Since (apparently) RUclips commenters appear to have achieved an average age of thirteen, (which makes the presence of such spiteful people on a gun video dubious...) let me point out that nobody here claimed to have invented this process. This video is just Tandemkross showing people how to do it. That's it. Just a tutorial. Can we all just go back to enjoying the free exchange of ideas now? LOL Keep up the good work, TK! Never given me reason to so much as consider sending anything back.
Thank you! For YEARS my son has wanted an old Ruger Mark 22. I always attempted to redirect him. Well 2023 Christmas was special and I knew what he wanted :) With your help his new toy will be VERY enjoyed. It’s also another good friendship builder for us. 👍🏼
This may be eight years old but I have never come across an online “how to fix it” video that had a greater impact on turning a brand new firearm from a total jamomatic to 100% reliable. 👍
I was having about a 20% FTF or stove-pipe failures on my Mark IV Hunter. I had tried all types of ammunition with no improvements. Then I came across this video. I "tuned" two of my magazines and after running about 300 rounds through . . .NO FTF or stove-pipes. Great tip and easy to follow instructions. Now onto my other mags.
I recently bought a Mark IV Target and was having frequent problems with stovepipes and jams with ammo from three different manufacturers. I finally tried some CCI Mini Mag and that helped with only 2 stovepipes in 8 mags, a significant improvement. However, I wasn't satisfied and decided to tune my 4 magazines with a couple omissions. I ground the sharp points as instructed by Bryan, deburred the edges on the top as well as the button track and sanded the edges of the follower. I decided NOT to polish everything because I'm lazy and my magazines are already smooth plated nickel and not blued. I ignored the plunger and replaced the follower buttons with new TK buttons. THE RESULTS WERE AMAZING!!! On a test run, I shot 80 rounds of Federal Champion that had been a problem before and another 40 CCI Mini Mag with no troubles at all. A week later (and without cleaning), the wife and I shot 240 rounds of CCI Mini Mag with zero problems. The wife even noticed how much smoother the magazines were when reloading. In order to test how low we can go with this magazine tuning, I'll have to try some of the crappiest ammo I can find and see what happens. THANK YOU TANDEMKROSS!!!
I am a buyer of TandemKross products and will continue to be in the future. I find their products are quality made and reasonably priced. As a competitive shooter I have been tuning magazines of various types since 1990. This video on tuning Ruger mags is very well done and incorporates a couple things I had not thought of in the process. Good job Brian, keep up the good work. As for this Wood guy, nothing in Brian's video is really new, he didn't claim to have "invented" the process and whatever issue you have with him and the company seems to stem from your attitude alone. I would hate to live my life with your attitude.
Instead of using gun oil, I used Dupont Non-Stick Teflon Dry-Film Lubricant. I got the spray can. I used it on the spring, follower, and button. It's dry, doesn't attract grit, reduces friction, and bonds to the surface.
I just discovered your video after analyzing a SR 22 mags that are rounded and MK II which are sharp and proceeded to do what you just showed , Super informative. Works great.
I find it rather amusing that anyone living would claim to have "invented" or "originated" the principles of polishing and deburring magazines. This is information that has been used by people who wanted to smooth out all the parts of their semiautomatic pistols, since the advent of the P-01. It's basically the same principles that were used by people who did action jobs on their revolvers before CNC machined parts were available. I learned some of this from Joe Bowman in the 1990's. I'm glad to see this is up here and available. There is no earthly reason for anyone to tolerate badly tuned magazines. Thank you, Brian, and all the other folks at Tamdemkross!
This made a huge difference for me. I also lightly sanded the spring with 1k grit and deburred the end of the spring that travels. All my magazines function smoothly now, 250 rounds tested with no failure to feed issues. Thanks for posting this video.
Man, this video saved me so much trouble. I was almost ready to give up, ran into this video followed it and now I'm having no problems. Thanks Tandemkross!!!
So glad that you posted this video. Was having all kinds of issues. Tuned 5 magazines folluwing your instructions and everything works perfectly now!! Thank you!!
Looks great! A no nonsense video. I know what I'll be doing this afternoon. Thanks for good quality audio and video and for not including silly obnoxious music. You put a lot of work into this and it shows. Thanks!
I’m late to the party but I wanted to thank you for these tips. I did all of your tips you suggested. Before it was gritty and sticky, after it is butter smooth.
The space where you grind the two corners is very tight. There is a perfect Dremel item for that, #453. It is a 5/32" diameter by 3/4" long stone used for sharpening chain saws. Both Home Depot and Lowes have it in stock. There is a picture of it on both of their websites.
Well , I got to say the magazine tune up worked perfectly, my 24 year old Mark II ran great , this is a easy trick to complete, I also replaced 11 of the magazine springs and did a complete tear down and clean after the grinding and polishing . For my third steel match I was 13 out of 46 . Great video and thanks again .
Thanks for the tutorial.... I will be tuning up my mags before shooting season kicks in! My only request is that you had shown a side by side comparison of the magazine lips before and after tune up.
