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Cajunized Question?
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Noted. Thank you.That's a good and very easy first step.
After that, I'd suggest slowly inserting a loaded magazine slowly, and looking for where things touch/hit. Loaded ammunition might be different than your snap caps - snap caps vary widely in shape, size, and weight, which can also affect how they sit in the magazine. As always, safety first!
Good luck!Comment
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I did not say I had hammer follow. I had the slide stop issue. What
I said was that it would not be good If a pistol with slide closing due to mag insertion also had a hammer drop incident.
There is a reason for all the safety features.
When one or more are absent, bad surprises may happen.Comment
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As others have stated the slide Auto closing is quite common for CZ 75 variants. Like a number of things with CZ pistols, it is luck of the draw. The angle of the slide stop contact surfaces can be adjusted to increase or decrease the likelihood of this happening.Vive La Exile Machine!!
Link--> CZ 75B -vs- CZ 75 SP-01 Comparison
Link--> CGW Type 3 Disco fitting fun
Link--> What is a CZ Tactical sport?
Will work for CZ Pics!Comment
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Slide going forward by itself or not, the chance of the hammer dropping would be equal for both so I don't see how this is relevant.I did not say I had hammer follow. I had the slide stop issue. What
I said was that it would not be good If a pistol with slide closing due to mag insertion also had a hammer drop incident.
There is a reason for all the safety features.
When one or more are absent, bad surprises may happen.
OP, don't worry about it. Like others have mentioned, some people desire it. What do you do after loading a magazine into a gun? You let the slide forward. Having it do it for you is just a plus. If it was inconsistently doing this then it would be an issue worth tackling.
Unfortunately none of my guns do this but I really wish it did, especially as a lefty
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+1 for this. Ive got HKs, Sigs, Glocks, CZs, etc that all do this.There is nothing wrong with it. It normally takes a pretty firm seating of the mag....The more you use a gun the more likely it will do it...My guns that do it...Glock, S&W M&P, CZ, Walther, Tanfo, a few 1911, and Sigs..
It nothing like a car "jumping" into gear..not even close.Comment
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Anchors Aweigh
sigpicComment
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The way you wrote the initial post was not clear. You said "I had the issue" after writing about hammer follow. You did not write "I had the slide drop issue" after writing about hammer follow.I did not say I had hammer follow. I had the slide stop issue. What
I said was that it would not be good If a pistol with slide closing due to mag insertion also had a hammer drop incident.
There is a reason for all the safety features.
When one or more are absent, bad surprises may happen.
Safety feature? I've seen many 1911's and other semi-automatic pistols where the slide would go into battery at the slightest touch, after inserting the magazine.
Are you saying the slide stop is a "safety feature'? Very interesting, I've never heard that before.
When a hammer follows on slide drop, I've never ever seen one fire, and I've seen that happen many times in IPSC/USPSA competition. You seem to be saying that the pistol would fire, but I'm not sure. The hammer following the slide doesn't give the inertial firing pin enough inertia to set off a primer.There are some people that it's just not worth engaging.
It's a muzzle BRAKE, not a muzzle break. Or is your muzzle tired?Comment
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OP, not sure what your level of training is currently. My suggestion would be to do a fair bit if practice with this pistol, both dry practice and live fire. There's no substitute for training/practice - doing everything safely. Finger off the trigger until it's actually needed/intended to fire, etc. Lots of people never ever practice. Be a professional at safety - you might already be there. Please forgive me if this isn't appropriate for your situation. I've been remembering the ND's I've seen at various events and ranges when people weren't completely competent, and completely familiar with their pistol/revolver/rifle. If the slide follows a reload, and the shooter panics, and squeezes the trigger, just because they were surprised. One reason safe practice and competition is good, it can breed good habits. Again, sorry if this is not good info for you......
(seen lots of weird stuff over the years)There are some people that it's just not worth engaging.
It's a muzzle BRAKE, not a muzzle break. Or is your muzzle tired?Comment
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I favor the feature and have several guns that do this. As others have said, the hammer falling upon closing the slide is a separate issue and would likely happen whether the slide cycles "automatically" or manually released. I am going to close the slide anyway and then either shoot or put on the safety. It is a slight advantage for a speedier reload. Just train so you are used to it.Comment
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I never knew this was a thing but apparently competition shooters actually look for that exact feature on their winning guns because it reduces motion which will reduce time! Here's the video I first saw that shows me that feature and even how to do it on your CZ 75:
I wanted to do this to my CZ but unfortunately I do not have it at this time hopefully soon though.Comment
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It is called inertia feed and I set up my CZ Shadow 2 slide stop to do this consistently with a full magazine slammed in. This gun is for competitive shooting.
Only gun in my collection that does this without modification is my M&P 9mm.NRA Member, CAPRC MemberComment
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yup, inertia feed. insert mag with authority, slide release is engaged. insert mag slowly and gently, slide stays locked back.Comment
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