Magazine. Try e-gunparts.com
Get in touch with high standard in texas, they have all the clips for all their models. I bought two from them 3 months ago for my s101
If you Google "high standard supermatic trophy" you will find auctions that have sold this gun for the high $600's. It is valued up to $1000. based on condition and model.
Doesn't exist. However, the M1 Garand is a rifle.it was used in WW2 and it holds a clip not a magazine. and was used by the US.Correction: The M1 Garand does have a magazine. The clip is integrated into the feeding system, but is still fed into the magazine.
You dont deserve the gun or magazine if you call a magazine a clip.
Doesn't exist. However, the M1 Garand is a rifle.it was used in WW2 and it holds a clip not a magazine. and was used by the US.Correction: The M1 Garand does have a magazine. The clip is integrated into the feeding system, but is still fed into the magazine.
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?
The Supermatic Trophy used the ML prefix from 1951-1953.
The term "magazine fed" indicates that items or materials are being supplied by a separate or detachable compartment (magazine). The most common use is in firearms, where the magazine is an ammunition clip or case, which can be replaced with another when empty. --------------------------------------------------------------------- While the above is mostly accurate, the magazine doesn't have to be detachable to be magazine fed. A lot of bolt action and lever action rifles used a non-detachable magazine (never a clip - a clip is a loading device, not a feeding device) and are also magazine fed.
Magazine fed, not clip. And it's .22 Long Rifle.
Cip is not a standard acronym, but generally it used as short-hand for clip on, such as a clip on earring.
'The Weekly Standard' is a weekly magazine that is published in the US. It began in 1995 and has become influential through its writers and publishers. It is often used as a key magazine to refer to regarding politics and modern culture.
A clip just holds ammunition & will not feed ammunition since there is not a spring to push the ammunition into the firearm. A Magazine is a feeding device that holds the ammunition & has a spring to feed the ammunition into the firearm. Also a clip is normally used to feed a magazine. As far as magazines go there are numerous types. The common ones are a box magazine, tubular magazine, rotary magazine & these can be internal or detachable. Most bolt action rifles have an internal magazine while most semi automatic firearms have a detachable magazine like what is used in an AK-47 or the AR-15 series rifles. One internal magazine semi auto rifle is the M-1 Garand, it also needs a clip to feed it. Many 22 rifles have a tubular magazine as do many shotguns. An example of a rotary box magazine would be the 10/22 ruger or the old Savage 99. The 10/22 is detachable where the Savage 99 is not (in the old ones, the newer Savage 99 magazines are detacable & I believe a regular box style). Hope this helps some.