Hi Brian, thanks BIG TIME for posting this mag tune how-to. In the past 6 months I purchased 3 22cal pistols; - 1988 unfired Smith & Wesson model 41 - A used but great condition Browning Buckmark URX 5 1/2" - A brand new Ruger Mark IV. Since 2 of these guns are unfired, and 1 is hardly used, (plus I bought 4 mextra mags for each gun to total 6), the mags are in need of your tuning attention. You know, the plastic followers have sharp edges from the cast molds, the mag frames are sharp from forming and cutting to shape, the top of the mag lip that holds the first round when you insert the mag is sharp...etc etc just like you described in your video..... Now I have 18 mags to tune up..... 🙄😔 thanks to you and your video... 😜 Seriously though, thanks for the great detailed instructions, perfect lighting, and focused video images to compliment the task
Great video, finished off my tune up on 11 markII mags and 13 markIII mags , about 5 hours in garage bench , these are 24 years old markII mags , so are the pistols . The markIII is five years old never a stovepipe or FTE or FTF . Had a double feed Saturday at a steel plate match . I'm looking to improve my time with the pistols I have , 24 years prices have went up along with ammo , Rimfire . Thanks
Thank you for putting this out there. First 5 rounds of every mag are hosed. 3 different types of ammo. The last 5 seem to run great. Gun is brand new with one of your triggers in it. Will do this work in the next couple days and bring the gun back out to the range. Fingers crossed!
Thanks for this info! It Fixed a new mag not inserting issue I had. I got a Mark IV 22/45 lite about a month ago, I Just got a new magazine from TK and it wouldn't insert. I found one edge of the magazine was catching on the magazine latch and I had to press the mag. release to let it fully inset. I contacted Ruger and they exchanged the Mag. and sent me two new mags. which did the exact same thing! Comparing the new mags, to the ones I already had that worked. I saw the edges of the new mags were kind of sharp not as rounded as the old mags. So I followed this guide and did a little extra smoothing and polishing in the trouble area of the mag. They slide in like BUTTER now!
Finally got around to doing all this after my mkii wouldn't even chamber the first round anymore at all. To be honest I've never cleaned inside the magazines either... between doing what's on the vid and cleaning the two guns magazines I have they're all cycling like Champs now!! Mkii Mkiii
Glad to hear it worked for you! If you're having issues with your firearm, cleaning it and your mags is usually a good (and free, more or less) place to start trying to solve the problem.
Well thanks, now I have 7 mags to tune up there goes a half a day just kidding thanks for the tips. I use my mark 3 and my 22/45 for bowling pin and steel plate races any tips to help win are welcome.
Thanks for info. My mags feel gritty and sometime the follower gets stuck and causes a failure to feed. I feel confident that this is going to help a lot.
part of this reason is that the spring is on the side of the magazine, rather than the center, delivering oblique force, as compared to a Beretta Unos or SW mag. It those cases the force on the follower is centered as the spring itself is so placed, provided for a much smoother mechanism that the Ruger mags can never achiever, regardless of how much smoothing, polishing, and lubrication you apply. This doe not affect performance, but those pother butter smooth mags are much more pleasant to load.
This was fantastic!!!!! Thank you!!!! I bought the Mark IV 22/45. When I shot it, horrible - 2-3 rounds per magazine didn't load and most got bent. So, I did this, all but bluing - I didn't have it. It's a totally different gun. Zero malfunctions today. Shot 120 rounds. Smooth! I love this gun! I was going to take it back, but no way now. Thank you for doing this!!! Though I think it's a shame that Ruger can't correct this in the factory
My Ruger Mk IV Lite has been a literal flawless machine for over 2K+ rounds, then suddenly started acting up. Naturally I suspect the mags. I'm starting with a takedown / clean, and we'll see where that leads - thanks for the vid!
@@TANDEMKROSS One of my mags won't takedown - the pin on the bottom just ... won't budge? I'm about to wrap it in a cloth, put it in the vice and smack it with the hammer punch - thoughts? Many thanks!
With all due respects to this great video, the second phase of this modification is not necessary. First of all, the honing of the area said to cause stovepiping is definitely necessary. But doing all that work to the factory follower buttons and slide area is really unnecessary. There is a much simplier route to take - buy and install the VOLQUARTSEN follower buttons. I have replaced 6 of them on my Mark II mags and it was THE CURE. After a quick examination of the VOLQ versus Ruger buttons, you can easily see why they work. Guaranteed ! Save yourself alot of needless work with this part of the upgrade. Otherwise, this is a very good and informative video.
This video helped me a lot. I recently purchased some extra mags for competition, and BOY did they hang and grind! I did as you did in the video, and those things are slicker than owl poop in morning dew. Thanks a lot for this video.
