I picked up a CZ 2075 Rami last week to use as a summer carry gun. So far, I've put around 140 rounds through it and find it to be a nice shooter. A CZ 2075 Rami is an aluminum frame/steel slide pistol that holds either 10 or 14 rounds in the included mags. It has a thumb safety that only engages when the hammer is back, but is a DA/SA gun. The Rami is kind of an odd pistol for CZ. It uses the standard CZ 75 style fire control group and has almost complete parts interchangability with the CZ 75 for internal components. But, outwardly, it looks more like a smaller CZ 40B than it does the 75. In fact, the gun really looks like the child of a 1911 and CZ 97B that spent a winter in the safe together.
The gun weighs about 25oz empty, which puts it at about the exact size and weight of a Kimber Ultra Carry when loaded with the 14 round magazine. The gun is supposed to come with two magazines, but are often found with three in the box. I was lucky and my gun came with one short 10 round magazine (pictured) as well as two 14 round extended magazines. It will also fit higher capacity MecGar mags such as the 16 and 17 round mags. It does come with an adjustable sight, which seems like an odd choice for a gun designed around CC use. The slide release and safety are shaved, but there is this big sight sitting up top. Odd choice there.
It's kind of a chunky little gun. It does not fit standard CZ holsters well due to the wide frame and slide, but mainly due to the wide trigger guard. It feels different than the CZ 75 does in the hand, but it still feels really nice. Recoil is a bit snappier than an all steel gun. It really is rather mild though, when compared to a 380 or Keltec PF9.
I have found that this gun absolutely does not like the lead 125g 9mm reloads that work well in my other CZs. The bullet profile contacts the rifling and refuses to chamber. It functioned well with WWB ammo, but was no overly accurate. It does seem to work very well with Speer Gold Dot 124g SD ammo as well as with the Hornady Critical Defense 9mm ammo. The Hornady CD ammo was the most accurate of the bunch and felt better than the Speer did in terms of recoil. I was grouping at around 4 inches offhand at 10 yards but I think the gun can do better than that. I was wearing bifocals at the time and that always makes shooting more difficult for me.
Overall, I think this is a really well built little gun. It's quite versatile in that it can be carried with the small 10 round magazine, the included 14 round or even the 17 round magazines. It seems to be accurate and should have that famous CZ reliability. The main thing it has going against it in terms of CC is the width. It's not a thin gun, but it does pack a lot into a small footprint otherwise.
The gun weighs about 25oz empty, which puts it at about the exact size and weight of a Kimber Ultra Carry when loaded with the 14 round magazine. The gun is supposed to come with two magazines, but are often found with three in the box. I was lucky and my gun came with one short 10 round magazine (pictured) as well as two 14 round extended magazines. It will also fit higher capacity MecGar mags such as the 16 and 17 round mags. It does come with an adjustable sight, which seems like an odd choice for a gun designed around CC use. The slide release and safety are shaved, but there is this big sight sitting up top. Odd choice there.
It's kind of a chunky little gun. It does not fit standard CZ holsters well due to the wide frame and slide, but mainly due to the wide trigger guard. It feels different than the CZ 75 does in the hand, but it still feels really nice. Recoil is a bit snappier than an all steel gun. It really is rather mild though, when compared to a 380 or Keltec PF9.
I have found that this gun absolutely does not like the lead 125g 9mm reloads that work well in my other CZs. The bullet profile contacts the rifling and refuses to chamber. It functioned well with WWB ammo, but was no overly accurate. It does seem to work very well with Speer Gold Dot 124g SD ammo as well as with the Hornady Critical Defense 9mm ammo. The Hornady CD ammo was the most accurate of the bunch and felt better than the Speer did in terms of recoil. I was grouping at around 4 inches offhand at 10 yards but I think the gun can do better than that. I was wearing bifocals at the time and that always makes shooting more difficult for me.
Overall, I think this is a really well built little gun. It's quite versatile in that it can be carried with the small 10 round magazine, the included 14 round or even the 17 round magazines. It seems to be accurate and should have that famous CZ reliability. The main thing it has going against it in terms of CC is the width. It's not a thin gun, but it does pack a lot into a small footprint otherwise.
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