Handguns > Semi-Auto

Chiappa 1911-22, .22 LR Pistol

An accurate and reliable .22 LR target pistol or plinker.

A recent addition to the rather short list of .22-cal. M1911s is the 1911-22 from Chiappa Firearms of Dayton, Ohio. All the components of the Chiappa guns are made in Italy by Armi Chiappa or in the United States.

The 1911-22 is a straight blowback pistol in .22 Long Rifle only, with a fixed barrel solidly attached to the frame. Major parts of the pistol, including the slide, frame, and some internals, are made of Chiapalloy, a proprietary zinc-based alloy that is durable, easily machined and readily blackened by an electrolytic process that produces a more durable blue-black finish than the painted finishes often used on zinc alloys.

Although steel is used in several critical areas, the pistol’s barrel, for example, is composed of an alloy shroud surrounding a steel liner button-rifled in a six-groove, 1:16-inch right-hand twist. Steel is also used for the firing pin, as well as the massive spring-loaded claw extractor set into the right side of the slide. Although guns of current manufacture feature Chiapalloy trigger components, these will be phased out in favor of a new steel trigger set.

Polymer is used for the magazine catch, mainspring housing, non-rotating grip safety filler, and the body and follower of the 10-round single-column magazine. Witness holes index the number of loaded cartridges. The magazine also has a unique feature: a raised tab on its right rear corner that serves as the gun’s ejector.

This combination of materials seems to work quite well, with test guns reportedly firing more than 25,000 rounds with no breakages. The Chiappa’s light recoil spring, with a rate of about 5 pounds, makes slide retraction extremely easy, enabling persons of even limited strength to use the pistol. But that spring weight can also allow the firing-hand thumb to induce a malfunction if it is allowed to drag against the slide during firing.

Safety features include the traditional left-side thumb safety and a gun lock on the right rear side of the slide. A third safety feature is the gun’s automatic trigger safety, which blocks the trigger until the slide is fully forward into battery. Finally, the hammer features a half-cock notch.

The initial version of this pistol to hit dealers’ shelves was the Standard Model with fixed sights and a standard trigger set, soon to be followed by a Target Model with adjustable sights, and a Tactical Model with no-snag fixed sights and a threaded muzzle. The Standard Model we received for testing gave us a number of surprises. The first was how closely the pistol resembled the appearance, feel and heft of its center-fire cousin. The rimfire retained the thumb safety, slide release and magazine catch of the original, omitting only the pivoting grip safety.

Also surprising was the gun’s performance. We tested the 1911-22 at 25 yards with CCI Pistol Match, Wolf Match and Federal Gold Medal .22 Long Rifle ammunition. Accuracy with all loads was quite impressive, with the CCI and Wolf ammunition grouping into slightly more than 1 inch at 25 yards. Even the worst-performing load averaged a respectable 1.68 inches.

While this is creditable, we are confident that the pistol is capable of better performance. The main obstacle hampering more precise shooting was the gun’s heavy, creepy 10-pound trigger, which felt more like that of a double-action revolver. According to the company, the alloy used for the trigger components work-hardens with use, eventually yielding a pull of around 5 pounds after 2,000 to 3,000 rounds. The new steel trigger components alluded to above will improve trigger quality to a range of about 3 to 3 pounds, 8 ounces.

Reliability was another of the Chiappa M911-22’s strong points. During an extended test-fire session of more than 300 rounds, using everything from subsonic ammunition to hyper-velocity loads, we experienced no malfunctions. Ejection with all loads was positive and strong, although brass from the more powerful loads flew farther out of the gun.

It is worth noting that Chiappa Firearms, cognizant of the brisk trade in aftermarket M1911 parts, will also be offering a variety of custom parts for the 1911-22, including a beavertail, a combat hammer, a target trigger with overtravel screw, a tactical light mount and more. Also, the Chiappa can accept a few original M1911 parts, such as grips and frame-mounted scope mounts.

The 1911-22’s accuracy, reliability and resemblance to the M1911 give it an unusual versatility. Given its level of accuracy, it would be as readily at home as an informal target pistol as it would as a plinker.