5 brand new mags . Brand new mk4 standard spent 2hr with ear bud and diamond lapping past on the feed ramp still getting 2rd ftf. On 5rd load mag. Guess I'll try this out
I just got a Ruger mark 4 22/45 Lite. Ive shot it about 1300 times almost exclusively with silencer. The first 50 shots are fine. After that it starts stovepiping the first rounds on the magazine. I started loading only 5 shots, then it worked flawlessly again. Then i sprayed the magazines with gun oil and it worked flawlessly with full magazines. Spraying them with oil is short term fix as it gathers alot of crap, and also makes for a huge cleaning job afterwards. I was thinking of sending the magazines back to the retailer, but after reading the comments there is a high chance i will get 2 new malfunctioning magazines in return...
I have SPs when my Mark III is dirty (approx 75 - 100 rounds) so I tried this tune-up. Great presentation and easy to follow, but following the completion of one mag, I could not discern a difference in follower smoothness between an un-tuned mag and the newly tuned mag. I will get to the range soon to see which mag fouls up first.
good vid, i just picked a MkIII up the other day, and Yes, it's a pain to load the mag., so im gonna try your tips, hopefully it makes it less sticky, thanks.
Thank you so much I was so disappointed with my new Mark III jamming all the time. Tuned the mag's just like you sead and pop pop pop raped fireing cheep amo like a CHAMP and after doing the first mag it was simple and fast !! 4 mor too go Thanks !!
Thanks for this video… Ruger really needs to fix reliability issues with magazines… tuning should just be an extra enhancement.. very un- happy with quality control with Ruger.. and Iv let them know about this ongoing issues .. from the looks of things they need to tune them before leaving factory!
Great vid, I was mainly looking to put the follower button on the other side, which worked, btw, but you have given me all kinds of extra improvements. IMO as a right handed, the button is on the wrong side of the magazine, which makes it hard to load.Reversing the follower button has made these SOOOOOO much easier to load, at least for me, anyway. Has anyone else noticed that?
I had not thought to do that until I read your post. If nothing else glad I watched the vid, 2 of the 6 mags I have stick at the top, and yes the thumb stud would be nicer on the Right side of the mag vs left. Going to take care of that when I get home.
I noticed. ..and tried it...worked great but now the bolt does not stay open when empty.. someone needs to make a two-sided button so it's easy to load left or right handed... I put mine back the way it was
I am very happy to come across this video - but it also disappoints me that a pistol from the factory can require so much work to make it reliable. I have a 22/45 that I bought 10 years ago that jams a live round in a stovepipe type position at least once every magazine. I will try these modifications and see if they can fix the issue, but darn - this shouldn't be necessary.
I realize I’m commenting on a four year old video but I’m just curious what the bluing is for. I was under the impression that cold bluing really doesn’t convey the benefits that the actual factory process does ( hot bluing) so I was wondering how it affects the magazines.
Just got a ruger mark iv lite and hopefully this works! Took it shooting and there was a failure to eject and feeding problems in every mag. Seems like this is the fix... I'll update if I fix it. Buying a dremel tomorrow as I only have a giant Milwaukee grinder and going to test some shots
@@TANDEMKROSS I've gotten everything done including Tandemkross firing pin, extractor, blast pack, green mag springs, And I tuned the mags... I've shot around 500 rounds through with 0 malfunctions. thanks Tandemkross!
I did it just like it shows, and now my 22/45 lite jams on the last shot every single time unfortunately. Copied this video exactly and now I need to replace my mags.
Should have tried it on one mag. If good, continue to another, or all of them. Never modify all you have without checking function along the way... I did this to one mag at a time, testing each as I went. Took a loooong time to get all 10 done. But didn’t loose any mags in the process. All work well.
QUESTION: Do the MK IV pistols benefit from this Magazine Tune-Up as well? Input is especially appreciated from T.K. and or people who have done it to their MK IV pistol magazines.
I have no doubt that the mags that came with my Mk IV 22/45 Lite would benefit greatly from this treatment. They both fail to push the first few rounds (last ones loaded) up because the button binds in its "racetrack". Those top few rounds can just fall out of the magazine after you've loaded it because the follower won't move up, and can't put any spring pressure against them. So I will certainly be smoothing up the follower button and it's racetrack at the very least. The other tuning looks wise, too. Mine feel very gritty and the button sticks when I'm pushing them down or letting them up. I suspect all of them are somewhat like that, so I'd say that yours will benefit to some degree from this treatment. I know mine will. If a guy had a vibratory polisher, as is often used to clean and polish brass casings, and you put the right sort of media in it, that might clean these mag bodies up, too, with little effort. But it would remove all of the bluing, of course. I'm not sure I care about bluing on the mags. I don't want them to rust, but just like with a lot of other parts of these guns, a tiny film of good oil should keep that from happening. It's too bad that Ruger doesn't put a bit more effort into deburring the punched edges of the sheet steel at that point in their manufacturing process. It would likely be a LOT easier for them to do it on the assembly line before the bodies are bent into their final shape. But I guess this gives a lot of us something to do while watching TV when cooped up on a cold, windy, winter day!
