Cocked and locked with double action.

Status
Not open for further replies.
hAkron, that looks like the same holster. My strap reaches easily across the uncocked hammer. When I replicate your "cocked and locked and snapped in" photo, I can put my thumb against the side of the strap and pull the pistol right out without unsnapping it. That's what makes me think this holster wasn't designed for cocked-and-locked carry. Can you do this with yours?
 
If I pull the strap forward from the gun it unsnaps before it clears enough of the back of the gun to slip out. I will say though that we at talking about a $12.00 holster, and even though the build quality seems suspiciously heavy duty for the price, it is totally realistic to assume that either I have a short strap or you have a long strap.
 
I will say though that we at talking about a $12.00 holster, and even though the build quality seems suspiciously heavy duty for the price, it is totally realistic to assume that either I have a short strap or you have a long strap.
Could be. Maybe it's an "option." ;)
 
Very wierd I just read through both My 75B and 2075 RAMI manual and I can't find it.

I distinctly remember reading in the manual that it was safe to carry the weapon at half cock and that the full safety was for a momentary break in firing.

I am 100% positive I read it I just have to figure out where

Well, I don't think you're going to find it in a CZ manual. I suspect you did read it, but it was more likely in a discussion like this.

If it's any consolation, I think you're perfectly safe doing so with a "B" model -- simply because all of the decocker versions do just that, when operated as they are intended to be operated. The firing pin block mechanism is what makes that carry method safe.

My argument on this point wasn't that it was not safe to do so, but that I didn't think the half-cock notch was an original design feature intended to function as a "carry" position.

As noted above, the decocker models do it, and they have only one hammer hook; the non-decocker "B" models, with both hammer hooks intact are, at least in theory, even more safe carried in that mode.
 
Walt Sherrill said:
I suspect you did read it, but it was more likely in a discussion like this.

Nope, I distinctly remember reading it out of a book . I wonder if it was some kind of CZ catalog.

Be that as it may you are correct it isn't in the manual.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top