CZ 75 Kadet Help-Bought For Husband

LTN396

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Please forgive me, as I am not very knowledgeable about firearms. I bought a CZ 75 Kadet .22LR for my husband and plan on giving it to him for Christmas. Now that I have Googled to the best of my ability, I am confused.
I am reading about conversion kits, originals, 75 pre B, SP -01, discontinued, etc and I have no idea what I have now or if I got a good deal!

Does my gun already have a conversion kit?
All 3 numbers (serial?) on the other side match and it also has CZ-USA Kansas.

Thank you all for helping and dealing with my lack of knowledge about these things.
 

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If the pictures you attached are what you bought, then you bought a full gun, not a conversion kit. This is good, your husband won't have to do anything to shoot it other than load it with ammo. I'm jealous!
 
Your husband is a lucky man!
I concur - you bought the full CZ Kadet, not a conversion kit.

They haven't made them for a few years - - but - - they are still very much desired.

You did well!
 
Thank you bassJAM1 and Hal. Yes, those are the pictures. I was so confused about reading all the different kinds. (sp-01 or CZ Kadet B etc) I do not know what those are going for but I have a feeling that I got a VERY good deal now. Thank you
 
Your husband had better be very nice to you after this,,,

Like has already been stated,,,
You purchased the entire pistol.

Your husband had better be extremely nice to you after this,,,
The CZ-75B Kadet pistol is very highly sought after,,,
It's perhaps the best duty size .22 ever made.

You now deserve BIG diamonds. :D

Aarond

.
 
As a CZ lover I am severely jealous. He's a lucky man. My wife did buy me an AK for my birthday last year though. [emoji3]

Sent from my SM-G930R4 using Tapatalk
 
"Does my gun already have a conversion kit?
All 3 numbers (serial?) on the other side match and it also has CZ-USA Kansas."


I can be incorrect, but I am fairly certain there should be 4 matching numbers for it to be a factory original Kadet, the upper and lower slide each have a number, the barrel, and of course the frame.

If the top three match and the frame number is different, then you have a Kadet kit on a 75.

If the frame number is the same as the top numbers, then you indeed bought a Kadet pistol, which are very expensive these days.

There is almost no difference between the full Kadet, and the conversion kit so either way, you have a great pistol there.

It is a Kadet, which means it is a few years old. All current kits sold are
"Kadet 2", which is clearanced for the Omega type pistols. The 2 works on everything. The original ( non 2) will not work with Omega.

I hope this helped. If the numbers don't all match, don't fret. It is still a terrific gun.

I hope he loves it. I know I would be grateful if I received that for Christmas!!!!

Kind regards

Rich
 
CZ no longer makes the dedicated Kadet pistol, but still makes the conversion kits. The full pistols have become very sought after, and command a large premium. I have the dedicated pistol, AND the conversion kit I use mostly on a 75B, and PCR. They are excellent .22 pistols.
 
If the picture is what you bought and your husband doesn't like it...

Find a new husband.

I doubt he will care if it is factory original or a kit someone already installed on a lower and lost the center-fire upper. Should be a great gun either way. As you can see, we pretty much all either own one or want one.
 
redlightrich said:
I can be incorrect, but I am fairly certain there should be 4 matching numbers for it to be a factory original Kadet, the upper and lower slide each have a number, the barrel, and of course the frame.

If the top three match and the frame number is different, then you have a Kadet kit on a 75.

Re: the parts of the upper assembly sharing the same serial number, that's correct. But it would probably be more correct to call that unit an upper assembly with a bolt and barrel. There's really no "slide" to found." :)

I can't believe that anyone would sell a standard CZ with a Kadet Kit upper assembly installed, and not also throw in the standard (9mm or .40) slide assembly, too, unless the seller was intentionally misrepresenting what was being sold. That is a possibility.

But unless the buyer paid an outrageous amount -- more than the cost of a fullsize CZ and a KIT, the dollars spent were probably well spent. You can't find a used Kadet Kit, nowadays, and the price of the Kit itself is painful.

I've had a Kadet Kit for almost twenty years, now, and it's the most accurate .22 I've owned or shot. I now mount mine on my 85 Combat frame, and the sights are the same.

I had a beautiful (stainless) long-barreled Ruger Government Model with the slab-sided barrel, and I liked it alot. But, the Kadet Kit mounted on a couple of different CZ frames I shot so well that I traded the Ruger for a Witness Sport Long Slide in .45 ACP.

That was back back before Tanfoglio started to build the really fancy larger-framed guns they now offer, and it was also before the CZ-97 was readily available here in the U.S. I later got a CZ-97, but liked the slightly smaller Witness Grip frame better.
 
I can't believe that anyone would sell a standard CZ with a Kadet Kit upper assembly installed, and not also throw in the standard (9mm or .40) slide assembly,
Since they no longer sell the Kadet it is not unheard of for people to buy a full gun, then sell strip and sell the center-fire parts. It could also be in a box located in unknown regions of the gun accessory closet, or it could have passed through the hands of an estate/trust administrator who had no idea which parts went to what.
 
Thanks to everyone for their input and help. I am sure my husband will love it. I, on the other hand, can hardly reach the trigger with my finger lol. The slide is very unfamiliar to me and I have never had a gun where the safety button won't move unless it is loaded. This is a great forum. Thank you, everyone.
 
Don't feel bad. I have the same problem with reaching the trigger on the CZs :)
I'd still like a .22 Kadet for the range even if I would never carry or compete with a centerfire.
 
The solution for (or, more correctly, to see a bit of an improvement to) the long trigger pull, is to start from the half-cock notch or just cock the hammer fully.

The half-cock position shortens the trigger pull a little, and makes it a bit lighter.

Those comfortable with cocked & locked (i.e., the hammer cocked and safety engaged) carry and start from that position in the holster.

CZ is one of the few guns that only allows the safety to function when the hammer is cocked, but because the trigger pull is long, you aren't going to pull it by accident (with the hammer down). Other guns, like the SIG line (where the DA/SA guns are generally decocker models), don't even have a safety -- so you aren't really losing anything important.
 
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I've mentioned in the past how alike the D/A pull of a S&W M19 is to the D/A pull on the CZ75b.

I've never thought it to be long at all.....matter of fact, I consider it normal.

Since it's not a D/A only, I refer not to mix the two and use mine as a S/A.

I really wouldn't mind a bit if it was a D/A only,
 
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