I'm not going through all this level of work, but I'll probably sand off the tiny bit of flashing on the follower, but it should be mentioned that the current magazines are no longer blued, but are instead stainless, so the bluing is unnecessary.
Do you sell any of these re-tuned mags on your website? For those who aren’t super handy with all these parts? If not, you should. I would definitely snag some.
Update gang.. just picked up the sandpaper and small files. I already have a Dremel, so all I need now is some liquid polish and some bluing agent....and.....time.....lotsss of time 😔
Apologies but this will be my last question. Are the grip panels the same on the mk3 as on the 22/45. Reason I am asking is I can get pretty decent grips but it is advertised as 22/45. Thx in advance for your help.
No worries! The Mark III and Mark III 22/45 have different grip dimensions and screw hole layouts. If you have a metal grip frame, grips designed for a Mark III 22/45 or Mark IV 22/45 will not fit.
I like the parts about removing the sharp corners on the lips. But I don't see the that much value in tuning up components most magazines don't even have and don't need - the button and racetrack.
Just did this process on my 6 magazines (I know only 6 but its a new gun give me a break) for my Mark IV 22/45 target. Pretty simple process took my time and they look good. Now I am just waiting on my blue to cure and my green rocketwire springs to arrive....looking at you TK..... waiting on my springs..... yep just waitin.
Hi Mikey, I asked our product development team and they said that many of the tips and techniques would work for most 22lr magazines. It's mostly just the feed lip adjustment that would differ from mag to mag. Hope this helps!
i pulled out my mags to tune them. i did see some spotted rust on the mags. What is the best way to clean this off? Can you use a sonic cleaner and dry and oil the mags after? Polish the rust off? I owned a buckmark for 20 years and never had a rusty mag. I have the mark iv now, this is such a disappointment. Help appreciated.
Anyone have any tips for the bullet nose hitting the top edge of the chamber? It leaves a dent in the bullet that probably affects accuracy. The mags that I didn't round off the corners don't do this. So I regret doing the mod. And no, I did not round them much at all.
Not sure why you would polish the retaining plunger because you can’t see it while it’s installed and it does not move while in normal operation. It holds the base plate in place and that’s it.
For me it took about 15 minutes per mag. None of it is difficult. I didn't take much off to round the corners of the rear feed lips but no more stovepipes so it doesn't take much!
Yes, I have a Mkii that stovepiped and I hated the gun. After seeing this I did the mods and it eats anything now. Made the gun I hated into a fun gun.
melloyello1125 If memory serves, that notch engages the magazine safety on the Mark 3. Probably says something that the most popular mod options on the market for the Mark 3 involve disabling that feature, eh? The loaded chamber indicator, too.
Since (apparently) RUclips commenters appear to have achieved an average age of thirteen, (which makes the presence of such spiteful people on a gun video dubious...) let me point out that nobody here claimed to have invented this process. This video is just Tandemkross showing people how to do it. That's it. Just a tutorial. Can we all just go back to enjoying the free exchange of ideas now? LOL
Keep up the good work, TK! Never given me reason to so much as consider sending anything back.
Thank you!
For YEARS my son has wanted an old Ruger Mark 22.
I always attempted to redirect him.
Well 2023 Christmas was special and I knew what he wanted :)
With your help his new toy will be VERY enjoyed. It’s also another good friendship builder for us. 👍🏼
This may be eight years old but I have never come across an online “how to fix it” video that had a greater impact on turning a brand new firearm from a total jamomatic to 100% reliable. 👍
I’ve got on that has never worked right. This is my answer.
I was having about a 20% FTF or stove-pipe failures on my Mark IV Hunter. I had tried all types of ammunition with no improvements. Then I came across this video. I "tuned" two of my magazines and after running about 300 rounds through . . .NO FTF or stove-pipes. Great tip and easy to follow instructions. Now onto my other mags.
So glad to hear that, Perry! Thanks so much for the feedback
On the subject of trying different types of ammo, CCI minimag and Blazer seem to work best for me.
Thanks Perry and Tandemkross for the info on the MKIV, im going to give it a shot as well.
I recently bought a Mark IV Target and was having frequent problems with stovepipes and jams with ammo from three different manufacturers. I finally tried some CCI Mini Mag and that helped with only 2 stovepipes in 8 mags, a significant improvement. However, I wasn't satisfied and decided to tune my 4 magazines with a couple omissions. I ground the sharp points as instructed by Bryan, deburred the edges on the top as well as the button track and sanded the edges of the follower. I decided NOT to polish everything because I'm lazy and my magazines are already smooth plated nickel and not blued. I ignored the plunger and replaced the follower buttons with new TK buttons. THE RESULTS WERE AMAZING!!! On a test run, I shot 80 rounds of Federal Champion that had been a problem before and another 40 CCI Mini Mag with no troubles at all. A week later (and without cleaning), the wife and I shot 240 rounds of CCI Mini Mag with zero problems. The wife even noticed how much smoother the magazines were when reloading. In order to test how low we can go with this magazine tuning, I'll have to try some of the crappiest ammo I can find and see what happens. THANK YOU TANDEMKROSS!!!
