Rifle Magazines
MAG Midcap
These magazines are a great cheap mag. They are made of plastic and are lightweight so carrying 8-10 of them is not hard. Each magazine holds 130rds which is about 50 more than other magazines of this size. There are two styles of this magazine, the standard M4 size and the VN short size. The VN style is half the size of the standard magazines. When you first get these you need to run a magazines worth of bbs through it to get all of the oil out and for the bbs to feed correctly. The first few rounds will fly about 10-12ft and then fall but after those first rounds are done, they start to fly straight. The price for 7 magazines is $58.00
Pros:
Cheap, lightweight, high count midcap, short or standard version
Cons:
Initial feeding problems, Can break and are un-repairable
Overall:
I would rate these 8/10 due to the fact they are so cheap and hold a high count of bbs for a midcap mag.
Pros:
Cheap, lightweight, high count midcap, short or standard version
Cons:
Initial feeding problems, Can break and are un-repairable
Overall:
I would rate these 8/10 due to the fact they are so cheap and hold a high count of bbs for a midcap mag.
Magpul PTS PMag/EMag
The real version of the PTS P/EMags are the best versions out there. Each mag hold 120 rounds, and is made from the same polymer that the rest of Magpuls products are made from. The endcap is actually clipped in and you have to release it to remove it and this allows you to take the mage apart for cleaning and maintenance as well as install Magpul Ranger Plates without having to worry about them falling off. The feeding system is much stronger and the fit in the magwell is much tighter. Like the ceaher versions, only the PMag comes in the Magpul color choices and the EMag only in black. These true mags fall in at around $25.00 per mag.
Pros:
Feeding system, material, baseplate
Cons:
price
Overall:
These are an easy 9/10 when it comes to general rating against other magazines but are a garunteed 10/10 when comparing to the cheap counterpart.
Pros:
Feeding system, material, baseplate
Cons:
price
Overall:
These are an easy 9/10 when it comes to general rating against other magazines but are a garunteed 10/10 when comparing to the cheap counterpart.
Magpul Beta/Green Label PMag/EMag
Though Magpul's name is on these mags they are not made in the U.S. These mags are the cheap licensed versions from Hong Kong. The materials used to make these mags are not Magpul's polymer but a cheaper plastic that is more fragile. There is more magwell wobble with these than true Magpul mags as well. The spring and follower are also not made of the same quality as Magpul's mags. The Base plate is a copy and doesn’t actually lock onto the base of the mag but just slides on. This makes it hard to use Magpul's ranger plates so if you use a mag assisting device you are limited to original mag pulls. Now all of the negatives aside, the price for a box set of five of these is $42.00 which is a great price for a midcap mag. These come in a variety of sizes and capacities. You can get short mags that hold 20, 30 or 70 rounds and you can get the standard sized mags that hold 30 or 75 rounds. With that many choices you can pick the perfect mag to fit your loadout. These licensed mags come in two different styles and four colors. You can get the standard PMag style or the newer EMag style. Only the PMag comes in black, od, foliage and dark earth.
Pros:
different sizes and capacities, colors, styles price
Cons:
material, base plate, mag wobble
Overall:
For those who are on a budget or just want the look of Magpul without spending the money these mags are perfect. I would give them an 8/10 because they are knockoffs and wobble in certain magwells.
Pros:
different sizes and capacities, colors, styles price
Cons:
material, base plate, mag wobble
Overall:
For those who are on a budget or just want the look of Magpul without spending the money these mags are perfect. I would give them an 8/10 because they are knockoffs and wobble in certain magwells.
Lonex Flash Mag
The Flash Mag by Lonex is a great non-standard hi-cap mag. Unlike most hi-cap magazines that use a winding wheel that takes 20+ spins to complete, the Flash Mag takes 3-4 single pulls of the string hidden discretely inside the base plate of the magazine. Almost teh entire magazine will feed from those 3-4 pulls. It is less work then a winding wheel and you dont have to stop in the middle of shooting to wind rounds back into your feeding tube. If you use hi-cap magazines, the Lonex Flash Mag is definitely the best choice to use.
Pros:
no winding wheel, less time to prep continuous shooting
Cons:
rattling of the bbs still occurs
Overall:
The magazine is much better than the standard hi-cap but still have teh hi-cap rattle It is rated 8/10 though for its easy and ability to shoot continuously without winding.
Pros:
no winding wheel, less time to prep continuous shooting
Cons:
rattling of the bbs still occurs
Overall:
The magazine is much better than the standard hi-cap but still have teh hi-cap rattle It is rated 8/10 though for its easy and ability to shoot continuously without winding.
Pistol Magazines
RA Tech KWA/KSC Co2 mag
Coming Soon
Thunder B Shells
Coming Soon