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Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 7:20 am
by bgreenea3
Cheaper than dirt had used GI mags in stock......... Only $130 each! :shock:

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 8:32 pm
by greener
bgreenea3 wrote:Cheaper than dirt had used GI mags in stock......... Only $130 each! :shock:
I have a birthday coming up, five or six would be nice.

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 10:34 pm
by bgreenea3
greener wrote:
bgreenea3 wrote:Cheaper than dirt had used GI mags in stock......... Only $130 each! :shock:
I have a birthday coming up, five or six would be nice.

if I loved you that much I would........ :P

Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2013 11:39 am
by Hakaman
hopefully all this insanity will come to an end, but I think this will live a little longer then it did 4 years ago. As far as the mag, my twenty's will have to do, it they become illegal, Hakaman might get shut down this summer. I can still use my bob sled (20 rd version!) for slow fire shooting.
Haka

Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2013 12:55 pm
by Bullseye
You may have to arrange financing for those birthday magazines at the rate they're climbing.

R,
Bullseye

Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 7:33 am
by greener
Bullseye wrote:You may have to arrange financing for those birthday magazines at the rate they're climbing.

R,
Bullseye
Their value is increasing faster than precious metals so they sound like an investment you should mortgage the farm for.

My DPMS came with 2 30-round mags. I didn't like them with my sandbag rest, so I bought a couple 20-round mags ($8/each). They work much better for shooting off a rest. Had I known that the price of magazines was going up like this, I'd have made a much deeper investment in magazines to help those who need them at any price. I'm hard pressed to come up with scenarios that I will need more than 100 rounds in magazines.

Just to make it interesting, New York has decided on a limit of 7 rounds (even the police), there is a national push for 10 rounds max and one of the gun control bills in the VA legislature is a 20-round max. Sort of reinforces the lack of logic behind the push.

Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:05 pm
by Bullseye
Current legislative thinking is everyone wants to do something, even when doing nothing makes more sense. It is like a cup of water added into the ocean, it won't change anything because the real problems are being glossed over and overlooked.


Remember, a committee is a group of people who singularly can do nothing and together decide unanimously that nothing can be done.

R,
Bullseye

Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 1:47 pm
by bgreenea3
greener wrote: Their value is increasing faster than precious metals so they sound like an investment you should mortgage the farm for.

My DPMS came with 2 30-round mags. I didn't like them with my sandbag rest, so I bought a couple 20-round mags ($8/each). They work much better for shooting off a rest. Had I known that the price of magazines was going up like this, I'd have made a much deeper investment in magazines to help those who need them at any price. I'm hard pressed to come up with scenarios that I will need more than 100 rounds in magazines.

Just to make it interesting, New York has decided on a limit of 7 rounds (even the police), there is a national push for 10 rounds max and one of the gun control bills in the VA legislature is a 20-round max. Sort of reinforces the lack of logic behind the push.
I carry 6 30 round mags and 2 20's, and a couple extra pistol mags in my patrol car, in my "active shooter" or "go" bag... It's nice to have extra ammo for me or someone I work with just in case. Since I have them, I won't ever need them, but if I didn't I'm sure I would.

I'm glad NY cops are limited in rounds to what the bad people carry I'm sure they won't ever carry an evil large cap magazine to commit a crime now its illegal. Kind of like gun free zones making us safer......
http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=C0vyxgJL ... 0vyxgJLJVA

Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 5:21 pm
by Georgezilla
According to what I read, NY police are not limited to the 7 rounds:

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/01 ... or-police/

Poor drafting didn't explicitly exempt LEOs, but a later clarification was given.

If the "spirit" of the legislation is taken at face value, however, LEOs should be subject to the limit. The idea that's given is to limit the amount of damage one person can cause, LEOs are people, and as such, are not exempt from developing mental illness, corruption, etc. But, of course, I believe this is about citizen control, hence LEOs are not subject to the limit of 7 rounds.

Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 6:34 pm
by Hakaman
I think it can be summed up best the way I have heard you folks, and others, say.
'Laws only apply to the lawful, not the outlaws.'