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AR15.COM
3/13/2005 1:15:24 PM EDT
With M-16/AR-15 mags it's the number of compression & release cycles that causes wear and loss of spring strength so load 'em and leave 'em.

I may be completely mistaken but from reading this forum I get the impression that somehow pistol mag springs are different and should not be left loaded for extended periods.  Can someone clarify this for me, please?
3/13/2005 3:22:53 PM EDT
[#1]
Loaded mags originally loaded in WWII have been found and shot with 100% reliable in recent years.  It's the compression and decompression that wears springs.
3/13/2005 4:11:57 PM EDT
[#2]
Springs are springs, makes no difference if they're for a pistol or rifle, IMO.
3/13/2005 4:38:55 PM EDT
[#3]
Well, that's what I had thought too. Maybe I just misunderstood what I was reading but I couldn't follow how one mag spring would be different from another but you never know. Thanks for confirming that for me.
3/14/2005 1:03:28 AM EDT
[#4]
Hardly a scientific test, but I've left several pistol mags fully loaded for over 2 years, and they ran just fine - those included some old Colt 1911 7 rounders, and a couple of CZ-75 factory 15 rounders in 9mm...


   - georgestrings
3/14/2005 9:42:48 AM EDT
[#5]
I have several old Colt mags that have been loaded for years.  They do make it to the range one or twice a month, fired, then reloaded.  They've been used like that since the late 90s at least.
3/15/2005 5:07:23 PM EDT
[#6]
Seems like a materials course I had in engineering school talked about "creep" in metals.  I would think metal springs would would loose compression strength over time under a constant load.  High temps will affect creep.  "Metal fatigue" occurs when repeditive motion or "load and release" happens many times.

However, I do not know all the variables about the steel metal composition...  get a PhD and some lab work to prove all the theories.  I have heard the WWII mag stories.  Get some more if you want new mags!  They are cheap.
3/22/2005 9:07:27 PM EDT
[#7]
Load'em and leave'em, shouldn't hurt a thing
3/23/2005 6:05:34 AM EDT
[#8]
The old 1911 mags had a lot of free space under the follower when fully loaded to 7 rounds, lasting nearly forever in that condition.
A lot of newer designs "stuff" more rounds in a smaller space, which works fine until fatigue sets in.
This may eventually show up when the slide fails to lock open, or worse, a misfeed.
"Downloading" a magazine a round or two, depending on capacity, certainly can't hurt, either when shooting or storing long term.
With some cheap aftermarket magazines, the problem usually occurs much sooner.