
| Calibre | 9 mm Luger; .40 S&W; 9 mm P.A. Rubber |
| Magazine Capacity | 10(14); 8(10); 10 |
| Trigger mechanism operation | SA/DA |
| Sights | fixed, snag free |
| Overall length | 168 mm |
| Barrel length | 74,6 mm |
| Height | 120 mm |
| Width | 33 mm |
| Weight | 665 g |
| Barrel | hammer forged |
| Surface treatment | black polycoat |
| Safety features | manual safety hammer safety notch firing pin block |
In 1975, Česká zbrojovka based in Uherský Brod, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic) introduced it’s now famous the CZ 75 9mm semi automatic pistol, which is still in production and is still one of them most popular semi autos in the world today. The CZ 2075 RAMI is their subcompact offering which came out circa 2007. The CZ 2075 RAMI P is the polymer version of the aluminium alloy 2075 RAMI and is 30 g lighter, other than that it’s the same gun. I had the opportunity to try out the CZ 2075 RAMI P 9x21mm this week. Don’t worry it comes in 9×19 mm, but that calibre is illegal for civilian use in Italy.
The first thing I noticed was high light it was. At 665 g this has to be the lightest subcompact I’ve ever fired. By contrast, the H&K P2000 SK 680 g and the Beretta PX4 Storm SubCompact is 740 g, although the CZ 2075 RAMI P is actually 5mm longer, 3mm taller and 0.5mm thicker than the P2000 SK, and 10 mm longer than the Px4 Storm Subcompact. So it’s really not a smaller gun — no more concealable – but it has a 10 +1 round capacity in 9mm, whereas the P2000 SK and Px4 Storm Subcompact have a 13 +1 round capacity.
The only problem I had with shooting it is that the trigger is uncomfortable and bites my finger. The ergonomics aren’t as good as the P2000 SK and Px4 Storm Subcompact, but it still was a good fit for my petite hand. Rob finds all subcompacts too small and the RAMI is no exception.
Shooting wise, it is a fantastic gun. I fired 300 rounds with no failures and that was with no cleaning or lube. The gun is designed to be accurate to 50m and it is. But what really interests me is rate of fire, recoil and accuracy over 10m in a dark room. The CZ 2075 RAMI P does all of those things well: it has illuminated titanium three-dot sights and it’s sleek shape is great for point shooting and there is very little recoil. However, despite being a great little female friendly gun. I still prefer the P2000 SK and Px4 Storm Subcompact, so I didn’t buy it.
It comes in 9 mm P.A. Rubber as well — WTF? Why would anyone want a semicompact that fires rubber bullets? Why would anyone want any gun chambered for rubber bullets?
Love the new design, and the black RAMI looks great against the blue design.
But I can’t access older comments on the other thread. Despite trying several different ways, I can’t access the older comments on the knife sharpening thread. All that shows are the last three comments.
Similarly, I have not been able to access multi-page comments threads on other posts. Your old design had a link that said “older comments” and “newer comments”. but I can’t find that feature and thus cannot access the full content of commentary.
@ el Fish
Thanks, I didn’t realise that. You can now view all comments on a single page.
Rubber bullets are a big no but looks like a good gun.
Interesting bog you have. I wanted to leave a comment on the page about knife fighting but couldn’t figure out how. Basically it was about the Sicilian knife fighting style you studied. Seems to me that it’s a lot closer to fencing than more exotic knife fighting styles. Myself I did a year of Kali-Eskrima and a couple of months of fencing and I found fencing closer to reality (I’ve had the really fortunate opportunities of being homeless and working in security in Los Angeles, New York and Paris [hence I've actually been stabbed and stabbed a few people back in the course of my fun filled life].
Hello Stefi, sights on RAMI are TRITIUM not titanium. Tritium is radioactive gas sealed in capsules with phosphor coating. Tritium is safe when sealed. Capsules are inserted to sights and lasts about 10 years making phosphor glow all this time.