Smith & Wesson’s E-Series

Smith & Wesson has a new product introduction that has been long overdue—the “E” Series of 1911s. Like so many other handgunners, I was delighted when S&W introduced their own line of 1911 pistols several years ago. But I was less than happy with the grip-activated firing pin safety system. To work properly, this safety required an exceptionally firm grip on the butt of the pistol. To my considerable dismay, I found that I didn't fully depress the grip safety every time, particularly when using a one-handed grip. The hammer would drop, but the gun didn't fire. 

For 2011, the decision-makers at S&W charged my old friend Herb Belin with the job of up-grading the entire line of S&W 1911 pistols. Belin is an old hand at the Springfield plant and was the moving force behind the introduction of the Scandium-frame, lightweight revolvers and the X-frame .460 and .500 S&W Magnums. He tied into the 1911 problems with gusto and the first improvement made was changing the firing pin safety to a less complex—and foolproof—inertia-based system. Herb then performed some cosmetic changes before cranking up one of those fancy CNC machines to cut good-looking 20 lpi checkering on the frontstrap of every “E” series 1911. I haven't fired one yet, but they look like some pretty nifty 1911s for the big anniversary year.

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4 Responses to Smith & Wesson’s E-Series

Jerry wrote:
March 14, 2012

Can you give the serial numbers of the S&W "E" series of M1911s that had the bad design grip-activated firing pin safety system, and those after which it was corrected? I'm planning on buying one and I don't want to pay $1,000 for one that will let me down!

Ron T wrote:
December 19, 2011

This one's for Gary. ... Have you shot a lot of bad guys with the 'vanilla' 9mm or the .45 that didn't stay dead???

Walter wrote:
September 16, 2011

I have been late getting on the 1911 band wagon although always have wanted to. I think the E series S&W 1911 is my bridge to finally take the jump. I can't wait.

Gary wrote:
August 08, 2011

Good for S&W. But they, like Ruger, are late to the M1911 party with another "Me Too" product. Pretty soon everybody that wants a M1911 will have one. Then what? I have two suggestions that will prove market leadership. 1. New auto cartridges that make a meaningful jump in power. How long do we have to live with the plain-vanilla 9mm and .45 acp? Time for another run at their Magnum versions. 2. Think of the advertising coop available to the first arms company that could announce that they were installing fully-supported chambers across the board on all their autos. These fully-supported chambers will be needed anyway to contain the pressures generated by the (hopefully) coming new selection of Magnum autos.