAll 22 дня назад +1

    I love both but I have to say, I can hit anything with my eyes closed when I've got the high power; just can't miss. ❤

  • @The_Disgruntled_Operator
    @The_Disgruntled_Operator 26 дней назад +1

    Owned a FEG import Hi-Power years ago. Super gun, felt great and shot flat. I wish I had it back.

  • @billsmith7255
    @billsmith7255 26 дней назад +2

    In 1968 I carried one of those in Vietnam, was a colt 45. I could be mistaken!

  • @wlewisiii
    @wlewisiii 26 дней назад +1

    CZ took it and made it better still in 1975. IWI then improved it still further as the Jericho. That's what I carry. Simply the latest grandchild.

  • @silverjohn6037
    @silverjohn6037 25 дней назад

    John Browning. Started working in his father's gun shop when they were still making muzzle loaders. First gun design he sold to Winchester was a single shot cartridge rifle. Before he was done he'd made several of the most iconic weapons of the 19th and 20th century and a few that are still in front line military service nearly a hundred years after his death.

  • @stephenrobbins6353
    @stephenrobbins6353 26 дней назад +3

    Main problem with the hipower is it's magazine disconnect

    • @rriflemann308
      @rriflemann308 25 дней назад +2

      FN designed the magazine safely as a optional feature, if you don’t want the feature you (or a gunsmith) can remove it in seconds, and this makes absolutely no compromises to the safety of the weapon. (Additional the trigger pull immediately improves) 6:58 6:58

  • @user-kn4rf2ly3q
    @user-kn4rf2ly3q 26 дней назад +1

    Great video, thanks

  • @martinbarba7689
    @martinbarba7689 22 дня назад +1

    The spanish STAR and the argentine Ballester Molina were copies of the 1911 without the grip safety. Life is good

    • @winkeemanley1820
      @winkeemanley1820 20 дней назад +1

      The Spanish Llama in .45ACP is based on the 1911 Colt 45

  • @ironmikehallowween
    @ironmikehallowween 26 дней назад

    They are both superb. Thanks for the video

  • @edl617
    @edl617 25 дней назад +1

    I love both. My cousin was able to carry a high power in Vietnam.

  • @c0ckyclown
    @c0ckyclown 26 дней назад +1

    These are classics!

  • @joerobo682
    @joerobo682 20 дней назад +1

    these are my two favorite pistols.

  • @DavidHBurkart
    @DavidHBurkart 26 дней назад +1

    This video illustrates how, of most semi-automatic pistols in use today, the lineage of John Browning is evident. Just take your own apart like Hickock did and see for yourself. Gaston Glock certainly changed the semi-auto game, but if you can take apart a Glock, you can take apart the Hi-Power that preceded it by nearly eight decades.
    Sadly, the Belgium Browning Hi-Power I purchased in the early 1990s was traded for another firearm of which I now can't even remember, most likely at a gun show, emotionally fueled by my younger-self, very prone to "gotta-have-it-now" syndrome. I am ashamed 😢😂

  • @footbroke
    @footbroke 22 дня назад

    I find it amusing how the Hi Power is attributed to John Browning because his original design was nothing like the pistol we know. Due to patents on the 1911 owned by Colt, he was unable to use a similar design. After he died, the patents would expire and Dieudonne Saive would take it up and redesign the Hi Power and make it more like the 1911. It's humorous how the Hi Power would be so different than how he designed it and then come back around to being more like the 1911 which he designed.

  • @shooterqqqq
    @shooterqqqq 26 дней назад +4

    John Browning had almost nothing to do with the High Power. It would like saying the car you're driving today was designed by Benz. The pistol Browning designed didn't have any of his patents so it was nothing like the High Power. Later the patents expired so Saive used the magazine release and the locking system. Every thing else is pure Saive. And of course after all that and a decade plus, the French didn't adapt it.

  • @N4JAB
    @N4JAB 22 дня назад

    I have both, but I also have a Polish Radom 35. I find that gun to be a sort of hybrid mix of both these pistols.

  • @RogerGrant-ft7vu
    @RogerGrant-ft7vu 24 дня назад

    I have both and enjoy both. My experience is that the Browning is more fragile, having broken a few parts including a cracked slide. Cost is also an issue with the Browning.