I am a buyer of TandemKross products and will continue to be in the future. I find their products are quality made and reasonably priced. As a competitive shooter I have been tuning magazines of various types since 1990. This video on tuning Ruger mags is very well done and incorporates a couple things I had not thought of in the process. Good job Brian, keep up the good work. As for this Wood guy, nothing in Brian's video is really new, he didn't claim to have "invented" the process and whatever issue you have with him and the company seems to stem from your attitude alone. I would hate to live my life with your attitude.
Instead of using gun oil, I used Dupont Non-Stick Teflon Dry-Film Lubricant. I got the spray can. I used it on the spring, follower, and button. It's dry, doesn't attract grit, reduces friction, and bonds to the surface.
I just discovered your video after analyzing a SR 22 mags that are rounded and MK II which are sharp and proceeded to do what you just showed , Super informative. Works great.
Your comments about removing burrs n polishing apply to MarkIIII mags just as well. 👍👍
I find it rather amusing that anyone living would claim to have "invented" or "originated" the principles of polishing and deburring magazines. This is information that has been used by people who wanted to smooth out all the parts of their semiautomatic pistols, since the advent of the P-01. It's basically the same principles that were used by people who did action jobs on their revolvers before CNC machined parts were available. I learned some of this from Joe Bowman in the 1990's. I'm glad to see this is up here and available. There is no earthly reason for anyone to tolerate badly tuned magazines. Thank you, Brian, and all the other folks at Tamdemkross!
Can u do this on all metal magazines and it will increase performance such as a 1911 mag?
9 years later still a very helpful video
This made a huge difference for me. I also lightly sanded the spring with 1k grit and deburred the end of the spring that travels. All my magazines function smoothly now, 250 rounds tested with no failure to feed issues. Thanks for posting this video.
Glad it helped!
Man, this video saved me so much trouble. I was almost ready to give up, ran into this video followed it and now I'm having no problems. Thanks Tandemkross!!!
Glad to hear it helped!
So glad that you posted this video. Was having all kinds of issues. Tuned 5 magazines folluwing your instructions and everything works perfectly now!! Thank you!!
You're welcome!
Looks great! A no nonsense video. I know what I'll be doing this afternoon. Thanks for good quality audio and video and for not including silly obnoxious music. You put a lot of work into this and it shows. Thanks!
I’m late to the party but I wanted to thank you for these tips. I did all of your tips you suggested. Before it was gritty and sticky, after it is butter smooth.
What a clear and concise vid! My 75th Anniversary MK IV NEEDS this work. I'll be doing so soon. Thanks for your efforts.
The space where you grind the two corners is very tight. There is a perfect Dremel item for that, #453. It is a 5/32" diameter by 3/4" long stone used for sharpening chain saws. Both Home Depot and Lowes have it in stock. There is a picture of it on both of their websites.
I just bought this based off your 6 year old comment. Thanks
Well , I got to say the magazine tune up worked perfectly, my 24 year old Mark II ran great , this is a easy trick to complete, I also replaced 11 of the magazine springs and did a complete tear down and clean after the grinding and polishing . For my third steel match I was 13 out of 46 . Great video and thanks again .
Awesome! That's great to hear! Thanks so much for watching the video and for the feedback.
I just had my very first jam on a Ruger Mark IV Standard less than 1-year old, after more than 1,200 rounds. This video is an eye-opener.
Thanks for the tutorial.... I will be tuning up my mags before shooting season kicks in! My only request is that you had shown a side by side comparison of the magazine lips before and after tune up.
Hi Brian, thanks BIG TIME for posting this mag tune how-to.
In the past 6 months I purchased 3 22cal pistols;
- 1988 unfired Smith & Wesson model 41
- A used but great condition Browning Buckmark URX 5 1/2"
- A brand new Ruger Mark IV.
Since 2 of these guns are unfired, and 1 is hardly used, (plus I bought 4 mextra mags for each gun to total 6), the mags are in need of your tuning attention. You know, the plastic followers have sharp edges from the cast molds, the mag frames are sharp from forming and cutting to shape, the top of the mag lip that holds the first round when you insert the mag is sharp...etc etc just like you described in your video.....
Now I have 18 mags to tune up..... 🙄😔 thanks to you and your video... 😜 Seriously though, thanks for the great detailed instructions, perfect lighting, and focused video images to compliment the task
So glad you found it helpful! Thanks for watching, Mike.
Great video, finished off my tune up on 11 markII mags and 13 markIII mags , about 5 hours in garage bench , these are 24 years old markII mags , so are the pistols . The markIII is five years old never a stovepipe or FTE or FTF . Had a double feed Saturday at a steel plate match . I'm looking to improve my time with the pistols I have , 24 years prices have went up along with ammo , Rimfire . Thanks
Thank you for putting this out there. First 5 rounds of every mag are hosed. 3 different types of ammo. The last 5 seem to run great. Gun is brand new with one of your triggers in it. Will do this work in the next couple days and bring the gun back out to the range. Fingers crossed!
