My brother has a Kimber aluminum 1911 which is chambered for .22 LR. The pistol is identical to the .45 in all respects, right down to the barrel link and the barrel bushing and I believe that in true Browning design the barrel drops out of battery when the slide is pulled back. I didn't strip the gun but it looks like a .45 barrel with a .22 hole in it. The magazine is the same outside dimension as the .45 ACP, and the inside is quite generous in dimension which makes the rounds somewhat staggered rather than straight in-line like a Ruger, Browning, Colt, etc.
Here's the problem with the gun. It did not want to strip the 2nd. round off the magazine. Slow manipulation of the slide revealed that the rounds dipped and the slide rode over the rim of the cartridge rather than picking the round up and feeding it into the chamber.
We shot Winchester Super X thinking that the ammo was the problem. We did not have ejection problems, no smoke stacks, but simply not picking the round up.
We went to Stingers, and the thing seemed to function fine. It seems that high speed ammo tends to cure this problem, perhaps the slide velocity has something to do with it with lower powered ammunition.
As noted, the magazine allows for some slop in the position of the rounds. The spring doesn't seem overly strong in it either.
Nice gun, but I'd like to know if any of you have encountered this with other Kimbers. My Ruger holds the rounds very securely and there is no room for them to roam around in the magazine. Could narrowing the inside of the magazine make a difference or is it something else?
Looking forward to your input.
Jack