Manufacturer: Chiappa Firearms, Ltd.; (937) 835-5000; Chiappafirearms.com
Caliber: .22 Long Rifle
Action Type: Blowback-operated, single-action, semi-automatic rimfire pistol
Frame: Cast and machined Chiapalloy
Barrel: Alloy shroud, steel liner, 5"
Rifling: Six-groove, 1:16" RH twist
Magazine: Polymer, 10-rounddetachable box
Sights: Ramped front post; fixed rear, drift-adjustable for windage
Trigger: Single-action, 10-lb.,1-oz. pull
Grips: Stippled hardwood
Overall Length: 83⁄8"
Width: 13⁄8"
Height: 57⁄16"
Weight: 33.5 ozs.
Accessories: Hard case, cleaning brush, gun lock tool, owner’s manual, extra magazine
Suggested Retail Price: $299

 

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51 Responses to Chiappa 1911-22, .22 LR Pistol

William wrote:
July 01, 2013

So far I've ran about 250 rounds through it. Having feed and eject issues with different ammo (CCI, Winchester, Federal and Remington). Today it failed to return to battery several times. A buddy noticed some gouging on top of the mags, so I smoothed them down and still had issues. Going to try some polishing before shooting it again, but the mags are junk. The ammo fits so loose, a few times the next round to chamber was pointing to the sky. Sometimes, the first four rounds would mess up, but the rest would go through without a problem. The stove pipes were one thing, but the return to battery failures are really annoying. The gun is new, but it acts like the spring is weak. Going to see if they have one with a bit more tension to it. I hate that it has these problems because it would be real fun to shoot.

cody wrote:
July 01, 2013

what is the size of the dovetail on the 1911-22

Robert wrote:
May 15, 2013

My 1911-22 so far seems to function just fine. It has almost the same feel as a 1911 in the .45, except it seems to feel lighter. I have a mix of different .22's[;] right off I fired 3 magazine loads of mixed .22's without a single FTf or fte. Not sure if I would rate it equal to my Ruger .22/45 on a mark III frame, but it is a decent firing pistol for the money. The only concern I have is the barrel bushing, but a stock 1911 bushing fits just fine in it and functions well. So far, I am impressed with this pistol. My guess is that the company is reading the customer reviews and had supposedly made some improvements as a result. More to follow as time permits

Steve wrote:
April 14, 2013

Had about 2000 rounds through mine at this point and while it's not perfect, it's certainly acceptable. The manufacturing tolerances on this suck - but then again it's Italian, what do you expect. I bought this for 250 at a dealer. It was in the display case and had been dry fired, resulting in a burr in the breach. Their smith filed down the burr and polished the feed ramp and now I have no feed, or ejection issues. The biggest pain is the barrel bushing. I've pulled teeth easier than removing that thing. All in all, for $250 it's a good buy, it's accurate and ridiculously fun to shoot. and FWIW - my dad bought a GSG 1911-22 at the same time I bought this- same number of rounds (we shoot together) and his has been in the shop twice for broken components. With that said, the GSG feels much more solid (think BWM vs Fiat)

Frosty wrote:
February 01, 2013

Sure is to bad that people expect more of a guns than they might get but my Chiappa/Puma 1911-22 is a great gun. Had trouble with one of the mags sent it back, they said it was bad and they replaced it in a week and now it works perfectly. The rep said to Do what the manual says, clean it and use CCI Mini Mags and you will not have any problems. Great gun for the price if you do what the company says to do. The more you break it in the better it gets. By the way they DO test fire every gun. Happy shppting everyone.

snuff wrote:
January 06, 2013

I have had mine for over a year ,I think I was ripped off.Mine did not come with an extra mag.The gunshop I got it from took my Taurus pt24/7osss .45 on trade and gave me 200 and this 22.It has had a few jams or misfire but the more I use it the less it seems to malfunction.

Ron Novak wrote:
December 06, 2012

Got my chiappa 1911-22 from mc sports for $269 on sale. They advised me, and I did break it in with 100 rounds of a hot ammo. (can't remember what)Then I was told to use winchester xpert hv and should have no problems. I filed the front sight to make it hit at my point of aim. After some 2500 rounds with literly no ftf or fte issues the barrel bushing flange broke. mc sent the gun back to the factory for repair. While waiting almost 2 months for it to come back, I purchased a bulk pack of federal, same 36 g,hollow point, volocity but with 250 less fps. I gun finaly came back nice and shinny. They even replaced the filed front sight. I hurried to the back of my compound with the federal ammo and then I experienced a fte or ftf issues at a rate of 1 or more a clip. Then loaded with the winchesters and had issues of 1 in 50. I then would mix the feds with wincherters and the feds would fte and I had to manualy eject the spent casing with moderatle pressure with my jack knife. After I refiled the front sight and from a brench rest at 25', I could cover the hits with a silver dollar. The low cost and the fact that it taught me to shoot my heavier cal guns more accuartly, I am satisfied. I really think it is a cleaning issue and I hope some will put out info on cleaning & oil every critial part.Sometimes I wish I would have picked up beer cans from the side of the road to make up the differance and purchased a COLT. (I don't see a spellcheck)

