The Guns & Ammo Network



New Handguns: Nighthawk Lady Hawk 1911

This week we’re at the PASA Park shooting facility in Illinois

Nighthawk Lady Hawk 1911

With its titanium blue finish and hard-chorme controls, the Nighthawk Lady Hawk Custom cuts quite a figure.

getting an exclusive new look at the hottest products coming to market. Every day we’ll be bringing you highlights from our time on the range. Today’s comes to you courtesy of Nighthawk Custom and pistol designer extraordinaire Richard Heinie.

This past winter and spring, while working on Handguns TV, it was my pleasure to get to shoot a number of guns from Nighthawk Custom, and the one I liked the best was the Lady Hawk. Designed by Richard Heinie, he of Heinie sights fame, the gun is basically a slimmed down 1911 meant to fit smaller hands—women, junior shooters and people like me. It’s been a runaway success.

Funny story from CEO Craig Gholson, who presented today, is that guys would buy these guns “for their wives,” and at least for the non-shooting wives, the second she would stash the gun in the safe and more or less leave it there, the husband would adopt it as his new carry gun. Great gun-buying strategy, if you ask me.

Also funny is that the male buyers started asking if Nighthawk would build a Lady Hawk but not put “Lady Hawk” on the slide. Why? Because some guys find it embarrassing to have that on the gun once they start using it. Me, I think it’s a cool name—maybe I always had a soft spot for the 1985 movie of the same name starring Mathew Broderick, Rutger Hauer and the ravishing Michelle Pfeiffer. But I digress.

The Lady Hawk is chock full of features. Heinie thinned the mainspring housing and frontstrap, but he found that once the frontstrap was thinned to his satisfaction, it was difficult to checker. So he came up with his Signature Scallop, which is as functional as it is good-looking. The resulting grip circumference is just .065 inch larger than a Springfield EMP.

Other features include Ultra-Thin Alumagrips, and Heinie magazine release, tool steel hammer and sear and Slant-Pro Straight Eight nigh sights. The mag well is contoured for carry.

It’s now available in a Compact version, and I shot it in both .45 and 9mm. Now I know some among you snort with derision at the notion of a 1911 being anything but a .45, but after shooting them both, I’m partial to the 9. In that caliber, in this 4.25-inch configuration, the 9 just comes back on target quicker and, to me, handles better

It will come in carbon steel, stainless steel or aluminum frame. I hope they keep the name, at least long enough for me to save up enough cash to buy one—for my wife, of course. At $3,000, that’ll take a while.

  • Diana Rupp

    Great plan! Christmas is coming!

  • Don Wensel

    $3000 for a 1911……have these gun companies lost their minds??

  • Randy W.

    For that price, does it come WITH a woman??

    • ginaf

      Ouch…so much for getting one , guess I'll stick with my

      XDM 45 – love it but the LadyHawk is a beauty. I need a man who like to buy his woman guns…..

  • Frank

    AT $3000, I could have my own custom 1911 made to my specifications.

    Way too expensive for what you get.

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      AMEN Frank! I love Nighthawk ….. but someone was drinking when they priced this thing.

  • Dale

    Why do these 1911 makers think the .45 is s special as to think to charge $3,000 for it? I can get a SigSauer .45 with all of their refinements for $1,000 and I'm talking one that's been through their custom shop! Shame on you Nighthawk! There is a recession going on in case you haven't noticed!

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      A Sig Sauer WHAT that has been through their Custom Shop? At $1,000 if it went through their Custom Shop that is ALL it did; pass through one door and out another. Until they introduced the "traditional" 1911 they were off on another tangent; typical looking SIG SLIDE – no resembling a 1911 at all. The external extractor is simply because they couldn't get the internal one to function properly. EXETER did not and does not build them like the Germans – be it the old West German or the new-age German weapons.

      When SIG was bough out by the TEXTILE BOYS they turned their focus towards PROFIT and quality / quality control went away. All that garbage "Diamondplate" bling is thanks to Mr. Cohen who pushed BLING at Kimber. He ruined them and now he's after Sig.

      I'll put my 20 and 25 year old Sig Sauer firearms up against any …. but the new version of Sig ….. no way …… Custom Shop or not.

  • Jamie D

    Holy, I was thinking of getting my wife a hand gun for X-mas but with the greedy prices of the manufacturers, I will by one on the down low just like the criminals do. And they wonder why all the American companies are going out of buisness or over seas.

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      You will buy like a criminal does? Nice pal — really nice. Good move. Make gun owners look like criminals. "Buy one on the down low" ….. whatta idiot.

  • A. R.

    Nice …… but it's not THAT nice .Jaaaaaaaaaaaaaysus !

  • http://AOL John Eaton

    When you go into detail regarding a new, weight-saving 1911, why don't you include the weight, in ounces? Seems reasonable.

  • Dave

    These guns are custom made and hand fitted.in the USA.

    That's why thay are more expensive than a factory-made gun made in Crotia. I own several Springfield XDs and carry them every day, but they can't compare to a custom made gun.

  • Tropical Mike

    Take a look at the Kimber SOLO and see how it compares. It is made in the USA and I think has this gun beat all around.

