Tisas USA

Tisas 1911 A1 US Army 9

$419.99
SKU:
10100521
UPC:
713135218461
1-Year Warranty, Lifetime Service Plan Learn More

Details

Specifications

Warranty

Videos

PROP 65 WARNING

Details

Tisas worked hard to faithfully to make a new production version of the most iconic sidearm ever carried onto the battlefield. The Tisas 1911 A1 US Army is built to look and preform just like John Browning intended.


Tisas Issued Series 1911 pistols come standard with our premium lockable hard case, two magazines, cleaning kit, bushing wrench, trigger lock and instruction manual.

Specifications

Warranty

At SDS Arms, we proudly stand behind the quality of our firearms from Tisas, Tokarev USA, Military Armament Corporation, Spandau, and Inglis. Every firearm is covered by a 1-Year Limited Warranty against defects in materials and workmanship from the original retail purchase date. After that, you're backed by our Lifetime Service Plan, which covers material defects for the life of the firearm. Quick Summary: 1-Year Limited Warranty on workmanship and materials. Lifetime Service Plan begins after 1 year (excludes wear items). Warranty voided by abuse, alterations, or improper ammo. Certain legacy/imported models no longer eligible for service. For more details or to start a warranty claim please visit our main support page.

Videos

PROP 65 WARNING

WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals, which are known to the State of California to cause Cancer and Reproductive Harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov

From Our Customers

Unbiased Review

Posted by J Parker on 2024 Jun 11th

My first 1911a1 was issued to me. Since then I've owned half a dozen or so in various brands. All but one being military configuration. To be fair in testing, I selected three different brands of similar configuration, using hand-loaded 230 grain ball ammo. I ran 1,000 rounds through each, without cleaning or added lubrication during testing. Yes, I'd call that abusive. In any case, the results are as follows... A. Colt military 1911a1, 8 each, failure to properly feed. No other malfunctions noted. B. Springfield 1911a1, 2 each failure to feed. No other malfunctions noted. C. Tisas 1911a1, Absolutely flawless right out of the box! Prior to testing, each were properly cleaned & lubricated, exactly the same. I used all new brass, Hornady brand powder & projectiles with CCI primers. Everything was as close to the same as I could get it. Another thing to note. On each round that initially failed to feed properly, once chambered all fired successfully. The obvious winner here was the Tisas. While impressed with my initial inspection, I honestly didn't expect this outcome. I expected the Springfield to be #1, and a close match between the Colt & Tisas. Not predicting which would prevail. I'm not merely impressed, I'm astonished over the quality and performance of this weapon! Besides the initial abuse I subjected it to, it's got a hard life ahead as it's intended to be used for safety training for new / prospective gun owners. I expect it will continue to perform flawlessly. I doubt it will ever see hollow point bullets but after my initial testing and a proper cleaning, I ran a few magazines of Hornady Critical Defense ammo through it. Again, it proved 100% reliable. The military Colt doesn't like anything but ball ammo. The Springfield seems content with anything I feed it. I plan on buying another for personal use / everyday carry. My trusty Springfield is being retired to the safe for now. The only thing I wasn't thrilled about was the mil-spec plastic grips. I ordered a couple sets of the walnut, double diamond U.S. marked grips and while slightly darker than I prefer it now looks as good as it shoots. Bottom line, visit your local dealer & inspect one of these yourself. There is a very good chance you will go home with it. If so, there is an excellent chance you will be at least as impressed as I am. You won't be sorry.

Write a Review
Unbiased Review

My first 1911a1 was issued to me. Since then I've owned half a dozen or so in various brands. All but one being military configuration. To be fair in testing, I selected three different brands of similar configuration, using hand-loaded 230 grain ball ammo. I ran 1,000 rounds through each, without cleaning or added lubrication during testing. Yes, I'd call that abusive. In any case, the results are as follows... A. Colt military 1911a1, 8 each, failure to properly feed. No other malfunctions noted. B. Springfield 1911a1, 2 each failure to feed. No other malfunctions noted. C. Tisas 1911a1, Absolutely flawless right out of the box! Prior to testing, each were properly cleaned & lubricated, exactly the same. I used all new brass, Hornady brand powder & projectiles with CCI primers. Everything was as close to the same as I could get it. Another thing to note. On each round that initially failed to feed properly, once chambered all fired successfully. The obvious winner here was the Tisas. While impressed with my initial inspection, I honestly didn't expect this outcome. I expected the Springfield to be #1, and a close match between the Colt & Tisas. Not predicting which would prevail. I'm not merely impressed, I'm astonished over the quality and performance of this weapon! Besides the initial abuse I subjected it to, it's got a hard life ahead as it's intended to be used for safety training for new / prospective gun owners. I expect it will continue to perform flawlessly. I doubt it will ever see hollow point bullets but after my initial testing and a proper cleaning, I ran a few magazines of Hornady Critical Defense ammo through it. Again, it proved 100% reliable. The military Colt doesn't like anything but ball ammo. The Springfield seems content with anything I feed it. I plan on buying another for personal use / everyday carry. My trusty Springfield is being retired to the safe for now. The only thing I wasn't thrilled about was the mil-spec plastic grips. I ordered a couple sets of the walnut, double diamond U.S. marked grips and while slightly darker than I prefer it now looks as good as it shoots. Bottom line, visit your local dealer & inspect one of these yourself. There is a very good chance you will go home with it. If so, there is an excellent chance you will be at least as impressed as I am. You won't be sorry.

J Parker