Tony Myers wrote:
November 27, 2012

Picked one from a dealer at a gun show 11-24-12. On 11-25 took it to the range for testing, 50rds of CCI and 125rds. Federals value pack. Had 31 FTE and 6 occasions of 3 rd burst and 2 occasions of 2 rd. burst, straight from the box, with a lite whip down. Did a complete tear down and cleaning. Found no burrs, dirt or parts failure. Did find some very loose tolerances which may attribute to the "Rock and Roll" effect. It's now re-assembled and on its way to a second testing. One mag did seem to function better than the other.

Clayton Boland wrote:
November 25, 2012

I bouht the chiappa 1911-22 it did not work right out of the box it was always stovepipeing no matter what round i used except the cci mini mags and cci blazers the gun also blew up in my face and chiappa will not contact me back DO NOT BUY THIS GUN IT IS A HUNK OF CRAP!!!

Joe wrote:
November 04, 2012

I just got my Puma back from Chiappa gun shop, and it will only fire every other shot. Brass has a good strike mark, but evidently not good enough. Reason the gun was in the shop was because a metal insert that strikes the firing pin fell out of the hammer. GSG rocks!

Ross Clayton wrote:
November 02, 2012

Try to get parts for these guns

Murky P. wrote:
October 17, 2012

Chiappa should be ashamed of themselves. Badly manufactured product only matched by their horrible customer service. About the closest thing to a scam that I have ever seen.

Tom T wrote:
October 14, 2012

Bought my 1911-22 in early October. Shot 200 rounds through it so far. Many FTF's and when I feed a magazine into the gun the slide rolls forward chambering a round making for a dangerous condition. Also the slide release is very flimsy Contacted Chiappa and waiting for a response....not happy

Erik C wrote:
September 09, 2012

Speaking to the unreliability... When i bought this plinker for my sone, i could not run a single clip without a stovepipe. However, I polished the guide and use only the cci minimags. It works much better and jams once very 3-4 clips with about 500 round through it. It really is the ammo. However, I too would buy a different brand before this if doing it over. SW or the ruger.

Tom C wrote:
September 01, 2012

I have this weapon a Chiappa Firearms from Legacy Sports Intl Puma 1911 PCP191122 SN D36874 and consider it the most unreliable pistol that I have ever owned, which has been many. I know that this sounds rather strong but this piece jams more time than it fires. It fails to extract completely thus causing feeding jams and the casing needs to be removed forceably, preferably with a wood or brass rod. I have tried several different brands of 22LR ammo and have been told that only higher velocity(powerful) rounds should be used, this does not seem reasonable for a firearm that is used for target or plinking or the occasional varmint. I am also not fond of the plastic magazine. Overall I consider this piece an unreliable and even dangerous weapon and would advise against it even though it is a very nice looking and feeling pistol.

big Ken wrote:
August 27, 2012

I just bought a 1911-22. Mine has the sand colored top. I shot 200 rounds through it. I love it. not 1 problem.

The Wounded wrote:
August 02, 2012

We've had this plinker for quite some time now and love it! Out of the box she ran good, but not perfect. When I polished the feed ramp and the slide rails, she really came to life. I would guess that we have around 1200 rds through it thus far. This gun is so much fun, when I shoot, I'm most excited for this one. If I would do it again, I would probably go with a GSG, but since I already have one, I would like to pick up another, since I have mags for it already. I am looking to Duracoat mine to make it more special for me. The max I would pay for this gun agian is probably 175-200, we got ours for around 250. Just look for a used one. All in all, if you're looking for a good plinker and you are willing to do some fine tuning your self, this is a great option. I love mine and it shows no signs of slowing down yet.

