Springy stuff
What many people don't know is that the original spring...the one that John Browning and Colt's dream team settled on...wasn't rated in pounds. The specs were 32 and 3/4 turns of .043 diameter music wire. Compared to Wolff's 32-turn/14 pound spring...that works out to about 14.5 pounds at full compression, and 13.5-13.7 pounds at full slide travel as installed in the gun.
This, with the old, soft frames and slides and original USGI spec hardball ammunition.
The spring's specs were changed at some point prior to WW2, and they became 30 turns of .044 diameter music wire...which resulted in pretty much the same dynamics.
And until the introduction of "Heavy Duty" springs, those were pretty much the only springs that were available...either through military surplus, or from Colt.
And the frames held up well into the 1980s when they were phased out.
Too much emphasis on the frame and not enough on the slide. The slide and barrel assembly catches all the hell. That's why the military ordered about a dozen of'em for every finished pistol that was delivered.