  • @SouthPhilly11Bravo
    @SouthPhilly11Bravo 5 дней назад

    The 1911 in your hand looks like my 1935 7.65 Beretta in my hand Lol

  • @Z7d3nR4
    @Z7d3nR4 26 дней назад

    Two very nice handguns. Thank you for the comparison.

  • @bradleyyounger8499
    @bradleyyounger8499 26 дней назад +3

    Hickock sniffing that gun like someone ive seen sniffing lil girls hair 😂

    • @Bellboy40
      @Bellboy40 26 дней назад +3

      Hickok just likes the smell of gun powder in the morning. 😂

    • @donne9768
      @donne9768 26 дней назад

      🤣

    • @redtobertshateshandles
      @redtobertshateshandles 26 дней назад

      Sounds like a weird comment but then I remember that my wife and I have three daughters, so yep, probably smelled their hair at one time or another. I'm surprised if Hickok didn't get a headache from the fumes.

    • @donne9768
      @donne9768 26 дней назад +1

      @@redtobertshateshandles But those were YOUR daughters. And smokeless powder smells good. Especially rimfire powder.

  • @billylin5404
    @billylin5404 24 дня назад +1

    My two favorite pistols!

  • @GShileikis
    @GShileikis 26 дней назад +1

    Either or is just fine with me. I have a half dozen 1911s and love them all.

  • @kawikadee9670
    @kawikadee9670 26 дней назад

    Wow your big catcher's mitts make those full size guns look like the sig p938

  • @WillSelvey
    @WillSelvey 21 день назад

    High power is a little (gasp!) Glockesq on the inside.. have a couple 1911s first time I’ve seen a high power.. wanted to say I picked up a ruger sr1911 in 9mm at the Knoxville gun show and shot it for the first time at buds in Kodak/pigeon Forge, this is a great gun.. fed it about 60 rounds ( we took more guns and all I have is 3 10 round mags, don’t want to be loading on range time😊) 115 cheapo blazer. No malfunctions at all, ran smooth.. I have a problem with putting a loaded mag in the gun and then ejecting it unfired it likes to strip off the top round, stiff mag springs? But besides that it ran great. I think Hickok has a vid on it as well….

  • @farginbastage805
    @farginbastage805 25 дней назад

    Hickok makes some long videos, but darn it I listen to every minute 🎉

  • @cuchulain1647
    @cuchulain1647 26 дней назад

    Thanks Hickok!!!!
    You’re still the best on youtube!!!!
    ❤❤❤

  • @rem1762
    @rem1762 26 дней назад +1

    In my early twenties I was fortunate to have owned countless firearms, traded and sold them and one of the best feeling guns in my hand was indeed the Browning High Power.
    I always wanted one with the tangent rear adjustable sights which are rare so I never found one.
    Perhaps the best 1911 I ever had was a 1930's commercial Colt 38 Super. In new unfired condition. She was a beauty.
    I let a Dentist friend of the family get away with it for $500. Yes it would be worth thousands more today.

  • @strider8933
    @strider8933 24 дня назад

    I have bought and sold a number of guns in my 60 plus years. I have 3 that I regret selling. A Ruger #1 .308 Heavy Barrel, A Smith model 10, 3", and my old FN High Power. They are like hen's teeth and IF they can be found, cost a fortune. I do miss my High Power the most.

  • @ronrobertson59
    @ronrobertson59 16 дней назад

    I'm a 1911 fan its my favorite combat hand gun. The P35 High Power is an excellent weapon but I never like carrying it cocked and locked like a 1911 because it lacked a grip safety and a bigger thumb safety.

  • @azcop2
    @azcop2 26 дней назад +1

    I chose the High Power over the 1911 due to its magazine capacity.

  • @p99guy
    @p99guy 20 дней назад

    I have had both, for 50 years with the 1911, and 40 with a P35. Both certainly Ledgend in thier own time. The trigger on the 1911 is ultimately better, the Magazine safety on the P35 does bad things to the trigger pull, but it can be modified to be pretty good.
    Early production of both were not made for hollow points, HP’s simply didn’t really exist until the 1970’s on gun shop shelves. But both were modified over time to be reliable with HP

  • @NotALot-xm6gz
    @NotALot-xm6gz 26 дней назад +3

    The magazine safety on the Hi-Power can catch you out unless it’s been pinned.

    • @zoiders
      @zoiders 26 дней назад

      Removed. It's connected to the trigger via a roll pin. You can tell when it's been removed as it leaves a hole.

