I’d be delighted to spit on its grave.
We didn’t abandon you, Colt. You abandoned us, and a helluva long time ago too.
They bet on the police state, never dreaming that the ‘civilian’ market was about to explode. And then the State went lowest-bidder or something and left them to dry on the curb. Actually, now I think on it, spitting on its grave would give it too much dignity. Kick it into the ditch and be done with it.
















































Yep. Not like they were a little, under-funded company that bet big and lost on one gov contract. They repeatedly spat on civilians, over and over and…
Come to think of it, my favorite Colt (Trooper Mk III) was aimed at the gov/cop market.
They *used* to make really great stuff. One of my most prized possessions is a Colt Anaconda. It complements my S&W 629 perfectly. One of these days, I’ve got to get a two gun holster rig. There is a symmetry….one cylinder rotates one way, the other cylinder rotates the other.
But abandoning the civilian market was a stupid move, and I cannot help but think that they might have been maneuvered into that so they could then go down afterwards when the contracts shifted.
or is that overly paranoid ?
Unreconstructed: has the Anaconda held up under heavy use with heavy loads?
I ask because they have a reputation for fragility and going out of time–apparently all the internals are crumbly, spongy MIM.
My favorite Colt is my Combat Commander, passed on to me. It was 35 years old when I got it, and had never been fired – I fixed that shortcoming rather quickly.
Thanks for the link, Joel. The comments on that article are worth going back for.