John Lindeman wrote:
August 02, 2012

Bought one of these 1911.22 for $300.00. the gun didn't function correctly from the box. It is obvious that these guns were not test fired at the factory. the shells wouldn't even eject manually. After the first shot, the shell cycled the action, would not eject, and slamed back into the chamber. The shell stuck in the chamber and had to be removed physically. I have never purchased a gun that did not shoot out of the box. I contacted Chippia and they told me to urs a Subsonic round. It ejects that round but usually will not cycle the slide. This gun is a piece of junk. Do not buy for any reason. You will be wasteing your money. I notice that this piece of junk is not showing up at gun shows. Vendoers and customers are getting wise to this junk. Chippia needs to apoligize to everyone it has taken for a ride.By the way, I took to friend gunsmith and the ejector doesn't grab the shell good enough and the chamber was not polished. He fixed bit for me for a minimal cost. Again, do not buy or put your hands on the junk.

Richard Simons wrote:
July 10, 2012

Do not send your gun in to be repaired! I sent mine in May,it took them 3wks to figure out it was a piece of junk. They said they would send a brand new gun.That was the end of May! today is July 10,so I contacted customer service.Their answer."I don't know when you will get it! Cheap gun,lousy customer service.Buy a S&W

freddy wrote:
July 06, 2012

chiappa ring of fire type junk pistol had one sold it as soon as I could want something very closeto the 1911-45ACP get a sgs 22 1911

mrgrimm1976 wrote:
June 24, 2012

Well, after owning the gun for two months, I had to send it back to the company due to a defect in the rifling. The turn-around was about three weeks, which was faster than I would have expected and the customer service (Steve) was very good. On top of that, it was returned with an extra mag, which I won't complain about. However, this gun is made of poor parts which wear out quickly, can be replaced cheaply enough and can get on your nerves easily. I am having to push forward on my slide to lock a round in almost one in three rounds and that gets old quick! My slide release is worn out. The slide wouldn't lock to the rear on empty magazines before that anyhow. the slide feels loose. The barrel is fixed to the lower reciever which makes cleaning it a pain. The extractor wears out quickly and it double-feeds alot. I keep it clean and shoot it often enough, but I am glad I have another RELIABLE firearm to count on. If you are in the market for a low priced .22, I would recommend a Sig Sauer just because it is more reliable and constructed of better materials.

H shepherd wrote:
June 02, 2012

I bought my 1911-22 today and right out of the box ftf"s &fte's..Brought back in house and found feed ramp prob's but after a sotf stone on a drimmell and some jewelers ruge it feed's ever soo sweet.Was disapointed in the cheesy mags after paying nearly $400.00 bucks.It seems to need cleaning every 200 or so rounds but again i brought it in and ran a 223 brass brush in chamber on my cordless drill and that seems to have solved that problem.Accur sucks will have to work with sights. Off to the left 5 or more inches and low at lest that much at 25 yards. Great feeling gun,like the look and feel,I hope that they take feedback from us and make steel mags for this gun and it would make this a GREAT GUN.I hope that they will make adj rear sights av il also.I don't think that w/poly mags that this was worth $400.00 plus tax

Ralph L wrote:
May 06, 2012

the 1911-22 is a good investment. I have put around 300 rounds through my new one it has had 6flf and not other problems with if.The only thing I am unhappy with it only came with one magazine.It is fun to shot!

TopSgtJoe(NRA instructor) wrote:
April 26, 2012

At our range, the RSOs refuse to let use of this gun. I bought one to try to use for my classes and found it nearly impossible to use safely. Good gun, wrong magazine. Did anyone else notice that even with the "good" ammo, it is impossible for this gun to fire consistently, BECAUSE the magazine loads too loosely and the rounds can NOT chamber correctly due to TOO much play in the shells when in the magazine (compared to how tightly the 22LR's are set up in a Ruger M-III.) In fact, to test the tolerances of the rounds in the PLASTIC magazine of the Chiappa 22, I was albe to easily load my 25 ACP ammo in it, which fit snuggly but not too tight. OF course, not to fire, but to see why the 22s do not seat properly in the mag. Also, I found that the spring action back was very weak and loose as well. JOE

