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Origins of the Legendary CZ-75: Short Rail and Pre-B Models (Ad-free)

Find something cool for Black Friday at Headstamp Publishing! https://www.headstamppublishing.com The CZ-75 began development in the late 1960s as a commercial project. It was not intended for Czechoslovak military use, but instead for export sales to bring foreign currency into Czechoslovakia. It was designed by František Koucký with some elements form other pistols (like frame rails and camming lug from the SIG P210 and a magazine based on the Browning High Power) and a healthy dose of original creativity (including the trigger mechanism).The design was finalized in 1973, approved for production in 1976, and the first production models were ready in June 1977. The first model of the pistol is quite distinctive, with frame rails much shorter than what we see on examples today. This is called the Short Rail or Slab Side model, and it comprised just the first 16,000 guns produced, with the last ones made very early in 1980. This frame design proved prone to cracking, and in 1980 a longer frame replaced it. A half-cock notch was also added to the hammer in 1980. A few additional points in the production timeline include: 1984: Heavy black enamel paint replaces bluing as the standard finish 1986: Slightly enlarged trigger guard, grip panel design changes 1987: Magazines cease being marked with serial numbers 1988: Serial numbering changes to from 6 digits to 1 letter and 4 digits 1989: Ring hammer replaces spot 1993: CZ-75B introduced with a firing pin block in the slide In 1992 the communist government in Czechoslovakia fell, and the country split into Slovakia and the Czech Republic. CZ became a privately owned company, and a slew of new options on the CZ-75 were rapidly introduced - so we will leave those for a separate video. Thanks to Royal Tiger Imports for providing me with the variety of early CZ-75 models necessary to make this video! http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com

Comments

Beccaskye

Thank you for an early Christmas Present

Pat Patterson

I've got a CZ75 clone: Tanfoglio Mossad (standard size). It is the firearm I can shoot most accurately. I don't know if that's due to the grip angle or not; all stainless steel, it's a hefty piece at 41 ounces. When I downsized a few years ago, passing most of my firearms collection along to my adult children, this is the only 9mm I kept. Uses Mec-Gar CZ75 magazines.

Guido Schriewer

my lady had a 85 as her first handgun. use to praise cz for the gun/money ratio. frankly... I don't like the trigger and I'd want to run a cz like a 1911. my huge paw is too fat to get underneath the safety. the ambi 85 I could work some only slow. the 75... nope. maybe a 97 would work I never tried one. those competition shadows are better. overall I am not a fan of the inside slide either. she switched to a 1911 in 9, too.

Guido Schriewer

I wonder how a 75 40cal may feel. should be heavy enough.

G.I.Orge

Just small historic correction. The communist regime fell in the fall of 1989. ("Velvet revolution" started 17.11.). And Czechoslovakia split on January 1, 1993. :)

Beccaskye

A history of the CZ75 and the clones would be an interesting book!!!

Niels Hansen

Will you do an episode on the CZ85?