Nice. I just ran the follower up and down a couple times and you can feel the resistance. Will definitely be doing this mod.
Thanks for this info! It Fixed a new mag not inserting issue I had.
I got a Mark IV 22/45 lite about a month ago, I Just got a new magazine from TK and it wouldn't insert. I found one edge of the magazine was catching on the magazine latch and I had to press the mag. release to let it fully inset.
I contacted Ruger and they exchanged the Mag. and sent me two new mags. which did the exact same thing!
Comparing the new mags, to the ones I already had that worked. I saw the edges of the new mags were kind of sharp not as rounded as the old mags.
So I followed this guide and did a little extra smoothing and polishing in the trouble area of the mag. They slide in like BUTTER now!
That's so great to hear! Glad you found this helpful. Thanks for watching :)
Finally got around to doing all this after my mkii wouldn't even chamber the first round anymore at all. To be honest I've never cleaned inside the magazines either... between doing what's on the vid and cleaning the two guns magazines I have they're all cycling like Champs now!!
Mkii
Mkiii
Glad to hear it worked for you! If you're having issues with your firearm, cleaning it and your mags is usually a good (and free, more or less) place to start trying to solve the problem.
This looks like a winter project in the man cave if you have more than a couple mags. Thanks for making my list longer. :)
Great video Brian. Quite easy to follow and informative.
Well thanks, now I have 7 mags to tune up there goes a half a day just kidding thanks for the tips. I use my mark 3 and my 22/45 for bowling pin and steel plate races any tips to help win are welcome.
Thanks for info. My mags feel gritty and sometime the follower gets stuck and causes a failure to feed. I feel confident that this is going to help a lot.
part of this reason is that the spring is on the side of the magazine, rather than the center, delivering oblique force, as compared to a Beretta Unos or SW mag. It those cases the force on the follower is centered as the spring itself is so placed, provided for a much smoother mechanism that the Ruger mags can never achiever, regardless of how much smoothing, polishing, and lubrication you apply. This doe not affect performance, but those pother butter smooth mags are much more pleasant to load.
Verry impressed by this non promoting video! Because tandemkross has a plus one follower and brass button availible.
This was fantastic!!!!! Thank you!!!! I bought the Mark IV 22/45. When I shot it, horrible - 2-3 rounds per magazine didn't load and most got bent. So, I did this, all but bluing - I didn't have it. It's a totally different gun. Zero malfunctions today. Shot 120 rounds. Smooth! I love this gun! I was going to take it back, but no way now. Thank you for doing this!!! Though I think it's a shame that Ruger can't correct this in the factory
Glad to hear it was helpful to you!
My Ruger Mk IV Lite has been a literal flawless machine for over 2K+ rounds, then suddenly started acting up. Naturally I suspect the mags. I'm starting with a takedown / clean, and we'll see where that leads - thanks for the vid!
Hope this helps!
@@TANDEMKROSS One of my mags won't takedown - the pin on the bottom just ... won't budge? I'm about to wrap it in a cloth, put it in the vice and smack it with the hammer punch - thoughts? Many thanks!
With all due respects to this great video, the second phase of this modification is not necessary. First of all, the honing of the area said to cause stovepiping is definitely necessary. But doing all that work to the factory follower buttons and slide area is really unnecessary. There is a much simplier route to take - buy and install the VOLQUARTSEN follower buttons. I have replaced 6 of them on my Mark II mags and it was THE CURE. After a quick examination of the VOLQ versus Ruger buttons, you can easily see why they work. Guaranteed ! Save yourself alot of needless work with this part of the upgrade. Otherwise, this is a very good and informative video.
Thanks for the feedback, James, and thanks for watching!
This video helped me a lot. I recently purchased some extra mags for competition, and BOY did they hang and grind! I did as you did in the video, and those things are slicker than owl poop in morning dew. Thanks a lot for this video.
That's great to hear! Glad you found this helpful :)
Much obliged Mate. Exactly what the Dr ordered and so perfectly done. Thank you.
5 brand new mags . Brand new mk4 standard spent 2hr with ear bud and diamond lapping past on the feed ramp still getting 2rd ftf. On 5rd load mag. Guess I'll try this out
Great video a lot of good information will use it on my mark four hunter!!!
Great step by step instructions- thank you.
Great info! Thanks for sharing with such clarity and detail! Keep up the great work!
I just got a Ruger mark 4 22/45 Lite. Ive shot it about 1300 times almost exclusively with silencer. The first 50 shots are fine. After that it starts stovepiping the first rounds on the magazine. I started loading only 5 shots, then it worked flawlessly again. Then i sprayed the magazines with gun oil and it worked flawlessly with full magazines. Spraying them with oil is short term fix as it gathers alot of crap, and also makes for a huge cleaning job afterwards. I was thinking of sending the magazines back to the retailer, but after reading the comments there is a high chance i will get 2 new malfunctioning magazines in return...
