As long as you could find links designed and manufactured for a pistol and marked as such, 10 would be fine.
If that system could run on the old cloth type belts then that would be awesome! Hmmm I wonder...
The argument would hinge on the distinction between each link, and the belt as a while. Between the forest and the trees, as it were.
If it is the belt as a whole that is considered the "magazine", then you putting 10 rounds together would serve as evidence that the magazine was intended for use in a pistol. The RCMP would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that you intended, at the time of manufacture, to use it in your belt fed rifle. You could, for example, have them stored in a box labeled "pistol belts". If someone with a belt fed rifle happened to buy some from you, then it is similar to someone putting a pistol mag in a rifle.
I find it far more likely, however, that the RCMP and crown would classify them as prohibited, and charge.
You would basically be "manufacturing" a post-45 belt.Guys....Here me out here. Could not someone take a pre-1945 designed belt (I am also assuming you do not have to have one made before 1945, just designed) and spend alot of time on the sewing machine sewing the holes to fit 5.56? or would that be "illegally transforming a magazine"?
The regs say nothing about being cloth or not.
The determining factor is age, designed prior to 1945, IIRC.
So metallic belts for the 34 or 42 (same belt) would be fine.
Heh - If you assembled it as a pistol, you could link 10 rounds together? After all, you could say that linking the rounds together counts as manufacturing the magazine![]()



























