Sorry this is so long.
Trying to capture the entire issue for troubleshooting.
I bought a new CZ 75B with the 10-rd magazines in November.
Took it apart, cleaned it out, lubed it up. A couple days later, ran 100rds Federal American Eagle 124gr FMJ (closest thing I could find to NATO rounds) through it.
It was hitting about 4" low at 25yds, dead-center left to right, and ran flawlessly.
Disassembled, cleaned, lapped the slide and feed ramp, cleaned, lubed, replaced the grips with LOK palm-swell bogies, replaced the front sight with 1mm green optic from CZ-Parts, received 2 Mec-Gar 10rd magazines.
2 weeks later, ran 100 more AE 124's through it. 1 failure-to-load when my off-hand thumb rode up above the plenty generous beavertail and lost a touch of flesh to the slide (user error). Other than that, ran flawlessly, and a joy to shoot.
Took it home, disassembled, cleaned and lubed.
~ 3 weeks later, ran another 100 rds AE 124's through it. Again, flawless. And, somehow, POI seems to be converging with POA (as CZ customer service advised it might, though I can't for the life of me figure out why.)
This time, before I got a chance to disassemble and clean it thoroughly, I brought my wife to the range. She mostly shot her GP100 to get comfortable, but together we ran 40 rounds through the 75B. Again, POI and POA got closer together (it's probably 1.5" low now), and it ran flawlessly.
I didn't get around to cleaning the guns until the following Saturday. Knowing I was going back to the range for 100rds on Monday, I didn't disassemble the CZ - just ran a patch of No9 down the bore, and followed with a few until they came out clean. (thoroughly cleaned the revolver.)
Monday came around, and the first 20 or so rounds were fine. Then I got a failure to feed. Finished the relay, but had a couple more where the slide didn't slide all the way forward into battery.
The next relay (of 48, 6 at a time, at 3 different ranges), probably 8 to 10 rounds didn't feed properly.
I finished the relay, apologized to the rangemaster, and took it home to see what's up.
Disassembled, thoroughly cleaned, lubed, reassembled. Loaded up the mags and just cycled the action through 40 rounds by hand (racking the slide, releasing, and racking again.) It must have jammed a dozen times.
Cartridge stops at the feed ramp, or part-way into the chamber.
I took it apart again, to see if I could see/feel anything hanging it up.
Rounds slip easily into the disassembled barrel.
Cycles like a dream with no ammo present.
Re-assembled.
Hand racking still produces about 25% failure to feed.
Read a bit. Disassembled, cleaned, and lubed the magazines.
Put a touch of synthetic grease on the slide rails.
Noticed it was hard to get a round into battery inside the slide. Blasted out the arched cutout that holds the case head; cleaned with a toothpick; lubed.
Seems better, but still not perfect. It does seem to get hung up more with the factory mags than the aftermarket ones, but the mec-gars are not completely without fault.
In most cases where it hasn't fed all the way, if I slam the slide forward with the heel of my hand it finishes the job and gets into battery. So it's trying, but seems to get jammed up somewhere along the way.
All ~ 440 rounds have been the same ammunition - again, the closest thing I could get to NATO-strength.
Ran solid for over 300, but now gets hung up to the point where I wouldn't use it in a defensive situation, and I hesitate to use it in matches.
Doing some more reading. Here are next steps I'm thinking of before my next trip to the range:
Disassemble, strip, lube with 0w-20 motor oil. (I've been using Tetra Gun Oil, except for the Redline synthetic grease on the slide rails.)
Disassemble and wax the magazines, and lube the springs and followers with a light wipe of 0w-20.
I thought the 75 was supposed to be pretty robust, and able to run in a lot of different conditions. Never expected this kind of trouble so early into its life. Also expected it to get better with break-in, not worse. Are my expectations too high?
My Springer XD45 has about 800 rounds through it, I've never cleaned the magazines, and it continues to run as flawlessly as it did on day 1.
Is this really likely to be a lube or magazine thing?
Has anyone seen similar problems on a late-model CA-compliant 75B?
Or am I looking at the probability of needing a new recoil spring? What weight?
Anything else I should consider?