EDIT: It is a CZ 24. The 27 is the military acceptance mark. Thanks for the video. It helped clear things up for me. I just bought what's supposed to be a CZ 27, but it looks exactly like your CZ 24, inside and out. The only difference is mine has a wooden grip.
That is likely further than my abilities at the moment... it is one thing disassembling with nothing between you and the pistol... it is a whole other game when trying to look through your camera and make sure everything is in the shot.
@@MilsurpMikeChannel I totally understand. Its just hard to find any detailed information on the 24/27's and I have a few that need some parts replaced. Thanks for getting back to me.
You had the hammer back to disassemble, not down. Precision in nomenclature when working on guns is important, "Squiggle the thingamajiggy until the doodad drops out" leads to bad things. When I bought a CZ24 back in 1989, I had to figure out how to disassemble it myself. A video like yours would have been most welcome back then. My 24 was a wartime production, Waffenampt and Böhemische Waffenfabrik marked on the slide.
You got that magazine out pretty easily on that vz24. It can be a real bear sometimes due to the magazine being the lock open for the slide. They could have designed that a bit better. Mine is missing the lanyard loop. Any ideas where one can be found. A repro would be fine too. Mine is missing a lot of the finish but the metal on this gun is so incredibly smooth to the touch. I really don't understand why either.
For parts... check out Numrich or Apex. I also made a long form video on where to get milsurp parts... plus people added some great suggestions in the comments.