this seems very clear to me and it goes both ways.
pistol magazines are 10 rounds of what it was designed for, if that pistol magazine fits in an ar15 rifle, that is of no concern to anyone.
5 rounds of beowulf is what is limited to, not 8 rounds of pumpkin, if you happen to fit 8 pumpkins in your 5 beowulf mags thats not a concern to anyone including the RCMP constable arresting you, the magazine is not regulated to pumpkins it is regulated to 5 beowulf. This is very very concerning they are monitoring firearms and yet not knowledgeable, or being wilfully ignorant and negligent about their own bulletin.
I think they need their #### slapped again.
I am kinda fed up about this whole nonsense, and for some reason I actually wish someone would get charged and this would go all the way to court so that we could have a clear judgement by a judge on this matter to settle this inconvenient truth one way or another, I know this might sound draconian, but it seems we are at this point right now.
The problem is when the crown realizes they are going to lose this case, they just drop the charges so it never goes to court for a judgement. And therefore the exercise just repeats itself forever. People getting intimidated and possibly arrested and eventually charged then charges dropped.
4. Magazines designed for one firearm but used in a different firearm
The maximum permitted capacity of a magazine is determined by the kind of firearm it is designed or manufactured for use in and not the kind of firearm it might actually be used in. As a consequence, the maximum permitted capacity remains the same regardless of which firearm it might be used in.
Example:
The Marlin model 45 (Camp Carbine) rifle chambered for 45 Auto caliber uses magazines designed and manufactured for the Colt 1911 handgun, therefore the seven round and eight round capacities are permitted.
5. Magazines for semiautomatic handguns which contain more than ten (10) rounds of a different calibre
Magazines designed to contain centrefire cartridges and designed or manufactured for use in a semiautomatic handgun, are limited to 10 cartridges. The capacity is measured by the kind of cartridge the magazine was designed to contain. In some cases the magazine will be capable of containing more than 10 rounds of a different caliber; however that is not relevant in the determination of the maximum permitted capacity.
Example:
Heckler and Koch P7 pistol chambered for 9mm Luger caliber:
The magazine designed for the 40 S&W calibre variant of the pistol will hold 13 cartridges of 9mm Luger calibre and function in the 9mm Luger calibre P7 pistol. This is permissible as the maximum permitted capacity of the 40 S&W calibre magazine must be measured by the number of 40 S&W calibre cartridges it is capable of holding, which is 10 such cartridges in the case of the HK P7 pistol magazine.