Oh good I only have 18 mags to do!
Got them done yet? lol. ugg i need to do mine
I would love to have 18 mags to work on, tinkering with guns and gun parts is pure catharsis to me.
18 mags is pedofile status hahahaha
I did not know that the magazines required any attention, thanks.
I have SPs when my Mark III is dirty (approx 75 - 100 rounds) so I tried this tune-up. Great presentation and easy to follow, but following the completion of one mag, I could not discern a difference in follower smoothness between an un-tuned mag and the newly tuned mag. I will get to the range soon to see which mag fouls up first.
let us know!
Oldie but a goodie. Thanks brother 💯🇺🇸💪✅
Thankfully I’ve not had the problems others have had and have not had to do this for my guns to function normally.
good vid, i just picked a MkIII up the other day, and Yes, it's a pain to load the mag., so im gonna try your tips, hopefully it makes it less sticky, thanks.
Thank you so much I was so disappointed with my new Mark III jamming all the time. Tuned the mag's just like you sead and pop pop pop raped fireing cheep amo like a CHAMP and after doing the first mag it was simple and fast !! 4 mor too go Thanks !!
So glad you found this helpful! Thanks for watching
Thanks so much for the tips. I had a lot of banana rounds. Not any more. Modified 8 mags and is cycles great. The video was very helpful.
What's a banana round...?
Thanks for this video… Ruger really needs to fix reliability issues with magazines… tuning should just be an extra enhancement.. very un- happy with quality control with Ruger.. and Iv let them know about this ongoing issues .. from the looks of things they need to tune them before leaving factory!
Great vid, I was mainly looking to put the follower button on the other side, which worked, btw, but you have given me all kinds of extra improvements. IMO as a right handed, the button is on the wrong side of the magazine, which makes it hard to load.Reversing the follower button has made these SOOOOOO much easier to load, at least for me, anyway. Has anyone else noticed that?
Thanks for the feedback! Glad you found this helpful.
I had not thought to do that until I read your post. If nothing else glad I watched the vid, 2 of the 6 mags I have stick at the top, and yes the thumb stud would be nicer on the Right side of the mag vs left. Going to take care of that when I get home.
I noticed. ..and tried it...worked great but now the bolt does not stay open when empty.. someone needs to make a two-sided button so it's easy to load left or right handed... I put mine back the way it was
hell yes. great idea. thanks for sharing
Thank you Brian. Every tip helps.
So glad you found this helpful! Thanks for watching
I am very happy to come across this video - but it also disappoints me that a pistol from the factory can require so much work to make it reliable. I have a 22/45 that I bought 10 years ago that jams a live round in a stovepipe type position at least once every magazine. I will try these modifications and see if they can fix the issue, but darn - this shouldn't be necessary.
Before reassembly I "lube" the follower, plunger, spring and inside of the mag with my silicone impregnated cleaning cloth.
Great tip! Thanks for sharing :)
Very nice, believe I will do this to mine in the near future.
I realize I’m commenting on a four year old video but I’m just curious what the bluing is for. I was under the impression that cold bluing really doesn’t convey the benefits that the actual factory process does ( hot bluing) so I was wondering how it affects the magazines.
Helps prevent rust and give a uniform look.
Excellent Video!!!
My mags suck. I will give this a try.
Just got a ruger mark iv lite and hopefully this works! Took it shooting and there was a failure to eject and feeding problems in every mag. Seems like this is the fix... I'll update if I fix it. Buying a dremel tomorrow as I only have a giant Milwaukee grinder and going to test some shots
Please let us know!
@@TANDEMKROSS I've gotten everything done including Tandemkross firing pin, extractor, blast pack, green mag springs, And I tuned the mags... I've shot around 500 rounds through with 0 malfunctions. thanks Tandemkross!
thanks , clear concise and useful
Brian at Tandem Kross. What radius gage specification would best to duplicate the radii that you demonstrated in this video at the feed lips?
it didn't seem that critical to me?? just rounding off the sharp points is not that complicated.
Thank you very much for tutorial.
What do you do with Mark IV magazines that are not blued but nickel?
Took me time too to realize it’s the magazine not the ejector or the ammo as is usually the case with 22 rimfire.
Did you round the inside top corner as well? Looks like u did, I think
Should these same steps be performed for a Ruger Mark IV Target magazine?
I did it just like it shows, and now my 22/45 lite jams on the last shot every single time unfortunately. Copied this video exactly and now I need to replace my mags.
Should have tried it on one mag. If good, continue to another, or all of them. Never modify all you have without checking function along the way...
I did this to one mag at a time, testing each as I went. Took a loooong time to get all 10 done. But didn’t loose any mags in the process. All work well.
@@craigp187 probably. That was 4 years ago.
Thanks for the video. What's the purpose of bluing the mag?
So it doesn't rust.
It’s the little things 👍
QUESTION: Do the MK IV pistols benefit from this Magazine Tune-Up as well? Input is especially appreciated from T.K. and or people who have done it to their MK IV pistol magazines.
