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I have had some mags that have been loaded for 10+ years. Been in the same ammo can. I should check on those, but they were brand new, loaded, boxed and haven't been touched since.
It depends on how good the steel is. There are many mechanical designs that rely on a compressed spring to stay compressed for years, even for decades. If the proper steel is selected and it is properly heat treated the spring constant will not degrade significantly.
Tag.I load my spare high capacity mag to about 50% because I have the same concern,
Imo. Leaving a mag loaded will not adversely affect a spring. All mine stay loaded. The cycling of a spring is what causes it to wear out or stretching or compressing beyond normal dimensions. Sitting loaded will not affect it any more than and probably actually less than loading and unloading frequently. I learned about springs in engineering school.
This has to be one of the most highly debated topics in firearms. The truth seems to be that nobody knows for sure.I personally keep my magazines loaded and about twice a year, I unload them for about a week, and then reload them.Does it do anything significant? Hell if I know, but it's not that difficult to do, and satisfies piece of mind.
Quote from: CP on August 26, 2015, 07:01:59 AMIt depends on how good the steel is. There are many mechanical designs that rely on a compressed spring to stay compressed for years, even for decades. If the proper steel is selected and it is properly heat treated the spring constant will not degrade significantly. Springs degrade from cycles, frequency and amplitude. Constant compression should not affect a correctly made spring, even if measured in years or decades.