Terry T wrote:
April 11, 2012

I did not know to expect with this 1911-22, as I had never fired one before. I had read the reviews and decided to give it a try. I've shot about two hundred rounds of federal standard 22lr in it and I too had quite a few fte's and fte's. I intend to try difference kinds ammo in it I have give it a really good cleaning. I'm not giving up on this gun yet, because I love the feel of it and it is cheap to shoot and fun when it works. I am not sure if I would buy this guns again. I would like to try another brand of 1911-22, to see how they compare

ML wrote:
March 19, 2012

I tried mini-mags and had lots of jam... found that the jam, FTE, or stove pipes were caused of thick coats of oil or wax compound around bullets themselves. When the round was chambered, the waxi/oil compounds built up around the breach, cause all sorts of problems.When I wiped them off (all 300 remaining rounds and took a heck of a long time), my cleaning cloth was thicked with oil/wax. after that, I had no problem with the mini-mags. I still perfer stingers and velocitors . No cycling issues or any other issues with them.

Jeff wrote:
March 16, 2012

I purchased the 1911 – 22 at land air and sea shop and take it to the range shot couple hundred around it and it jammed every two or three times I payed 413$ for it and I want my money back. I called the shop and they said I need to shoot a few hundred more rounds through it so it can get broken in so I did so and it still Jams like every two or three times. It also has issues with the hammer or firing pin cuz it will push the hammer back and when I pull the trigger theres no fire I pull the hammer back and then it will fire. Not happy with this gun.

Malcolm7888 wrote:
March 04, 2012

Recieved my 1st Chiappa 1911 22LR on the 23 of Feb. Stripped it, cleaned it, took it to the range and put at least 120 rounds of Walmart stocked Remington Gold Bullet 22LR HP (550 rds). Many, many FTE's, FTF's, and stovepipes. Then, upon firing, I had a cartridge explode in the chamber! I'm lucky I didn't lose part of my face. The brass casing was lodged and fused into the barrel, rendering the gun useless. Took it back to the armory where I bought it, and they ordered me a new one. This all happened on the same day in the space of 4 hours. Recieved my 2nd 1911 on March 2nd, and took it to the range. Used CCI Stingers and Mini-mags, as well as Federal value pack, all from Walmart. Shot a combined total of 320 rounds. Maybe 10 stovepipes out of the bunch. The gun shot like a dream. Stripped and cleaned it thoroughly and brought it back to the range the very next day. Using Federal Value only, shot 340 rounds, with about 20 stovepipes and FTEs. The gun started to muck up and lose performance right around 240 rounds, but the 1st 100-200 shot clean and accurate. Nearly 700 rounds in 2 days. Seems reliable enough, given proper ammo. NOTE: After the exploded round incident, I carefully examined every single bullet that I purchased, including the leftover Remington Gold Bullets, and each individual cartridge from 1100 rounds of Federal Value, the 100 Mini-Mags, and the 50 Stingers. Nearly all of the leftover Remingtons had very loose casings, and all were very, very dirty! 1st box of Federal had 2 loose casings. 2nd box had almost 130 loose casings! Both boxes much less dirty then Remington. CCI Stingers and Mini-Mags had not a single loose casing, and these were also much less dirty then Remington. Bought another 100 Mini-Mags and 50 Stingers today, examined each, and found all to be sturdy and well made. So folks, make sure you put higher quality ammo into your Chiappa 1911 22LR, so you won't suffer the incident that happened to me.

mrgrimm1976 wrote:
March 02, 2012

Comments...Picked mine up at a local Cabelas for around $300. Came with a soft case, eye protection, earplugs, three magazines and a cleaning brush/owners manual. Put about 300 rounds through it and it was very accurate at 25 yards. I had several FTF and a few stovepipes, but that's to be expected during the break-in period. Overall, it's a hoot to shoot for the price and to get that kind of accuracy out of a 22 1911 is usually unheard of. In the end, you get what you pay for.

Todd wrote:
February 20, 2012

Chiappa 1911-22. Kept it clean.Tried all sorts of Ammo.Still failed to feed.Failed to extract. Some times would double feed. Stove pipes were frequent. Clip would not contain Ammo, Any little nudge Ammo would come out. How ever would i could get the gun to function.At 25 to 30 yards it was a straight shooter.

Jack McCain wrote:
February 08, 2012

I bought mine not to long ago, I can't complain. I got 4 mags with it. At first I had some FTF but after a day of shooting it improved. Its a good gun to shoot around with, being the ammo is cheap.