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      The SOLO is a ammo-sensitive weapon, over-rated, under-performing, gun mag hyped, over-priced piece of typical Kimber "bling". It takes three men and a lady to pull the slide back, the springs go south by 700 rounds, the trigger is supposedly 'smooth' – and it is – compared to sandpaper.

      NO. The SOLO is definitely NOT as good as the Nighthawk ….. NO Kimber is as good as a Nighthawk AND ….. NO Kimber will EVER be as good as a Nighthawk.

  • Adam

    Anyone who thinks a Kimber is comparable to a Nighthawk or any other true custom 1911 is just plain ignorant about the subject. The reason they charge 3K for one of their handguns is because that is what they are worth. If you are not in a position to be able to afford a nice custom pistol such as this, then don't buy one. But don't knock Nighthawk Custom for putting out an amazing product and certainly don't compare them to Kimber. Thats just funny

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      Right on Adam! Kimber "The Original Shining Sensation"! They don't usually work any better than a Rock Island — but they will blind the bad guys. That clown Cohen really screwed the puppy-dog when he headed Kimber down 'the path'. NOW …. he's doing the same to Sig Sauer!

      Oh …. by the way 'world' …. Nighthawk makes a fiine product – but at the price …. can you say, "Baer" – "Wilson" – "Brown" – "Reeder" – "Gemini" or a host of others. I hunted for a used Nighthawk — found one at a "I gotta sell it sale" and it IS a fabulous fabulous (twice fabulous) firearm. The "Lady"? Naaaaaaaa………. not until the next load of powder falls off the drug dealers Lexus!

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      It is NOT a $3,000 gun. Simple as that; it IS a great gun, but at $3,000 there are far better available and I do NOT mean Kimber (BLING).

  • Denise

    Wow, don’t they realize how many nice guns you can buy for the price of one of these?

  • JW

    It amazes me that some (ahem) "men" get all up in arms because they don't want "lady" printed on their handgun. One of the best concealment pistols ever made–as far as pure concealment is concerned–is (IMO) the S&W 3913 LadySmith… ultra slim & compact. I wouldn't have had any machismo/ego problem in carrying it. I just hated the gun plain & simple, and my wife couldn't control it.

    That said, I don't think I'll be buying a Lady Hawk for me, my wife, nor anyone else at that price… even in a bull market. Yes it's a custom gun and probably worthy of a fair amount of green, but $3K? Not sure about that. It's innovative, though (i.e. machining down the MS housing & frontstrap to reduce grip size, albeit offset by the fact that standard parts are no longer interchangable… I assume).

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      'Ahem' …. if I kin wears their undies …. I kin carry a gun what says, "Lady" all over the dang thang! Howevrah …. not at THAT price; not unless the "UN-lady" comes in the package.

  • bigjohn

    Black Hawk make beautiful guns and performan excellent but I don't know they stay in business at their prices. That goes for Wilson, Ed Brown, and Les Baer. All excellent quality gun makers in their own right but most working people who love the 1911 as much as I do can't afford those guns evene at used prices. I think 1.5 to 2 inch groups out of any defense handgun is all most of will every need for self-defense. These gun makers make guns better then most of us can hold and shoot straight under stress anyway. That being said if I won the lottery tomorrow mornging I would treat myself to one made by every one of them. Why? Because I could and because in my opinion there has never been a gun made better then a 1911.

    • Don Bailey

      Go with a Springfield EMP 9mm and get the same quality, just as accurate in the right hands for less than half the price.

  • bigjohn

    ginaf, funny! We are looking for a woman to buy us some guns too.

  • bigjohn

    I can see buying a Nighhawk, Les Baer, Wilson, Or Ed Brown if it was the only 45 caliber 1911 that you were ever going to have or own. However the 1911 owners and lovers that I know have more then one 1911. Anyway once you have the full seize one you have to get the medium, and small seize for summer and for any other excuse you care to use.

    • Tom H. – New Mexico

      Anything less than 4.25" slide length is OUT —- Kimber (yuck) does a few that are shorter – they run 500 rounds and need transplants. Springfield …. same thing and they kick like elephants. IMHO of course. To each his/her own!

  • tammie

    how does para ordance rate

    • Don War

      I have a Para P-14.45 LDA (light double action) for hammer down carry. The trigger is smooth and light but travels more than my single action custom colt. The barrel is ramped and match grade. The full size pistol is all steel @ aprox. 37 oz., 49oz fully loaded w/185g HP. In all these years, through my handloads and premium Hollow points, it has never jammed. Not once. It is accurate enough to hit our target in the house at night. It is too heavy to carry daily but with 14 shots my wife keeps it within easy reach every night. It is a useful tool, not very pretty but how does one explain Concealed Carry to a pretty gun owner? I taught weapons in the US Air Force and one thing we all agree on is that the platform matters little after the projectile takes over. The para does it's job accurately and efficently for my defensive purposes but I'm not in combat anymore. Maybe a $3,000.00 logo is the psycological pressure one needs to impress an enemy into surrendering.

      • James

        Para LDAs are huge piles of garbage. I had the 7.45 LDA and the connecting rod from the trigger to hammer would fall off every 250-300 rounds. Thus revoking its status as a reliable carry gun

  • derf

    I can buy a lot of drugs for three thousands dollars