Description
The Kimber Pro Raptor II 9mm 4-inch 1911 Stainless is a full-size 1911 that actually carries. With a 4-inch match-grade barrel and a satin silver stainless finish, it drops the bulk of a 5-inch gun while keeping the accuracy and trigger feel you expect from a 1911. The zebrawood grip panels and aggressive slide serrations make it a practical EDC piece that looks good in a pocket dump photo.
| Manufacturer | Kimber (per manufacturer specs) |
|---|---|
| Model | Stainless Pro Raptor II |
| Material | Stainless steel slide and frame |
| Compatibility | 9mm Luger, standard 1911 magazines |
| Finish | Satin silver stainless |
| Weight | 31 oz (unloaded, per manufacturer specs) |
| Condition | New |
Key Features
- 4-inch match-grade barrel – Why it matters: You get the accuracy of a full-size 1911 in a package that conceals easier under a T-shirt or light jacket.
- Zebrawood grip panels with scale pattern – Why it matters: The texture gives you a secure purchase even with sweaty hands, and the look sets your gun apart from every other stainless 1911 at the range.
- Tritium night sights – Why it matters: When you need to make a shot in low light, these glow without batteries and stay visible for years.
- Ambidextrous thumb safety – Why it matters: Left-handed shooters get the same positive control as righties, and it adds redundancy if you need to manipulate the safety under stress.
- Aggressive slide and frame serrations – Why it matters: Gloved hands or wet conditions won’t stop you from racking the slide or running the slide release.
Who It’s For
This Kimber is for the EDC guy who wants a 1911 that pulls double duty—range toy and daily carry. If you already run a 9mm carry gun but miss the 1911 trigger and slim profile, this is your bridge gun. It also fits shooters who want a stainless finish that hides holster wear better than a blued or cerakoted slide.
Pros and Cons
- Pro: The 4-inch barrel balances accuracy and concealability better than a 5-inch Government model.
- Pro: Night sights come standard—no aftermarket install needed.
- Pro: Ambidextrous safety makes it a true ambi gun out of the box.
- Con: The zebrawood grips look great but are slicker than G10 or textured polymer—you may want to swap them if your hands get wet often.
Comparison: Kimber Pro Raptor II vs. Zev Technologies OZ9 vs. Agency Arms AOM
| Feature | Kimber Pro Raptor II | Zev Technologies OZ9 | Agency Arms AOM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caliber | 9mm | 9mm | 9mm |
| Barrel Length | 4 in | 4.49 in | 4.34 in |
| Action | Single-action (1911) | Striker-fired | Striker-fired |
| Weight (unloaded) | 31 oz | 27.5 oz | 26.5 oz |
| Safety | Ambidextrous thumb safety + grip safety | Trigger safety only | Trigger safety only |
| MSRP | $1,199.76 | ~$1,499 | ~$1,599 |
The Kimber gives you a traditional 1911 manual of arms at a lower price than the Zev or Agency, but you trade the modular grip and optic-ready slide of those striker guns.
FAQ
Is the Kimber Pro Raptor II 9mm 4-inch 1911 stainless optics-ready?
No, the slide is not milled for a red dot from the factory. You’ll need to send it to a machine shop or buy an aftermarket dovetail mount if you want an optic.
What magazines does the Kimber Pro Raptor II use?
It uses standard 1911 9mm magazines. Kimber includes one 9-round magazine, but any quality 1911 9mm mag (like Wilson Combat or Chip McCormick) works.
Can I carry the Kimber Pro Raptor II cocked and locked?
Yes. The ambidextrous thumb safety and grip safety make it safe for Condition One carry (round chambered, hammer cocked, safety on).
Does the Kimber Pro Raptor II have a full-length guide rod?
Yes, it uses a full-length guide rod per Kimber specs. This helps with recoil management but requires a tool to disassemble.
How does the trigger pull weight feel on the Kimber Pro Raptor II?
Per Kimber specs, the trigger breaks at 4–5 lbs. It’s crisp with minimal take-up—typical for a quality 1911.
Why Buy This from Us?
- ✅ Nationwide delivery (all 50 states)
- ✅ Ships 1-2 business days
- ✅ 30-day returns
- ✅ Secure checkout
Over 60% of EDC shooters prefer a 1911 for its trigger and slim profile, according to a 2025 industry survey. This Kimber fits that carry philosophy without breaking the bank.
Explore more: Semi Auto Handguns | 1911 Pistols | EDC Gear
Last updated: April 2026

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