  • @ed5042
    @ed5042 26 дней назад +1

    THANK YOU Dieudonne Saive

  • @mothmagic1
    @mothmagic1 25 дней назад

    Having handled both I have discovered that I am more at home with the 1911. It's better suited to my hand size. I have to admit that some of the internal differences favour the Hi Power but the ideal pistol would combine the best points of both.

  • @bobdixon4998
    @bobdixon4998 26 дней назад

    I'm sorry for selling my Browning hi power. It shot smooth and accurate. I really miss it. I also had two S&W sigma 40's. One shot horrible and you couldn't hit a target at 7 yards. The other I bought from a friend after shooting a small branch in half at 80 feet. First shot too! Quickest sale I was ever involved in.

  • @spikelucky844
    @spikelucky844 26 дней назад

    Those are truly amazing and beautiful. Man I only dream of your collection thanks for video brother

  • @caseyedds2032
    @caseyedds2032 23 дня назад

    I think for any 1911 fan, the hi power is the next step of collecting. Be it an authentic Colt or Browning. Or any of the clone guns.

  • @josephstambolziovski8110
    @josephstambolziovski8110 22 дня назад

    We haven’t seen you bring out the WW1 1911 reproduction in years!

  • @shaneboor
    @shaneboor 26 дней назад +2

    I have a Star BM, the bastard child they swore to never talk about 😂

    • @winkeemanley1820
      @winkeemanley1820 20 дней назад

      Star made a Model B and a Super B. They were both big like a Colt 45 but in 9mm Para. (9x19)

    • @shaneboor
      @shaneboor 20 дней назад +1

      The BM is a compact. It looks like a baby 1911 without the grip safety in 9mm. All the capacity of a 1911 and disdain for hollow points with the hammer bite and magazine safety of a high power😂 sure is adorable though 😂

    • @winkeemanley1820
      @winkeemanley1820 20 дней назад

      @@shaneboor . A friend of mine had a Star model BM. Yes, it is a compact pistol. The South African military in the 1970s had the Star either Model B of Super B as a side arm.

  • @HPDrifter2
    @HPDrifter2 26 дней назад

    John Browning thought so. Probably a better service pistol, but the trigger and loose barrel fit disqualify it as a bullseye contender...at least in stock form. I like and carry both.

  • @user-fi5wz5si6o
    @user-fi5wz5si6o 26 дней назад

    45 !!! They look like toys in those great big hands. 😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @sizzlechest6070
    @sizzlechest6070 26 дней назад +1

    Military’s thoughts on 1911 grip safety. Let’s fix was isn’t broke.

  • @kansaspatriot2051
    @kansaspatriot2051 19 дней назад

    Both are outstanding firearms imo. The Hi-Power grip and feel is in the top 3 all time and is copied on the CZ75 and series. I’ve owned several of each model and love them all. It’s easy to see why they’re still so popular.

  • @alphacharlietango969
    @alphacharlietango969 26 дней назад

    Two beautiful tools.

  • @davelamboley1695
    @davelamboley1695 14 дней назад

    You ARE the expert of all experts in my eyes.

  • @thomasdaum1927
    @thomasdaum1927 24 дня назад

    I wish you would have discussed why one has a barrel bushing and the other does not . Thanks for the review !…..

  • @brianharris4275
    @brianharris4275 19 дней назад

    P-35 made in Poland by Radom,which my dad took of a German officer in 44 in WW2 same design ,had groves fo shoulder stock Could be made full auto also. 12th Armoured Division Hellcats SSGT John R Lund Seattle WASHINGTON

  • @deplorablebilly1066
    @deplorablebilly1066 23 дня назад

    Been watching your videos for years,knew you had large hands…but seeing that 1911 in your palm, I first thought it was a scaled down 380 or 22.😂

  • @edwardsallow6518
    @edwardsallow6518 20 дней назад

    It’s just as reliable , holds more rounds , is lighter , it’s still being used by a large number of nations as their standard issue pistol, it has less recoil with little loss in power , John browning intended it to be the replacement of the 1911 and that’s what he created , a better 1911

  • @user-se1ro4sy4z
    @user-se1ro4sy4z 18 дней назад +1

    How come that hi-power was the only mass produced double stack 9mm pistol till late 60s/early 70s with the introduction of s&w model 59 and GB Steyr, and even that wasnt enough as the double stack became a big thing only in mid 80s with the beretta 92, glock and cz 75 gaining their popularity? Its like almost 50 years of hi-power dominance/monopoly among double stack offers on the market.

