- Location
- Port Perry/Toronto
Has anyone tried it? The magazines for both look nearly identical...
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Yes, as long as you don't modify it. You might then be considered to have re-manufactured/designed for a new gun, in this case a semi-automatic rifle.It would be completely legal. Magazines are classified based on what they were originally designed to go in NOT what they eventually end up in.
Yes, as long as you don't modify it. You might then be considered to have re-manufactured/designed for a new gun, in this case a semi-automatic rifle.
I can't show you that. However, it is the conventional wisdom. Try this: modify a bolt mag until it will fit an AR15, then ask the RCMP Firearms Support Services Directorate what they think. They are the people who approved the 10-round AR pistol mags.Show me where it says that I can't modify a mag to fit in something else WITH OUT changing its original capacity and I will stand corrected.
Yes, as long as you don't modify it. You might then be considered to have re-manufactured/designed for a new gun, in this case a semi-automatic rifle.
That might be possible, if you then stamped or otherwise permanently marked the mag for the AIA (based on the Berettat Storm marked/not marked ruling). As you say, interesting.If it was interpreted that way you then could weld up the little hole in the front of an M14 mag thereby making it "designed and manufactured" for an AIA.




























