Check your info on Alexander Arms web site - mags come in 4,7 and 10 round.
However they don't come in 5 or 5.5 rounds do they?
Check your info on Alexander Arms web site - mags come in 4,7 and 10 round.
However they don't come in 5 or 5.5 rounds do they?
30 round 223 PMAGs are pinned to 5 are they not and legal.
they are legal but the problem here is when someone decides to call that same mag a Beowulf 50 caliber mag and pins it to fit 5 of the larger rounds instead increasing the capacity to skirt our capacity laws.30 round 223 PMAGs are pinned to 5 are they not and legal.
BBB is valid, OEM Beowulf mags only comes in capacity of 4 and the mag bodies are manufactured to that length, for any company start importing and selling Beowulf mags that is crimped, pinned or block to 5 rounds or even worse 5.5 rounds, is like playing with fire with people's lives.
becauseLike I said around page 3... Why hasent anyone went to some random chinese company and got a ton of 5 round .50 beo metal mags made? No pin. No crimp. Specifically "designed" for 50 beo.
Being the dealer with Alexander Arms, we were originally going to manufacturer the polymer version of the .50 Beowulf mags in Korea completely with a new mold 2 years ago. We have one currently sitting with RCMP for inspection, however, numerous email with RCMP did mentioned that they will not likely going to approve any .50 Beowulf magazine.
Here is a portion of the communication I have with RCMP
"Across the spectrum of numerous inspections, RCMP-SFSS has not seen a single 50 Beowulf magazine or a single 458 Socom Calibre magazine for the AR-15 platform that is not prohibited. This is because the magazine designs we have seen have been adapted from the AR-15/M16 5.56 x 45 mm design to accommodate the 458 Socom & 50 Beowulf calibre cartridge but have never lost the 5.56 mm design features.
I am not here to argue, I am here to tell people what SFSS told me.
It really doesn't make any sense to me either, but a lot of stuffs in life doesn't make any sense as well.
You seem to forget about the 450 bushmaster, It is not mentioned by the RCMP-SFSS because it is a true proprietary design yet it still works with a AR15 lowerThat's fine, magazines don't need approval. And it wouldn't be a pinned or repurposed mag like is in question now.
Based on the logic being applied there can never be a 5 round magazine for any larger calibre? No that's dumb.
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/bulletins/bus-ent/20110323-72-eng.htm
This bulletin is intended to provide general information only. For legal references, please refer to the Firearms Act, the Criminal Code and Regulations. Provincial, territorial and municipal laws, regulations and policies may also apply.
Some of you hanging it all out there on the RCMP's interpretation of law put in a bulletin may be in for a rude awakening one day....
3. (1) Any cartridge magazine
(a) that is capable of containing more than five cartridges of the type for which the magazine was originally designed and that is designed or manufactured for use in
(i) a semi-automatic handgun that is not commonly available in Canada,
(ii) a semi-automatic firearm other than a semi-automatic handgun,
What makes you think someone, somewhere along the path won't deem all AR magazine origins to be .223/5.56?
Food for thought (or gas on the fire) - whichever you prefer![]()
That's fine, magazines don't need approval.
Throughout the reading of this whole thread my brain kept asking me "why would anyone send a magazine to the RCMP for approval?". It was news to me. I'm a relative newbie and fully acknowledge at all times that I could be wrong, but as far as I know as long as a mag doesn't fit the criteria for being a prohibited device, it's an entirely uncontrolled device. You may as well send your washer and dryer in to the RCMP for approval.
A mag is either legal or it isn't, there is no approval process that I'm aware of.
A magazine is not just a mag body. A magazine is a mag body plus a spring plus a follower plus a floorplate plus engravings/markings etc. If a court will be satisfied that a magazine (not just a mag body) was designed or manufactured for use in a .50 calibre rifle, then the magazine may hold five .50 calibre cartridges. Whether a magazine was designed or manufactured for use in a .50 calibre rifle is a question of fact. A court will require evidence on the point. The manufacturer or person possessing the magazine will have to prove it, or rather, more accurately, the Crown will have to prove that it is NOT. In the case of these magazines, can the manufacturer prove the magazines were designed or manufactured to hold .50 calibre?
then why has a LARGE shipment of Beowulf mags been stopped from coming in the country as per one of this sites vendors posts in this thread?A mag is either legal or it isn't, there is no approval process that I'm aware of.



























