Author Topic: RAMI BD Continuous Improvement Suggestions  (Read 7897 times)

Offline PappaWheelie

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RAMI BD Continuous Improvement Suggestions
« on: December 05, 2017, 01:04:01 PM »
I finally connected with CZUB directly via email, receiving a very positive response, so am now wondering why I hadn't tried going "direct" sooner: I had repeatedly, over a period of more than a year, asked CZ-USA to forward (to CZUB) a Word document with feedback and suggested engineering changes regarding their global-best subcompact the 2075 RAMI BD.

Below are copy-pasted excerpts of my email, their response, and the attached Continuous Improvement Suggestions document with links to the document's inserted images.

Hi CZUB Marketing Team,

I'm an American with deep respect of Czech/Moravian history, including:
-"Homeboy" Jan Hus, the REAL first Protestant reformer (100 years before Martin Luther),
-the "hand cannons" that Hus' followers used for defense against the persecution of the Catholic church,
-the Moravian Revival,
-the Zinzendorf 100 year prayer movement,
-CZ and Jawa-CZ motorcycles that I wrenched on in my youth, and how their "bulletproof" design philosophy is also evidenced/reflected in CZ firearms,
-the York bench vise that I obtained as an employee of a Jawa/CZ motorcycle dealership,
-the fact that your CZ 2075 RAMI BD is the pinnacle of currently-available concealed carry options (see link:)
http://www.czfirearms.us/index.php?topic=81829.msg600234#msg600234
-the best-in-class CZ 97 BD: see the PappaWheelie – May 29, 2016 testimonial at http://cz-usa.com/product/cz-97-bd-45-acp-black-aluminum-grips-3-dot-tritium-night-sights-10-rd-mags/
-and finally, your current leadership's stand against EU "refugee" imposition and the loss of national sovereignty thereby risked.

I have two questions:
1.) did you ever receive my May 17, 2016 file (Subject: CZ 2075 RAMI BD Strengths and Improvement Opportunities) as submitted to CZ-USA for forwarding?  I attach a copy, which is preferred to text copy-paste in that photographic images are included.
2.) Do you hold any hope for the slimmer, more traditionally CZ-styled high capacity subcompact described here?
http://www.czfirearms.us/index.php?topic=92719.msg707426#msg707426
__________________________________


Dear Sir,
          Thank you for your e-mail.
We have to admit that your knowledge of Czech/Moravian history is unbelievable, it is something one does not encounter very often.
I personally have never met anybody with such a great knowledge about our country, not to say your knowledge about our current state policy concerning “refugees”.
Technical suggestions you make are forwarded to our company products managers.

