I just got my P-01 Cajunized with the Cajun Gunworks Pro Package and it is phenomenal. I can’t describe what a difference it makes. It’s like night and day. Highly recommend that everyone does it.
The CZ 75 and it’s variants like this P01 do not have a low bore axis. The slide is shorter, but the frame is taller. The shorter slide is lighter, so it is less reciprocating mass contributing to the recoil impulse. The bore axis is actually higher than a lot of pistols currently on the market.
You really don’t know much about guns. The CZ P-01 has a really low bore axis. Shoot a Sig P 320 or just about any Sig and you’ll know what a high bore axis is.
I have not found any pistol magically reliable. I had some issues with my P01. It didn't like certain ammo....generic Remington 9mm, for example. Some of the mags didn't feed correctly. It's a very reliable gun now, but I put work into it and had to scrap a few magazines. I had to do a little polishing on a few more mags. Don't get me wrong, I like the gun a lot. But it wasn't magically reliable. The only semi-auto I've ever owned that has literally NEVER malfunctioned is my Dad's old XD 9mm service model. I get tired of the CZ and Glock hyperbole on reliability. Half of my Glocks were shit....a .45 that did all kinds of weird shit and a 9mm that hurled brass back into your forehead. Sold them both. Glock perfection, my ass. My G23 runs well, but still malfunctions a bit. Get to know your guns well if they are life-saving tools.
Sounds more like the ammo choice ir user error if that many guns have given you issues (short racking or riding the slide with your thumb) If anything is out of spec enough, ot won't function. The fact that I've seen Remington ammo with the bullet reversed and pressed into the case says enough. It was the ammo choice, not because the P-01 was picky, just that the ammo was that far onto the crap scale
Yes, firing pin can fail from dry firing. Use dummy rounds or rubber washer. You could replace the firing pin from cgw or similar retailers to dry fire.
@@jdawgl33it isn’t the firing pin that typically fails, it is the firing pin retaining pin. According to the testing it went through, it had to survive a few thousand dry fires, so I doubt it’s a big issue. Snap caps.