It is important to have ammunition if one is going to own a weapon. Many Magazine clips can be bought at the manufacturing stores, or found in stores online.
I assume the person is inquiring about the "clip" or "magazine" that holds the bullets in the Remington 7600 pump rifle. The rifle came equipped from the factory with a 4 shot clip. The clip was removeable to provide more ease in unloading and loading the rifle, but can also be lost. It can be ordered from the manufacturer or from other websites. Make sure you order it in the caliber you need.
Try e-gunparts.com
While some people use the terms interchangeably, the proper term IS magazine, Magazine comes from a French word for storage. A clip holds cartridges, so that they may be quickly loaded INTO the magazine. Example- an AR 15 rifle may have ammunition loaded in 10 round "clips". The cartridges are pushed from the clip into the magazine. The MAGAZINE is then loaded into the rifle. However, some rifles, such as the M1 Garand, used an "en bloc" clip. This held the cartridges, and the entire clip was inserted into the rifle magazine. Confused now?
It is possible but not guaranteed. The Remington 581 and 591M are different models, so there may be slight variations in the stock design that could affect the compatibility. It's best to compare the dimensions and mounting points of the stocks to ensure a proper fit.
This is known as the clip or magazine.
do you mean attaching the magazine= clip, to a rifle
If you mean the magazine, there is a magazine release button on the left side of the gun. You press the button and the magazine comes out.
As big as someone cares to make for it. By the way, it's "magazine", not "clip".
The M-1 Garand uses an "en bloc" clip, rather than a magazine. The standard clip holds 8 rounds. The entire clip is loaded into the rifle, after firing the last cartridge, the empty clip is automatically ejected from the rifle.
List the caliber and then someone will try to help you.
.222 Remington model
Magazine fed, not clip. And it's .22 Long Rifle.