Just bought a nice stainless steel Combat Commander with a Bar-sto barrel and night sights. I got it very reasonable and my first thought was to turn it over and make a few dollars I could put toward something else. I shot it (mistake). Wow. Best shooting 1911 I have ever owned! I put up a 1" targ dot, backed off a few feet and put the first three rounds in it, two handed, standing. Got to thinking, maybe I should keep it, I might not find another that shoots this well. So just as a test, I dropped a stainless Colt commander barrel into it and shot it again. The group was slightly larger but still impressive. The bushing (which I assume came with the bar-sto barrel) is very tight requiring a bushing wrench to move. And it is a nice snug fit to both barrels. So I'm thinking now that if I want to tighten up groups on a .45, that the bushing would be the first place to start rather than buying an expensive barrel. This is assuming that the slide doesn't rattle a lot and the barrel locks up decent. So, assuming that, I can sell this gun because I can tighten up the next with a little work, correct? Have I learned something or am I just lucky? 44 Man