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Frustrating Things About the Fusion Firearms XP Pro

I’ve owned the Fusion Firearms XP Pro a few months now. I’ve a little under 500 rounds through it. I’ve been focusing on being familar with my EDC, the Prodigy DS Compact, which is why the round count on the XP Pro is rather low.

I shot the XP Pro a few days ago and while it still shoots good and there have been no failures, there are frustrations.

The frustrations come with disassembling the gun. A simple field strip is not a simple as other guns. Firstly, the gun requires a take-down tool (a paper clip will do). I’m familiar with using such tools and take-down on other 1911s are simple but, again, it’s not simple with the XP Pro. My XP Pro has a reverse plug that can’t be removed by hand. Each time I’ve to disassemble it, I’ve to use a punch to remove the reverse plug. I shouldn’t have to do that and I’ve never seen a 1911 that requires such a thing. I understand that gun makers sometimes want their gun’s fitment to be tight, but there’s really nothing to gain with a reverse plug being so tight that a mallet is required for removal. And, no, I do not want to have to refit that part (that’ll be a pain in the ass). I honestly don’t think that part should be that tight.

As well, I’m currently unable to remove the firing pin retaining plate. This is another item that is far too tight. I’ve tried twice to remove it and was unsuccessful each time I tried. This item is tricky to remove when the plate is so tight, because you’ve to push in the firing pin before trying to tap out the plate with a punch. Fusion Firearms has a video demonstrating how to remove a tight plate. Again, I’ve no idea why that part is so tight. I’ve never run into this issue in the past with my other 1911s/2011s. In my opinion, it shouldn’t be that tight.

Now, the firing pin retaining plate is not going to be removed all that often, so I can deal with the difficulty in removing it since it won’t be removed often, but the fact that I had to seek out a video to do such a simple thing as removing the damned plate…that’s frustrating.

What’s even more frustrating is that I’ve to use a hammer and punch to remove the reverse plug. If I’m at the range and have to field strip the gun, the tight reverse plug is a show-stopper – I’d have to wait until I got home, as I’m not going to start carrying a hammer and punch in my range bag, just for this gun (as a just-in-case).

Another thing is that I’ve noticed the chrome coating flaking off in places (most of it being along the areas where the frame and slide meet. It doesn’t appear as if it’s being rubbed off via friction…it’s flat-out just flaking without any other obvious catalyst.

As well, the chrome coating is browning on the underside of the slide and underside of the dust cover.

None of what I listed above causes the gun to fail. As far as function goes, the gun is functioning. That’s good, but the other things need to be addressed, in my opinion.

Once I reach 1000 rounds through the gun, I’ll publish a video speaking of these issues. If I have to, I can send the gun back to Fusion to see if they can make those parts easier to remove (and to see what they say about the chrome browning and flaking).

Categories
handgun Optic

I Ordered An Acro Adapter Plate For the Prodigy DS

I want to experiment with mounting my Viridian RFX45 to my Prodigy DS Compact. The RFX45 uses the Aimpoint Acro footprint.

I’d almost decided to buy the RFX44 because it has a slightly smaller stature (not quite as big as the RFX45), but that one also uses the Aimpoint Acro footprint. I’m thinking that the RFX45 should fit the Prodigy since the plate will raise the optic a bit, which should help with fitment. That’s what I noticed when I mounted the RFX45 to my Tisas DS9 Carry, at least (I also used an Acro-to-RMSc adapter to mount the optic).

In researching, it seems that I can use the Aimpoint Acro adapter mounting plate (SKI is PH5077N-ACRO-PLT-RET; plate number is A18B) from Springfield Armory. The cost is $129.

To cut costs, I searched for the A18B plate across the internet, to see if I could find it cheaper. The lowest I saw it was $99 but also was wary of shipping costs – in my experience, gun stores rape folks with shipping costs, which is why I was skeptical about obtaining the plate for less than $130. I found a seller on Amazon that sells the part for $109 and since I’ve Amazon Prime, shipping costs don’t exist for this item.

The plate should arrive by this coming Wednesday (6/18)…just in time for Juneteenth (ie, time to test via a range visit).

I’m not even sure I want to run such a large optic on my carry gun but I’m more curious than anything else. I might not even fit it this week, as I really don’t want to mess up the zero on my carry gun by removing my current optic, so I might wait until next year to try it – I do plan to purchase a Prodigy DS 5″ Comp or maybe an Emissary.