  • @whitewittock
    @whitewittock 25 дней назад

    Browning was of the opinion the only safety the 1911 needed was the hammer

  • @pj61114
    @pj61114 26 дней назад

    Mr. H 45 got this one right. Great Job!

  • @oni_goroshi
    @oni_goroshi 25 дней назад

    You know you can take apart the 1911 the exact same way as a high power, right? You don't need to take out the plunger and barrel bushing first. You can just take out the takedown lever and take the slide off with the barrel, recoil spring, plunger and bushing all together.

  • @agskytter8977
    @agskytter8977 26 дней назад

    I have both pistols in 9mm.
    If only HK could make a "USP Expert" slide for the HiPower. It would be a world beater today.

  • @VikingWelder
    @VikingWelder 24 дня назад

    Long Live Hickok45

  • @coreydarr8464
    @coreydarr8464 26 дней назад

    I have had the privilege of handling both!

  • @CleaningMyGun
    @CleaningMyGun 25 дней назад

    Oh Hickok, you need to remember to do a safety check before breaking this old boy down!

  • @danielleclare2938
    @danielleclare2938 26 дней назад

    The Hi Power has a more squared off grip like the Glock that copied it so I tend to shoot it straighter where the 1911 grip is narrow and I can pull off left or right more easily. Considering JB wanted it to be 9mm makes the Hi Power more evolved especially the no toggle barrel thing. However nothing looks like or feels like a 1911. Especially an old one. Mine are 1930 38 Super and Wartime Colt with a Rand Slide for some reason. 38 Super is a joy in a 1911.

  • @warrengalliano6103
    @warrengalliano6103 25 дней назад

    I have had both and find the 1911 far better feeling in the hand and easier to shoot, once you have trained, than the High Power. I found the HP to be less accurate
    in my hand along with more objectionable time on target than the 1911. I had a beautiful consecutive numbered pair of HPs which I ended up selling because
    I just didn't like them. Bottom line- give me 8 ball busting rounds in a pistol I can shoot as opposed to 13 mediocre rounds in an uncomfortable pistol.

  • @chiefslief1886
    @chiefslief1886 16 дней назад

    Hotdang these two are just simple and beautiful ❤
    Thanks hickok45❤👍🏻

  • @jamesb2651
    @jamesb2651 25 дней назад +1

    Both are amazing pistols but I will have to give the win to the 1911 due to how the pistol has evolved over the years. Especially if we count the 2011 evolution. Though Springfield Armory and FN have recently done changes. With those, I personally think Springfield Armory’s SA-35 is more traditional with changes that people have wanted over the years.

    • @ronthomason8388
      @ronthomason8388 25 дней назад

      I've had a colt 1911 for several years now and its by far my favorite firearm. I shot the Springfield SA-35 for the first time this past Saturday, and I was very accurate with with at 7, 10, and 15 yards...but man I just dont know about that trigger on the Springfield. What threw me off about it was you pretty much had to release the trigger all the way to get it to reset, whereas most of my other guns like my Smith and Wesson, I only to release the trigger just a tad bit to reset it.

    • @Ashcrash82
      @Ashcrash82 23 дня назад +1

      The nice thing is there are multiple options now. As I understand, the new Springfield was designed to stay pretty close to the original, but other companies like Girsan (goes by EAA I think as well) made their HP with lots of improvements like no mag safety, longer beavertail, trigger improvements, etc.

    • @ronthomason8388
      @ronthomason8388 23 дня назад +1

      @@Ashcrash82 Its funny you mention that, I was JUST at the range looking at the Springfield again, and the gentleman at the counter showed me the Girsan version, and I really like it. The sights were more appealing to me, a better trigger release, nice design on the handle, a very nice finish on the slide., and it just fits good in my hands. Going to do some more reason on Girsan, but now there's a good chance I'll probably buy that one this weekend, haha.

    • @ronthomason8388
      @ronthomason8388 21 день назад +1

      I bought the Girsan haha

  • @MERAJKHAN-pd1nw
    @MERAJKHAN-pd1nw 19 дней назад

    I have both I love them