broken glock magazine
Got an older, not full metal lined, glock mag that has developed that annoying crack at the top front. What are my options?
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Take the guts out and scrap it.
Go to one of the Glock forums and put a ad in for a mag body [;)]0 -
Throw it in the trash what size Glock? I have a bunch and if I have one I'll send you one. If you can't have high caps I may not have one. Send me an emai. Ricci. 0 -
You would only be out some time to try a plastic weld on it. Today a replacement is easy to obtain, tomorrow perhaps not so much. Save the guts in any case. 0 -
Take out what isn't bad and trash it. No reason to try and count on a mag that's broken and repaired. 0 -
quote:Originally posted by Ricci Wright
Throw it in the trash what size Glock? I have a bunch and if I have one I'll send you one. If you can't have high caps I may not have one. Send me an emai. Ricci.
Not knowing (nor wanting to know) the details with respect to this case, many places that ban purchase/ownership of high cap mags have older ones grandfathered in, and *replacement of broken parts* is permitted.
IE, you can't legally get new mags, but you may legally be able to get parts to fix the ones you've already got.
You'd have to check your local laws, but it may be entirely legal for you to get a replacement mag body for a broken high cap Glock mag. Assuming so, you can always keep the broken mag body (or even just an image of it) as evidence that you've legitimately used the part to repair a broken/worn mag, should this ever become an issue.
In practice, most vendors won't sell these to restricted areas, because they don't want the hassle, but that's as separate question/issue and there really may not be a legal obstacle here.0 -
No issue with me owning it. 0 -
Email sent. 0 -
Haven't received it yet, but I will respond when I do. 0
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