sks magazine large pin type question.

tinviper

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Hi I am looking to drill out the frankenpin and install a nicer style large 1cm type block you see on many sks's anyone know how to find that style of plug looks like a thimble almost.
 
I think it's technically illegal to inpin your magazine even if going to be repinned unless you are a licenced gun Smith.

Take the advice of the previous poster and buy another aftermarket magazine either original or new production to fit the bill as needed. For your next SKS check the mag to see it's the small pin. Other than being ugly and overbearingly big the pins do not interfere with the gun in anyway.
 
you can buy new "scrubbed, or no numbers" sks mags at some of gun shops that specialize in sks sales. These are usually of chinese origin
I picked one up that was internally pinned(pin welded to the follower) for about $25. The weld and pin are very unobtrusive. Will need to be fitted to your rifle , 10 min job .

Some of those franken pinned mags are nothing short of a butcher job , globs of weld half ground off and bbq paint
 
I think it's technically illegal to inpin your magazine even if going to be repinned unless you are a licenced gun Smith.

Take the advice of the previous poster and buy another aftermarket magazine either original or new production to fit the bill as needed. For your next SKS check the mag to see it's the small pin. Other than being ugly and overbearingly big the pins do not interfere with the gun in anyway.

I think you can repin your mag as long as special tools are required to un-puin it and no way one can unpin it with bare hands w/o tools
 
If yoyou inpin your magazine you are in possession of a prohibited device. You cannot modify your firearm to make it prohibited as far as I know. Unless your licenced to work on prhibted parts your running risk of "The Tyranny"
 
If yoyou inpin your magazine you are in possession of a prohibited device. You cannot modify your firearm to make it prohibited as far as I know. Unless your licenced to work on prhibted parts your running risk of "The Tyranny"

what if you are cleaning your mag and repinning it immediately after?
what if the pin is broken and you have tools to repin it immediately?
is completely disassembled magazine considered magazine parts or magazine?
 
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what if you are cleaning your mag and repinning it immediately after?
what if the pin is broken and you have tools to repin it immediately?
is completely disassembled magazine considered magazine parts or magazine?

Ask the CFO I just don't recommend it as standard practice
I'm not agreeing with the overbearing Nanny State. Just saying modifying your mags is against the law if your pin falls out repin but how not sure of technicalities on that. Generally they should not just fall out.
 
Ask the CFO I just don't recommend it as standard practice
I'm not agreeing with the overbearing Nanny State. Just saying modifying your mags is against the law if your pin falls out repin but how not sure of technicalities on that. Generally they should not just fall out.

np, I just thought you know the answers.
of course, it is a good practice to avoid conflicts/ confrontation with the CROWN, for sure
 
I'm sure the Crown and His Honour are reasonable folk.
Scenario one: An unpinned magazine buried in a bin of "in-work" gun parts in the corner of your workshop.
Scenario two: An unpinned magazine in your jacket pocket (and no loose pin nearby) that happens to fit the rifle you're currently plinking with at the sandpit.
Which do you think they are likely to interpret as having criminal intent?
If your pin falls out, secure the mag and pin in a container and do everything reasonably possible to make it obvious that it's been removed from use pending repair.
Just my two cents (which nowadays in Canada rounds down to bugger all).
 
If it's "franken pinned" with the large blob of welding material, just grind the blob flush and reblue the magazine. No need to remove the rivet.

If it's the rivet method with a larger external rivet, just leave it alone.
 
Seeing as how the sks has an internal magazine thats not easily removed like a conventional magazine its dismantled from the rifle and taken out, perhaps completely dismantling the mag so its not usuable may be legal to then work on the pin.
 
Ask the CFO I just don't recommend it as standard practice
I'm not agreeing with the overbearing Nanny State. Just saying modifying your mags is against the law if your pin falls out repin but how not sure of technicalities on that. Generally they should not just fall out.

I have had two separate pins fall off. One was a spot welded lug inside the magazine, I just drilled a hole in the lug and riveted it into the mag using the hole left where the spot weld broke.
Second one the pin fell out of the follower. It was done tastefully with no weld, it was just press fit into a hole in the follower. I didn't even know it had fallen out, I was fondling it on the couch one night and noticed I could push the follower down pretty far. I fixed that one with a piece of 5/8" rod in the bottom of the mag, I attached it with JB weld and clamped it down while curing.

Both times I removed the mags from the gun until they were fixed. What else are we to do if the mags break? Call the police and turn in the gun? Remove it from the gun and throw it in the bush?

Phil, I hope you don't have a 1022, you would be going nuts. :p
 
If it's as you said frankenpined then it's going to have a huge weld on the bottom . as someone else said go get another mag and use it . keep the old one. it will have a huge hole in the bottom from the welding job . or do what you want.
 
what if you are cleaning your mag and repinning it immediately after?
what if the pin is broken and you have tools to repin it immediately?
is completely disassembled magazine considered magazine parts or magazine?

I think the disassembled mag body was already tested in court and found to be a mag.
 
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