Dave wrote:
February 06, 2012

Purchased Puma 1911 22 1/2012 fired 700 rounds Walmart Federal bulk. Only malfunction occurred after 300 rounds due to fireing residue. Cleaning solved problem. So far good gun. Trigger getting better.

ML wrote:
January 07, 2012

Today I shot 600 rounds through my Chiappa 1911 .22LR .Experienced one FTF and one FTE only. Again, depending what type of shooting you wish to do, I just aimed few inches higher so that my shots would hit the steel plate rather than landing on the dirt. Keep in mind that my plates were 6"x6" and were 25yrds down range so that I cant miss.

Marcus wrote:
January 05, 2012

Bought one for myself after Xmas for $235. Shot 200 rounds so far - really enjoying it, great fun shooting. Had an assortment of jams, stovepipes, failure to feeds, probably 14 times in 200 rounds. Should get better though. I like the trigger on mine, but i'm no experienced shooter. Haven't filed the front site down yet, but my rear site seemed ok. Really like the gun!

charles wrote:
December 26, 2011

I just bought my 1911-22 about week a go, going to the range soon to check it out.

ML wrote:
December 23, 2011

I heard so much comment about Chiappa 1911 .22LR about the pro and cons...well it amy be true for some sitiuations, but yesterday was my first time that I shot my chiappa 1911 with various .22LR ammo. Getting to the point, It has no problem with CCI velocity and CCI Stingers. It is a great .22LR for practice. Thanks

Len D wrote:
December 07, 2011

Just bought my chiappa 1911-22 a week ago and can't wait to try it out tomorrow at the range . Paid 250 and picked 2 extra clips for 19 bucks each . Will post more after range.

Donga wrote:
November 16, 2011

Just bought one here on long island For 289 plus cuomo with only 1 mag Where did you find it for 215 Was it supposed to come with 2 and did the store beat me out of the other mag? When I asked about a spare mag they said they have just one for 29.99! Was at Benson's in Coram NY

JC wrote:
October 29, 2011

Picked mine up friday and have put about 500 to 700 rounds thru... 2 stove pipes and one FTF. Very nice gun so far, soooo much fun at an affordable price. Will shoot about 600 rounds tomorrow!

RPK wrote:
October 17, 2011

Bought it for the wife as a weekend range "plinker". Paid $215.00 OUT THE DOOR on 10/08/11. Came with hard Chiappa tan case, 2 magazines, cleaning brush and an instruction manual. Finally took to the range on 10/15/11. Fired 500+ consecutive rounds. Started with CCI HP's, went to Winchester XL HP's and finally ended up using Golden Eyes and then Remington lead rounds. Had about 6 stove pipes towards the end when feed ramp was "leaded up". I believe the issue was with the cheaper lead ammunition at the end coupled with the fouling and deposits on the feed ramp. I usually fire a Colt Government Model 1911 .22 Caliber semi-automatic and initially, had the same problem with cheap ammunition in that weapon. FOR THE MONEY, which is 1/2 what I spent on the Colt, the Chiappa 1911-22 shot AS WELL AS, the Colt. That is a pretty big statement if you know what the Colt sells for. The Chiappa 1911-22 was fun to shoot, easy to load and cleaning was not a pain in the rump. The most difficult part during the cleaning process was taking the barrel shroud off at 90 degrees. Once I got that off, it was a breeze. re-assembly was even easier. FOR THE MONEY, this is a decent handgun for what it was designed for. I would not take it to combat or use it as a front line defense weapon, but in a pinch it will send lead down range. SO FAR, it would appear I got a good one for the wife. The more I fired, the smoother the trigger pull became. Now, that the Chiappa 1911-22 is broken in and adequately test fired for her safety, I hope she likes it. If not, our eldest son will certainly not complain as he inherits a fun lil' "plinker" for the weekends. FOR THE COST, the Chiappa Puma Model 1911-22 is indeed a fine pistol.

motox570 wrote:
July 18, 2011

I bought this gun last week and shot it today for the first time. Field stripped and cleaned it before firing. Shot 100 rounds of CCI mini mags through it at 25 yards. It shot 2in to the left at first, but adjusted the rear sight and it was dead on. Between my uncle (former military sharp shooter) and myself, we had 6 bullseyes with groups being very tight. under 1 inch. 4 FTE out of 100 rounds. very impressed with this weapon. It should only get better with more rounds down range. Very happy for 285 OTD.

