Hello all. I have been searching for some time on how to determine the difference between Pre-Ban and Non Pre-Ban AR 15 mags. New to the AR world. Any advice or if you direct me to any helpful reads I would very much appreciate it. Thanks so much
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I have a couple dozen high-cap pre-ban AR mags from several different manufacturers and NONE of them have a date of any form stamped on them - inside or outside. Many post ban mags will have the month and year of man'f stamped on them and may also have something like "LE or Export Only" stamped on them if they were made during the AWB ban. Once the Federal AWB sunsetted, most all mag man'fs ceased the date stamping, etc. There are some easy ones....some manufacturers didn't even exist prior to 1994....others stopped making mags prior to 1994....some didn't start making mags until AFTER the AWB sunset. And just like with some Glock mags, there are some AR mags out there that you just can't tell when they were made.
Hello all. I have been searching for some time on how to determine the difference between Pre-Ban and Non Pre-Ban AR 15 mags. New to the AR world. Any advice or if you direct me to any helpful reads I would very much appreciate it. Thanks so much
Rule of thumb- don't believe anyone who tries to sell you a plastic preban.
I think you're going to be able to classify AR mags into three distinct groups, and act accordingly.
1. Documented pre-ban. These mags will have pre-Sep 13, 1994 date stamps on them. Center Industries, for example, started marking their mags sometime in the late '80's. Frequently this is on the inside of the mag body. Or they will be from manufacturers who were not making mags during the ban, like Adventure Line or Parsons.
What about orlite?
No surprise. As I said, CI didn't start marking their mags until some time in the late '80's, and some say not all CI's mags were marked until late into 1991. The only problem with date or contract markings on the floorplate is that you may want (or be forced) to change out floorplates as they get bent or have the tabs broken.I have Center Industries mags NIW that have the month and year on the wrap, but nothing on or inside the mag at all. Sanchez is another contract man'f that falls into the Adventureline and Parsons category (I have some Parsons too). With the Center Industries, the military contract number is stamped on the floorplate of the mag. This number can be directly tied to the month and year of manufacture.
Good post. One thing I know for sure: If it says: "C-Products" - it's not pre-ban - even though some have seen fit to offer them as such...
I meant the tab at the rear you use to remove the floorplate. Sometimes they bend and snap off from removal or bouncing on the ground.I wonder why the CI mags I have that are marked July / 1992 on the wrap have no markings inside or outside of the mag. I'm also concerned that the floorplate of the mags doesn't have any tabs on it at all - tabs are on the mag body. This is so confusing despite all the expert commentary here. I am still mystified.
wait, like dealers selling C- Products mags for $40 each??
Yup...If I've said it once - I've said it a thousand times - never trust your freedom to a gun dealer...
Rule of thumb- don't believe anyone who tries to sell you a plastic preban.
Some are date stamped too! Provided you don't go FA, they don't melt eitherBad advice. There are plenty of Orlites and Thermelts. (er, Thermold/Master Molder) mags that are preban, and all are "plastic".
Yes, there are a lot of newer plastic mags that are usually not preban (mostly pmags, some random junk out there by USA promag and the like) but saying that "plastic is a bad as a rule of thumb" is foolish.
-Mike