Yeah…except that my one Colt - a 1911 Competition model in .38 super - needed work out of the box. The safety was hard to select on and off.I had a Range Officer in 9mm. It was a nice pistol, but it wasn't as nice of a pistol as a Colt. Ive got more than one super 38 colt with a 9mm barrel which is a good option too if you can get and fit the barrel.
A word about 1911/s in other than 45. Many of them use a ramped barrel (and there are 2 different types of ramp) VS properly forging and matching the frame to the proper dimensions for 10/40 or 9/38. I am not a fan of ramped barrels and would avoid them, every trouble child 1911 ive owned has had a ramped barrel and i don't think it's a coincidence. Ramped barrels are also not necessary in a properly dimensioned 1911 shooting "normal" ammunition. IF you were loading super or 9x23 to major power factor and shooting a lot of it i might be persuaded to entertain an argument about it. Even at that i shot a fair amount (thousands of rounds) of max load VV out of a standard barrel with no issues and my normal had load in both 9mm and super exceeds anything but specialty ammunition.
This is why my first choice would be Colt.
I had to disassemble my brand new gun, and fit the safety properly. A real lack of QC from the factory.
Then, in the first hundred rounds, the fiber optic rod fell out of the front sight, so, I had to fit a new length of rod.
It’s a good gun now, and very reliable, but quality and Colt don’t necessarily go hand in hand.
Contrast that with the Range Officer and the Mil-Spec from SA in .45 ACP that ran great right out of the box. No parts fitting, no parts replacement, needed.