TMB wrote:
June 03, 2011

I purchased one a year ago and love it so much that I purchased another a month ago (his and hers). I too had fte problems...at first. I'm no quitter, so the more I used it and broke it in, the better it became. I now have no problems with ftf or fte. I came to realize that if you're going to use standard, inexpensive, long rifle rounds, then expect to run 300 to 500 rounds to break it in. By that time, it will be performing flawlessly. if you run a more powerful/better quality LR load from the get-go, then it will perform much better. Don't give up and say it's garbage. Be patient and you'll see it's a fine pistol.

Jim K wrote:
May 12, 2011

Bought the gun and immediately started having failure to feed problems. At round #9 it would stove pipe the fresh round about every other magazine. I'm thinking it's a magazine problem since they are plastic. Accuracy is OK, not great, but OK. I tried to order a new mag but they are on back order. Not real impressed, but for the price... .

Scott Hawks wrote:
April 10, 2011

I purchased one of these 1911-22LR about 6 mos ago for my son, I thought it would be an inexpensive way to teach him to shoot. It's teaching him allright, how to handle a weapon that does not shoot well and jams every other shot, in my opinion, this is one of the most dangerous guns on the market, I will never put it in the hands of a beginner ever again.

Hollis wrote:
March 31, 2011

Do not buy this gun!!! It has a high ftf rate, especially with lead, some with copper. Returned it to factory but they will not answer the phone, answering machines, or return my emails. Buy the new Siger, it is awesome. Need more info? Drop me a line!!

Nevelle wrote:
March 30, 2011

i like mine. it shoots accurately, no ftf/fte's, and fits my 1911 holsters. for a new gun that cost's 225 bucks, i couldnt be happier! sorry a few of yall got friday guns, but it happens.

JDS wrote:
March 29, 2011

I have tried three different brands and loads of ammo and all three have the same FTE rate. Not only when shooting but also when manually working the slide. And when the extractor did pull the round the ejector failed to expell it and the weapon would double feed and of course jamb. I am very disapointed with this firearm and have all plans of returning it to the manufacturer demanding a full refund so that I can spend the money on a gun that actually works and one that the paint doesn't scratch off when you breath on it wrong. As fun as this gun is when it finally does decided to work for you when all things are considered...do not waste your time on this weapon, there are far better options out there for the price of this inferior weapon.

Clint Eubanks wrote:
March 22, 2011

I had the barrel bushing break on my gun releasing the spring components down range during shooting. I hope it is still under warrenty.

Adan Fermin wrote:
March 05, 2011

I have the Chiappa 1911-22 LR since last year 2010 and the first 6 month I used it at the Range and my experience was very bad, to mention a few at first jammed to many times, slide was defected and more. I sent it back for three times for same defect and they sent me back a new one. I am testing this one to make sure this is the right one.

Nathan Ross wrote:
January 25, 2011

After using the Chiappa 1911 .22, i hated it. The frame looked like it was molded, it wasn't actually blued, i think it was just painted. Then with the low power rounds it FTE about 2/3's of the time, and when i used the right ammo it still FTE about every 50 rounds. You couldn't upgrade any of the parts. So i couldn't put a grip safety on it or a rounded main spring housing. Sice i couldn't do that I couldn't get a good feel for the gun. The sights were terrible too. Also after firing it at the range I quickly noticed that it wasn't as accurate as Chiappa Firearms said it would be. So to get to the main point it didn't live up to its name at all, but im gonna keep my eye out on the reviews for the German Sports Guns or GSG 1911 .22 because they completly redisigned the slide to allow the gun to be a better performing 1911 .22. The gun is also 80% upgradeable. What i like about it the most is that it already has a rounded main spring housing along with a grip safety. It comes with 3 different sizes of sights incase it shoots high or low and i think it comes with a straight main spring housing. So i would recommend watching the reviews for it because as a new gun it had some problems with pot metal, but they have been working on resolving that

Robert Draut wrote:
August 28, 2010

The 1911-22 really isn't suppose to have a half cock. If you pull hard on the triger the hammer will fall. Per Chiappa this isn't suppose to be a half cock?? With the trigger group modification they are doing the half cock is eliminated. This information is per Customer Service at Chiappa