The Auto Ordnance Licensed 1911 Pellet Pistol is a licensed replica handgun. It has excellent attention to detail and is constructed out of metal. Ergonomically correct, it has controls like the thumb safety and magazine release in the right places. And because it is fully licensed, it bears the correct markings, trademarks, and logos in all the right spots.
The efficient non-blowback system maximizes the number of shots fired on each 12g CO2 cartridge. It shoots double-action only and utilizes a precision rifled barrel for accurate shots. This pistol is 8.66" long and weighs 2.2 lbs., which helps add to the realism of the Cybergun Auto Ordnance Licensed 1911.
Auto Ordnance 1911 CO2 Pellet Pistol
- .177 caliber
- Length: 8.66”
- Weight: 2.2lb
- Magazine capacity: 12 rounds
- Up to 359 FPS
- Semi-Auto
- Powered by one 12 gram CO2 cartridge
- Dual thumb and beavertail grip safeties
- Non-blowback
- Manufacturer Auto-Ordnance
- Caliber .177
- Velocity 359 fps
- Condition New
- Ammo Type Pellets
- Action Semi-auto
- Barrel Style Rifled
- Fire Mode Repeater
- Gun Weight 2.20
- Overall Length 8.66
- Loudness 3-Medium
- Mechanism CO2
- Rail No
- Safety Manual
- Front Sights Blade
- Rear Sights Fixed
- Use Plinking/Fun
- Warranty 60-day limited warranty
- Noise Level 80.4 dB
Pros
The weight of the pistol is light and easy to handle
Cons
Disappointed from the Start
I had issues with this pistol right out of the box. The magazine wouldn’t eject smoothly, and I had to follow Airgun Depot’s advice to spray it with silicone and repeatedly insert/eject it to get it working properly. That temporarily solved the problem.
However, things went downhill from there. After installing the CO2 cartridge and loading 12 pellets, the magazine was difficult to insert. I managed to fire the first six rounds, but when I tried to eject the magazine, it was jammed again. Then, while attempting to rotate the barrel to load the remaining pellets, the pin holding the barrel fell out completely.
At that point, I didn’t feel comfortable continuing to use the pistol. I contacted the manufacturer and filled out their support form, but never received a response. I even tried to purchase a replacement barrel and magazine, but still haven’t heard back.
Based on my experience, I cannot recommend this pistol. The mechanical issues and lack of customer
Perfect weight shoots straight and a great looking pistol fills like the real thing having a Springfield armory 1911 A1 45 ACP
Pros
The blow back action is right on the money
Cons
None
Question?
Login to ask someone who bought this product.What's the material it uses
asked Hans from USAresearch shows two models are made , one all metal (zamak) and a slightly lighter and cheaper model with a polymer frame-metal slide combination. I determined that ADG has the all metal gun by its weight.
LEBRON from USAdoes this gun use slugs does the gun use slugs .177 4.5
asked William from USAYou mean 'pellets'? It says in the description it uses .177 PELLETS for ammo. Read it again. I know of no .177 pistol using "slugs" for ammo. Basically three types of ammo for 177 caliber air guns: BB's, Pellets and Darts.
James from USA







I really wanted to this to work. Found several things that helped but never satisfactorily: (1) After trying several types of pellets, found that only wadcutters work, (2) Made a pellet seating tool to center the pellets in the rotary magazine, (3) When it jams, use the supplied cleaning tool to push the pellet back into the mag. Finally determined that the fundamental problem is that the pellets will get stuck part way into the barrel breach. The issue is that the breach lacks a decent tapered entry "funnel" (forcing cone), and so alignment between the mag and the barrel must be precise in order for this to work. After a few months of trial and error, I have given up on it - it is now a wall hanger.
Pros
Look and feel are authentic.
Cons
Jams often.