CZ 82 9x18mm Makarov Compact DA/SA Pistol, 3.8 in Fixed Barrel, Steel Frame, 12+1 Capacity (1990, Czechoslovakia)
This 1990 CZ 82 is a compact, service-pattern sidearm from Czechoslovakia chambered in 9x18mm Makarov. It features a steel frame with a durable black polycoat/enamel finish, a fixed polygonal-rifled barrel, and ambidextrous safety and magazine release controls. Capacity is 12+1, and it includes two 12-round magazines. An import mark reading 'CZECH REP.' is present.
Condition
Overall Condition: Good condition, showing some signs of prior use and handling.
Bore Condition: Good - Clean, well-maintained, minor wear marks.
Bore Rifling: Good - Clean polygonal rifling with well-defined geometry.
Specific Condition Notes: There are visible scratches and blemishes, with areas of finish wear. The bore is clean and shiny.
What's Included
- CZ 82 pistol (9x18mm Makarov)
- Two 12-round steel box magazines (no visible maker markings)
The CZ 82 pairs a compact footprint with a 12+1 capacity in 9x18mm Makarov. Built on a steel frame with a black polycoat/enamel finish, it reflects its Cold War service-pattern heritage and Czechoslovak manufacture in 1990.
Its operating system is straight blowback with a fixed 3.8 in barrel and polygonal rifling. The pistol is hammer-fired with a DA/SA trigger and an exposed hammer, offering familiar controls and consistent cycling.
Controls include ambidextrous, frame-mounted manual thumb safeties on both sides with red fire indicator dots, plus an ambidextrous magazine release positioned at the rear of the trigger guard. A lanyard ring is mounted at the heel of the grip.
Sighting features include a fixed front blade and a square-notch rear in a dovetail that is drift-adjustable. The slide has an anti-glare rib and a top-mounted loaded chamber indicator bar for quick visual checks.
Additional details include black checkered synthetic grips and an import mark of 'CZECH REP.' The configuration and markings align with the well-known service-pattern attributes of the CZ 82 from the Cold War era.




