I think your onto something enefgee. The Pmag and ATR examples are bang on. It has to be a dedicated pistol mag not just a 30 rd mag with different markings.
Why? There is no difference between a pistol lower and rifle lower, yet they are classified different. Why can't there be 30 round pistol mags for an AR? They have 32 round pistol mags for a glock.
Again, back to the Regs - if the mag was designed before the pistol was made, it's safe to assume the mag was designed for a rifle - the AR mag in 30 round length was designed long before anyone thought of making an AR pistol. The LAR mag was designed to go in the box with a new LAR pistol, ATR's mags were designed to go in the box with ATR's pistol - they don't include them with a new rifle, therefore they're pistol mags. No manufacturer ships a new pistol AR with a 30 round length mag pinned to 10 (regardless of how it's pinned) therefore the mags are for either a rifle or a pistol. A pure aftermarket magazine would, I'm sure,always be decided to be for both rifles and pistols - in which case the mag must be pinned to 5 rounds.
I really, really hate our laws. If our laws made sense we wouldn't be having this discussion. Mr Harper, can you please fix this crap? Thanks man.
Well I think these mags are legal given the fact that the mag body is designed in such a way that it can't be modified without going to great extremes to take more than 10 rounds unless you start cutting and grinding the chit out of it. Also it is appropriately marked as a 10 round pistol mag. Given the mags are made south of the border and had to enter Canada they must be approved or they wouldn't be allowed into the country.
I still like my ATR 10 round mags more than these and will stick with them as they are a damn ###y mag.
Given the mags are made south of the border and had to enter Canada they must be approved or they wouldn't be allowed into the country.
This is not true at all. CBSA is not the same as the RCMP. Just because someone got something past CBSA and puts it up for sale does not necessarily mean that it has been approved or is legal to own.
While interesting, these items are questionable at best.
Hooray Grammar Nazi time!True. Ditch mag capacity rules and this is all mute.
Hooray Grammar Nazi time!
mute
adjective [mut·er, mut·est.]
- not emitting or having sound of any kind; incapable of speech
moot
adjective
- of little or no practical value or meaning; purely academic; not actual; theoretical; hypothetical.
On topic: mags look cool. Do want.
This thread was started yesterday, Saturday. Today is Sunday.
Offices are closed.
Phone lines to the CFP/SFSS will no doubt be humming tomorrow morning.
Potential for rejoicing or weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth.
Outcome will be interesting.
30 round mags were in use in Viet Nam in 1967-68, AR pistols weren't produced until long after the passage of the GCA '68 which required a tax stamp on all SBR's. The 30 round magazine was developed by the US military for the M16 rifle.
From my understanding the paperwork to bring anything firearm related into the country still has to go through the RCMP doesn't it?
US law. Point being, 30 round pistol mags exist. AR pistols exist. No where in canadian law does it say 30 AR pistol mags can't exist, pinned to ten. Just like glock 30 round pistol mags are pinned to ten, then imported.



























