Aksa Ak20

R1 950,00
00
Blank Ammunition
What combo of ammunition would you like to include?
R100,00
R200,00
R450,00
Holster
Would you like to include a holster?
Compatible Holsters
R160,00
R180,00
R220,00
R480,00
R480,00
R250,00
R250,00
R350,00
Pepper Ammunition
What quantity of pepper ammunition would you like to include?
R195,00
R70,00
R500,00
Certificate of Ownership Physical Licence Card
R150,00
First/ Middle Name
*
Surname
*
ID Number
*
Date of Birth
*
Please Upload a Picture/ Selfie to be used for your Physical Licence Card
*
Add-Ons
R450,00
R650,00
Addons Price: R0,00
Total Price: R0,00
🎁 Receive 25x free high power blank ammunition with purchase – for limited time only!

Description

Aksa Ak20- CZ75

The Aksa Ak20 is a replica of the CZ Pre-B Variant featuring an impressive 14 round magazine.  The CZ 75 BD equipped with loaded chamber indicator, reversible magazine catch, lanyard ring, checkered front and back strap of the grip and serrated trigger as standard. Most Police models have “Police” stamped on the slide. A smaller amount exclude “Police” but have front slide serrations. An alternative variant to the blow counterpart of the Blow C75.

Stainless steel version of the CZ 75 B. Available in a high gloss and matte stainless finish. Also available in the new/limited edition CZ75 (sand blasted finish with sides of the slide and frame decoratively ground). All stainless models feature ambidextrous safeties. High gloss and matte models were discontinued in late 2019 / early 2020 in terms of the real firearm counterpart.

The CZ 75 is a semi-automatic pistol made by Czech firearm manufacturer ČZUB. First introduced in 1975, it is one of the original “wonder nines” and features a staggered-column magazine, all-steel construction, and a hammer forged barrel. It is widely distributed throughout the world and is the most common handgun in the Czech Republic. Firearms expert Colonel Jeff Cooper considered the CZ 75, at least its original version (short rail), to be the best 9mm service pistol ever made.

The armament industry was an important part of the interwar Czechoslovak economy and made up a large part of the country’s exports. However following the 1948 communist coup d’état, all heavy industry was nationalized and was cut off from its Western export market behind the Iron Curtain. While most other Warsaw Pact countries became dependent on armaments imports from the Soviet Union, most of the Czechoslovak weaponry remained domestic (for example, the Czechoslovak army used the Vz. 58 assault rifle, while other communist bloc countries used variants of the AK-47).

Following the Second World War, CZ75 brothers Josef and František Koucký participated to some extent on designing all of CZUB’s post-war weapons. Kouckýs signed their designs together, using only the surname, making it impossible to determine which one of them developed particular ideas.

By 1969, František Koucký was freshly retired, however the company offered him a job on designing a new 9×19mm Parabellum pistol. Unlike during his previous work, this time he had a complete freedom in designing the whole gun from scratch. The design he developed was in many ways new and innovative.

Although the model was developed for export purposes (the standard pistol cartridge of the Czechoslovak armed forces was the Soviet 7.62×25mm Tokarev, which was later replaced with the Warsaw Pact standard 9mm Makarov pistol cartridge), Koucký’s domestic patents regarding the design were classified as “secret patents”. Effectively, nobody could learn about their existence, but also nobody could register the same design in Czechoslovakia. At the same time Koucký as well as the company were prohibited from filing for patent protection abroad. Consequently, a large number of other manufacturers began offering pistols based on CZ 75 design

The first CZ 75 models manufactured between 1975 and 1979 were made of high-quality forged steel, with a hammer and a hand-finished finish due to the low cost of labor in socialist Czechoslovakia. These models, referred to as the short rail, are among the rarest among collectors (less than 14,697 examples of this quality version were manufactured between 1975 and 1979).

In order to increase its production of CZ75s at a lower cost in order to export them, the Česká Zbrojovka company looked for alternative sources of supply for the manufacture of steel frames for the pistol in the late 1970s. Negotiations on the production of pistols outside Czechoslovakia had already begun in 1977 between Merkuria (Czechoslovak exporter) and the Spanish company Alfa in Eiba. An agreement was reached in 1979 with Alfa to produce cast frames in order to increase production, at the cost of a significant reduction in finishing and lower quality steel compared to the “short rail” models forged in Czechoslovakia.

Additional information

WeightN/A
DimensionsN/A
Colour

Black, Fume, Shiny Chrome

Related products

Chat Icon
error: Content is protected !!