If so, approximate round count? What were you doing when it failed? Normal (reload, drop every now and then) abuse or excessive (drop a lot, stepped on, kicked, in the course of duty type stuff) abuse?
Thanks.
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If so, approximate round count? What were you doing when it failed? Normal (reload, drop every now and then) abuse or excessive (drop a lot, stepped on, kicked, in the course of duty type stuff) abuse?
Thanks.
One of my old 10 rd magazines for my G17 has a follower which seems to cant a bit higher than it should at the front of the magazine, but it still seems to function well. I've replaced the follower with a new one with the same result, so I gather that the problem is probably due to some distortion/spreading of the inner metal tube at the top. The magazine has been heavily used from 2006 in IDPA, GSSF and steel plate competitions, but I can't really say that its been abused, even in IDPA use.
Annually, I inspect all of my springs for wear, and as preventive maintenance replace them as necessary.
Best, Jon
Last edited by JonInWA; 04-24-09 at 20:05.
I have one Glock m19 mag that has a crack in the plastic that runs from the top down, almost to the bottom on the rear portion. The metal liner shows through. It works just as well as when new. It does not drop free when empty.![]()
My very first Glock was a glock 22. It was issued to me in 1994. At that time, it had been issued two years earlier. Back then, we shot a lot more than we do now. I can't give an aaccurate amount of rounds fired. But, I would estimate an average of 500 per year. (this sounds low, because I was issued a newer one a few years later and didn't shoot this one as much)
Anyway, we are always allowing our magazines to fall to the ground during qualification rounds and drills. The only problem that I have encountered was a failure to feed last fall. I replaced all my magazine springs and haven't had any problems. I did notice that the old springs were quite a bit shorter than the new ones.
Mags are disposable. If you have a suspect mag, crush it, toss it, & replace it.
Glock mags have an excellent reputation for durability, but that doesn't mean they're immune from unusual wear or bad luck.
After years of use, I had to change the springs in my G34/G17 mags. Other than that, the Glock mags have been good. I have had HP and 1911 mags than you just could not trust. Threw those out!
"Being PARANOID is just plain smart thinking when they are really out to get you!"
Glock 23 mag w/ 16K+ rounds through it showing excessive wear around magazine release notch. Still functions flawlessly but soon it will be a range only mag
X-Military
Glock Armorer
During recent training, I cracked the baseplate on a G17 mag. I guess you can dump them on the concrete only so many times. While the baseplate is cracked, it never came off and the mag still functioned without a problem. I'm not using that one for anything but the range until I can figure out a way to replace the baseplate.
And this leads me to a question: What's an easy way to remove the baseplates from Glock mags? Am I the only one who is having issues with squeezing the sides of the magazines together?
I have a G19 as my duty gun. The only issue I've had is failure to drop from the mag well. As far as round count or how long it was loaded before it became an issue, I couldn't tell you but it lasted for a good few years. Mag are expendable but if it still fail to function properly after changing the mag springs then it should not be used for duty or self-defense. In my opinion, I would keep the mag and use it as part of malfunction drill ONLY. As I mentioned above, I've had failure to drop freely from the mag well and I had to rip it out. I've marked bad mags as "Training Use Only" so I don't mix it with good mags during reload drills.
Last edited by BT2012; 04-25-09 at 15:28.
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