__________________________________


(Attachment text)
2016-05-17
To: CZUB via CZ-USA
From: (PappaWheelie)
Subject: CZ 2075 RAMI BD Strengths and Improvement Opportunities
Dear Ceska Zbrojovka:
I am very pleased to own the excellent CZ 2075 RAMI BD and have been waiting since February 4, 2016 for a CZ 97 BD as special ordered from -.
I am writing to congratulate you for perceiving, and creating, the far-and-away best concealed-carry pistol on the market in the RAMI BD.  Its 15 round capacity, CZ-legendary ergonomics, short barrel concealability, benchmark reliability, and world-class accuracy make it clearly the best choice available.
Two engineering choices, however, detract from its optimization. It is my pleasure to communicate these “continuous improvement opportunities” in hopes that future RAMI customers might benefit from them having been addressed.
1.) Firing pin retaining pin –the stock retaining pin is of the coiled type, i.e., rolled up like a cinnamon roll, and its lack of hardness contributes to firing pin sticking malfunction after being used with a laser bullet for practice (laser bullets have an elastomeric “primer” to trigger an electronic switch and absorb firing pin energy, but the elastomer is typically not stiff enough to prevent “dry firing” impacts at the firing pin retaining pin interface). 
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Aixb5kKzhiQv0hu8qU2w5TZbRElMdFkU
The inability to see through the pin (as can be done with a split spring type pin) precludes early diagnosis of retaining pin deformation, so actual sticking of the firing pin comes as an unwanted surprise.
Recommended EC (Engineering Change): specify installation of a high quality split spring type retaining pin, such as
https://cajungunworks.com/product/61100-tempered-spring-steel-firing-pin-retaining-pin/   or
https://www.mcmaster.com/#97855a170/=1aer669  (Rockwell hardness specification C46 minimum)
And, specify a small ~0.5mm radius on the corner of the firing pin notch/OD intersection to blunt the ability of the firing pin to bite into the retaining pin.  See image above.
The visibly hollow split spring type retaining pin would enable visual detection of retaining pin deformation to the extent that firing pin sticking might soon occur, although my experience with the CGW pin and the slight corner radius has been that virtually no deformation, indeed only cosmetic burnishing of the oxide layer, has resulted after this suggested change.
2.) Rear sight setscrew centering hole –my RAMI BD has required a significant (~0.7mm!) offset of its rear sight location to “center” firing patterns on the target laterally, but as delivered, the RAMI is unable to maintain the required rear sight location for as few as three magazines, even after application of Anti-Seize compound to the threads of the setscrew to increase its clampload.
After no fewer than five reversions from the calculated-correct location to a more centered location (which unfortunately shoots “left), I finally removed the sight (thinking Loctite) and saw the reason.  A (2.5mm diameter X 1.0 deep) sight-centering hole in the slide is directly below the setscrew of a centered sight, but acts as a (literal) black hole to suck the setscrew and sight back towards the center of the slide under firing impacts when the setscrew has been tightened near the edge of the hole.
Rather than resorting to a milled groove to flatten the setscrew clamp area, I have filled the hole with a JB Weld-fixed plug (the tip of the shank of a 2.5mm drill), carefully dressed flush with the bottom of the dovetail groove, a remedy no customer should have to face in order to obtain a reliably straight-shooting RAMI.
Recommended EC: simply delete the 2.5mm hole, for manufacturing cost savings.
Addition of Anti-Seize compound to the setscrew threads prior to assembly would offer the sight-fixing retention functionality intended by the hole, by substantially increasing clampload, while enabling future RAMI customers with the ability to fine-tune sight alignment without trauma.
3.) Hammer tooth flatness (bonus input): -my RAMI has greatly benefited by the purchase and installation of the OEM “Thick” Trigger https://cajungunworks.com/product/5-oem-thick-trigger/ and Short Reset System https://cajungunworks.com/product/srs-2075/ (the original RAMI trigger curvature is so excessive that it digs into one’s trigger finger) as offered by Cajun Gun Works.  In conjunction with this work I smoothed the significant broachmark of the hammer’s SA tooth.  Note in this image that the groove was so substantial that even after full break-in it could actually be photographed given the right lighting! 
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1RpSG1Zh1uFSgqXtl_0cGumj2R7NErc__
This non-flatness greatly detracted from the intended “surprise” of a proper SA trigger pull.  I believe SA trigger action (feel) to be an attribute that “sells,” and also contributes to a marque’s legacy, and so that it would be in CZ’s best interest to apply (or reinstate?) the process controls (tool sharpening intervals) necessary to regain the perceived quality for which CZ pistols have traditionally been revered.
Recommended EC: specify the OEM “Thick” trigger for both the RAMI BD and the 97 BD; and,
apply a reasonable (subjective grittiness-derived) flatness control specification to the RAMI’s hammer SA tooth.
Thank you, CZ, for your excellent engineering design and manufacturing!
Best regards,
(PappaWeelie)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Nrjk17trvjQnJ2ZUE0dEZXeVk/view
Member, Gun Owners of America
CC: CZ 2075 RAMI BD in PappaWheelie Invisible 15 Round RAMI Holster
Homeboy: CZ 97 BD, Underwood 45 Super 120 Grain Xtreme Defender ammo
UBG: CZ 75 SP-01 Tactical Urban Grey Suppressor-ready
-all w/ CGW Short Reset Kit/1485-T2 Disco, 5 "Thick" Trigger, polished SA tooth

Offline CZ-RAMI-2075

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Re: RAMI BD Continuous Improvement Suggestions
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2017, 07:23:44 PM »
Wow, very interesting. You have some valid points there.


I'm probably@ 8,000 rounds of 14 year carry with my RAMI and never a pin breakage or
walk-out.



I loved my RAMI BD, but couldn't shoot it without cocking it.


Have had a problem with DA trigger stroke, actually the hammer arc, for a while now.


Did know that a trigger job or parts might help this problem but I'm not one to mess with my
carry gun triggers, and I'm not alone with this thought.


I can carry my RAMI in Cocked and Locked mode, but am about 65% successful with swiping the
very thin thumb safety off in a hurry at the range.


My hope is that a P10-C or even a forthcoming P10-S will give the easy-peasy light striker-fired trigger
that I experienced when handling a gun shop employee's P10-C last year.
www.CZforum.com


http://czzone.blogspot.com/



CZ GUNSTUFFS.clarkstoncz@gmail.com for any questions.