1911 Holster Stock Walnut with Mainspring Housing & Harness

Item Number
C45433-SET
8 reviews Write a Review
$149.95

Quality hardwood Model 1911 pistol ‘Rig’ complete with wood stock, leather holster for the stock with belt loop, and the converted mainspring housing that facilitates connection of the stock to the pistol. Nice walnut grain and a stock girth and shoulder butt that absorb more of the recoil over using a plain board stock. Pistol can be stowed away within the wood stock. The hinged portion of the stock also has a metal loop from which you can attach a belt frog if you prefer not to use the leather holster. 

SOME MINOR FITTING MAY BE REQUIRED. 

ALL NFA RULES APPLY

8 Reviews

  • 5
    1911 Holster Stock Walnut with Mainspring Housing & Harness

    Posted by Jim High on Nov 22nd 2025

    This is an outstanding product! It gives an authentic vibe to my 1911 collection.

  • 5
    1911 Holster Stock Walnut with Mainspring Housing & Harness

    Posted by Allen Harrison on Nov 21st 2025

    Very nice set. leather is so new that it's going to require some stretching and breaking in to hold stock.

  • 4
    1911 Stock and main spring

    Posted by Robert Jackson on Nov 20th 2025

    The stock is a great reproduction. The only thing missing is the retaining spring that was located in the top of the door. Another great feature is that sarco gives you the mainspring but you will have to get the spring and retaining pin to install. Which prevents you from being in violation of NFA rules. Thanks sarco !

  • 5
    1911 Holster Stock Walnut with Mainspring Housing & Harness

    Posted by David Redmond on Nov 14th 2025

    Very good quality product. I have an original Canadian Inglis Chinese contract High Power with the holster stock and this one is almost an exact duplicate of the High Power model except it's for the 1911.

  • 4
    1911 Holster Stock

    Posted by Bill on Nov 14th 2025

    Nice Quality. Minor fitting to mainspring cover

  • 4
    1911 Stock conversion

    Posted by Bob Oberlender on Jul 3rd 2025

    Replacement of the Kimber mainspring housing was simple. Assembling the stock to the handgun went easily. My brother-in-law and I went out to the back pasture and tested it. I shot two 7 round magazines and the handed him two mags to shoot. Both of us had difficulty getting a decent stock weld and gaining sight alignment. The stock interfered with our ability to line up the front sight dot with the two rear sight dots, couldn't get our eyes close enough, resulting in shots going higher than we wanted.

    On his second mag, the Kimber had a failure to fire. The hammer fell on a live round, but with insufficient force to fire the round. He cleared that round out of the chamber and attempted to fire again. Another failure to fire. I attempted to fire and had the same issue. I removed the stock and aimed at our target, the pistol fired normally for another full mag. I put the stock back on and again, failures to fire.

    I took the pistol back to my shop and disassembled the mainspring housing. The hammer spring appeared to be of normal tension compared to a new hammer spring from Kimber in my parts bin. I took a very fine round rasp file and honed the inside of the tube where the spring sits. I lubed the spring and reassembled the pistol with the stock. Took it to the back pasture and ran two mags full, including a 10-round mag. No issues.

    My only complaint is with the inability to get a good sight picture and sight alignment. I suppose I can find an elevated rear sigh and a high front sight, I haven't looked yet. I'm thinking of getting a conversion kit that will dove-tail into the rear sight hole and adding a tall red dot sight, it might require spacers.

    All in all, it's a very cool build. Will get a lot of comments on the range. But it is a definite no-go when it comes to accurate shooting as is.

  • 2
    Perfect except...

    Posted by Thomas Heim on Mar 17th 2025

    Whe angle of the stock iron is wrong resulting in a comb drop of 1/2" making the pistol sights unusable. For comparison a Browning HiPower with a shoulder stock has a comb drop of 2 1/2". The stock iron needs a angularity adjustment! Are you planning on fixing this issue?

  • 5
    1911 Holster stock walnut and leather harness

    Posted by DAVID LIM on Jan 4th 2025

    Excellent product. Fits my Colt 5 inch perfectly. Interesting item for any collection.