easyg
Member
Okay, it was totally my fault.
I'm not trying to place blame on anyone other than myself.
I dropped my pistol today.
While in my kitchen, I was holstering my CZ 83 pistol.
It slipped from my grip and hit the tiled floor.
I picked it up and gave it a thorough inspection....not even a scratch!!!
I decided to check that it would still function properly.
I removed the magazine, ejected the chambered round, and did a function test (rack the slide, do a single-action trigger-pull, rack the slide again, manually lower the hammer, and do a double-action trigger-pull).
And all was well.
So, I go to reload the magazine when I notice the previously chamber round, the one that in the chamber when I dropped the pistol, has a tiny dimple in the primer.
My blood ran cold and I got that slightly sickly feeling.
I had thought that the CZ 83 was "drop safe".
I'm not trying to place blame on anyone other than myself.
I dropped my pistol today.
While in my kitchen, I was holstering my CZ 83 pistol.
It slipped from my grip and hit the tiled floor.
I picked it up and gave it a thorough inspection....not even a scratch!!!
I decided to check that it would still function properly.
I removed the magazine, ejected the chambered round, and did a function test (rack the slide, do a single-action trigger-pull, rack the slide again, manually lower the hammer, and do a double-action trigger-pull).
And all was well.
So, I go to reload the magazine when I notice the previously chamber round, the one that in the chamber when I dropped the pistol, has a tiny dimple in the primer.
My blood ran cold and I got that slightly sickly feeling.
I had thought that the CZ 83 was "drop safe".