MDS ten-round 9mm mags in a CX-4 Storm?

firemachine69

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Anyone use these? Found a dealer selling these online for a third of an aftermarket mag in Canada goes for (of course, no American ever wants a gimped mag).

Anyone tried them in a Beretta CX-4 Storm, or that brand in general in any pistol/carbine for that matter?

:cool:
 
The mags are for the pistol, but my Storm is the "92" variant (three versions exist in 9mm), and it works perfectly with the four Beretta 92F 9mm K-Mags I bought from Bits of Pieces. However, I paid $49, for each mag (got four extras), and those are aftermarket. I really don't feel like they are good value, but in the scope of canadian dealers, it WAS a good value. Now I'm going for cheapo AWB ten-rounders that no one wants for sixteen-seventeen bucks a pop. I can get five or six and stay below the defacto hundred-dollar US-export limit currently in place by the BATF, even more if I buy them used.
 
The reason why I asked was because if they where made for the storm, then they fall under the same conditions as the OEM mags and must be pinned at 5.. if they where made for the pistols then you are good to go.

As for the export, there are lots of threads around that discuss the export limitations from the US..
 
Export limits are ok under $100.


All Beretta 92F mags are assumed to be used in the 92F (obviously), and they are ALL advertised as being designed for that pistol. Other than OE Beretta CX4 mags, I don't think any other manufacturer makes aftermarkets for the Storm Carbine, again, simply because it's extremely well-known that the Beretta line of pistol mags (92/PX4/8000 - depending on which CX4 Storm version you have) are compatible with the Storm. So, it would serve no purpose for the aftermarket manufacturer to specifically stamp certain mags "Designed for the Beretta CX-4 Storm Carbine", when:

A) It will anger customers when they run out of the mags stamped for the 92F, and think they received the wrong part (in the US, anyways) when the customer sees one marked for a carbine.

and

B) Screw the canucks over. Any half-competent dealer in Beretta items that sells to a Canadian should know our basic and primitive round-count limit.
 
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