Springfield Armory's newer 1911s have a titanium firing pin and a heavier firing pin spring than most other 1911s. This, combined with a hammer stop that prevents the hammer from striking the firing pin unless the trigger is pulled, prevents the pistol from firing when dropped on the hammer in CA tests for accidental discharge. Since the 1911 from SA is available in CA, I believe it works.Venus Pax wrote:I've got a question for the 1911 gurus:
If a 1911 is dropped, is there an internal device to keep the hammer from hitting the slide's end (I forgot the proper term for that part)?
Other manufacturers use other methods (I believe Colt 80s & 1991s have the block like TXRancher metioned) but I am not familiar with all of them. All 1911s certified for sale in CA have to pass the droip test, though, so they will have something that works to prevent this type of discharge.