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The Range
Firearms Chat
New 300BLK PMAG's coming soon.
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<blockquote data-quote="NightShade" data-source="post: 2945348" data-attributes="member: 29706"><p>Yeah I agree that there are other ways to keep track and the way they are doing it is little to no difference from standard mags. I picked up something at one point and ended up with one of the 5.56 bands.</p><p></p><p>What I did for the 300BLK has no way to be mistaken as a different mag. All my 5.56 are black and 30 round, the 300 blk is tan and 40 round. If it's full you can tell right off the bat.</p><p></p><p>I bought a couple pmags before I even had my rifle complete. The lubricity of metal against plastic is one of the things I like along with no dents from a drop taking it out of commission without knowing what may have happened. A steel or aluminium mag can easily cave in on a side and cause an issue that is harder to see, the way I figure it when a pmag quits it's probably pretty well got some cracks or pieces missing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NightShade, post: 2945348, member: 29706"] Yeah I agree that there are other ways to keep track and the way they are doing it is little to no difference from standard mags. I picked up something at one point and ended up with one of the 5.56 bands. What I did for the 300BLK has no way to be mistaken as a different mag. All my 5.56 are black and 30 round, the 300 blk is tan and 40 round. If it's full you can tell right off the bat. I bought a couple pmags before I even had my rifle complete. The lubricity of metal against plastic is one of the things I like along with no dents from a drop taking it out of commission without knowing what may have happened. A steel or aluminium mag can easily cave in on a side and cause an issue that is harder to see, the way I figure it when a pmag quits it's probably pretty well got some cracks or pieces missing. [/QUOTE]
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New 300BLK PMAG's coming soon.
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