Does anyone have one of these CZ75B's?

I've had several CZ75B's now, I am currently shooting a stainless CZ75B. Very accurate, reliable, and shiney.
 
Stick with the CZ.
They are great guns right out of the box.
If you like polymer get a SP 01 Phantom. I did a couple months ago and have no regrets.
If you are ever in NS drop me a pm and you can give it a try. :D

Why don't you do us a favour and start a new thread and write a range report up on your Phantom. I would be interested to hear about the gun. Pros and Cons.

Take Care

Bob
 
I've had several CZ75B's now, I am currently shooting a stainless CZ75B. Very accurate, reliable, and shiney.

That's the one with the rubber grips and the ambi safeties, right? If so, that's the gun that turned me onto CZ and I'll want once after I do my Restricted course this month.

I probably won't have the $ until next year sometime, but that'll give me plenty of time to convince Herself that I should be allowed a handgun... :nest:
 
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I love mine:
IMG_0005.jpg



I use it for IPSC and IDPA.
Have about 5000 rounds down it right now.
Lighter Mainspring, lighter recoil spring, Fibre Optic Competition sights.
Next is new grips.
 
I have a Bul Storm(based upon the CZ-75 with several refinements to the design to improve balance, increase durability, and make the gun more comfortable to handle and easy to operate)......
bulstorm.jpg


and I haven't shot any 9mm that feels or shoots better. I also own a Glock 17.
 
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I have a Bul Storm(based upon the CZ-75 with several refinements to the design to improve balance, increase durability, and make the gun more comfortable to handle and easy to operate)......
bulstorm.jpg


and I haven't shot any 9mm that feels or shoots better. I also own a Glock 17.

It sure looks like a Tanfanglio!
 
Interesting. Unless I missed it, not one post in favour of the Glock over the CZ so far. Well you won't get the first one here. After having a lot of CZ exposure (Shadow, 40P, 97B) I broke down and bought a G17 to see what all the hype was about. Basically I test fired it, sold it, and bought CZ85Combat.

Glocks definitely have their strengths (lightweight, reliable, simple function) but IMHO I have to agree with the earlier poster who said the two guns are not in the same class for feel or accuracy.
 
Buy both... you know you're going to eventually anyways, this way you can take 'em both to the range and never be disappointed! :D

(As an aside, I sold my G17 and regret it terribly, I will own another! I still have my CZ pre-B 75... "from my cold, dead hands!")
 
Interesting. Unless I missed it, not one post in favour of the Glock over the CZ so far.

I have been posting and asking a ton of questions about 9mm's and at one time owned a CZ75 but sold it for another gun. Now after all the dumb newbie questions and posts about which one to buy it does appear that you are right and I should not have sold that CZ75 in the first place. That said I think I am going to buy a 1911 in 9mm.....maybe.....just like my 4 year old son I want everything and can't decide on one thing
 
It sure looks like a Tanfanglio!

It's just a pleasure to shoot!! Here's the write-up on it....

Developed by a diverse team of experts comprised of championship-level IPSC competitors, combat veterans, Israeli Special Forces operatives, and ergonomics experts, the double action Storm is BUL Transmark’s first handgun featuring a solid steel frame. Responding to demand for a double action service pistol designed to withstand use and abuse by shooters of all sizes and proficiency levels under adverse conditions, BUL’s team went one better by not only meeting and exceeding this long list of requirements, but also by keeping the cost down!

Though BUL’s Storm is built tough and priced right, affordability and durability are only the beginning. As with their award-winning M-5 series handguns, the BUL Storm is also based upon a proven platform (the CZ-75 in this case) whose track record for reliability is beyond reproach. In engineering the BUL Storm, several refinements were made to the CZ-inspired design to improve balance, increase durability, and make the gun more comfortable to handle and easy to operate.

The BUL Storm is built on one of the strongest-looking semi-auto frames we’ve ever seen however its contoured design and no slip rubber grips make the gun easy to hold and comfortable enough to put many other “high cap. nines” to shame. Three dot sights, chrome-lined barrel, and smooth factory adjusted 4.5-5.5lb SA/DA trigger are all standard on the Storm series handguns.
 
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