I have no doubt that the mags that came with my Mk IV 22/45 Lite would benefit greatly from this treatment. They both fail to push the first few rounds (last ones loaded) up because the button binds in its "racetrack". Those top few rounds can just fall out of the magazine after you've loaded it because the follower won't move up, and can't put any spring pressure against them.
So I will certainly be smoothing up the follower button and it's racetrack at the very least. The other tuning looks wise, too. Mine feel very gritty and the button sticks when I'm pushing them down or letting them up. I suspect all of them are somewhat like that, so I'd say that yours will benefit to some degree from this treatment. I know mine will.
If a guy had a vibratory polisher, as is often used to clean and polish brass casings, and you put the right sort of media in it, that might clean these mag bodies up, too, with little effort. But it would remove all of the bluing, of course. I'm not sure I care about bluing on the mags. I don't want them to rust, but just like with a lot of other parts of these guns, a tiny film of good oil should keep that from happening.
It's too bad that Ruger doesn't put a bit more effort into deburring the punched edges of the sheet steel at that point in their manufacturing process. It would likely be a LOT easier for them to do it on the assembly line before the bodies are bent into their final shape. But I guess this gives a lot of us something to do while watching TV when cooped up on a cold, windy, winter day!
I'm not going through all this level of work, but I'll probably sand off the tiny bit of flashing on the follower, but it should be mentioned that the current magazines are no longer blued, but are instead stainless, so the bluing is unnecessary.
EXCELLENT video
Do you sell any of these re-tuned mags on your website? For those who aren’t super handy with all these parts? If not, you should. I would definitely snag some.
We don't currently but it's something we've discussed! Good to know you'd be interested!
I would buy the tuned magazines for my Mark IV immediately. Please consider this!
@@terrymontgomery8327 It's definitely something we're considering :)
Update gang.. just picked up the sandpaper and small files. I already have a Dremel, so all I need now is some liquid polish and some bluing agent....and.....time.....lotsss of time 😔
Instead of sandpaper for deburring, 3M make scotchbrite unitized wheel in small dai for you rotary tool, work great, 1 step deburring!
Great idea, Walter! Thanks for sharing!
Apologies but this will be my last question. Are the grip panels the same on the mk3 as on the 22/45. Reason I am asking is I can get pretty decent grips but it is advertised as 22/45. Thx in advance for your help.
No worries! The Mark III and Mark III 22/45 have different grip dimensions and screw hole layouts. If you have a metal grip frame, grips designed for a Mark III 22/45 or Mark IV 22/45 will not fit.
@@TANDEMKROSS Thank you Sir, much appreciated
Do you need to use a blueing agent? Is it just for the looks?
Thanks for the video and info. Could this be done to the Victory mags if needed?
The design of SW22 mags of course isn't exactly the same, but you should be able to apply these ideas to pretty much any magazine to tune it up.
@@TANDEMKROSS thanks.
I like the parts about removing the sharp corners on the lips. But I don't see the that much value in tuning up components most magazines don't even have and don't need - the button and racetrack.
most 22/45 mag issues are from the mag riding too low in the handle causing fail to feed
What a great video!
Just did this process on my 6 magazines (I know only 6 but its a new gun give me a break) for my Mark IV 22/45 target. Pretty simple process took my time and they look good. Now I am just waiting on my blue to cure and my green rocketwire springs to arrive....looking at you TK..... waiting on my springs..... yep just waitin.
2 years later all my magazines are still functioning 100% I have no issues 1000's of rounds later. Thanks again for the great tutorial TK!
Would this type of fine tuning apply to most 22LR magazines?
Hi Mikey, I asked our product development team and they said that many of the tips and techniques would work for most 22lr magazines. It's mostly just the feed lip adjustment that would differ from mag to mag. Hope this helps!
This absolutely helps, just like all your videos and products. Thank you very much! :)
You're very welcome!
i pulled out my mags to tune them. i did see some spotted rust on the mags. What is the best way to clean this off? Can you use a sonic cleaner and dry and oil the mags after? Polish the rust off? I owned a buckmark for 20 years and never had a rusty mag. I have the mark iv now, this is such a disappointment. Help appreciated.
0000 steel wool works great for me
@@exarcherbullsgap449 Yep, with a little oil on the pad.
Good info, thanks!
So all this work to make it function like a buckmark magazine? Just kidding. Great vid.
Great video but it would be great if Ruger made some better mags. 2 came with my Mark IV Lite and they both jam every 10 rounds or so.
My mark 3 mag already is rounded.
Anyone have any tips for the bullet nose hitting the top edge of the chamber? It leaves a dent in the bullet that probably affects accuracy. The mags that I didn't round off the corners don't do this. So I regret doing the mod. And no, I did not round them much at all.
ruclips.net/video/HC7ZL-Lps4w/видео.htmlsi=WxBRsd82jd9Ic-yd
Looks like an evening's worth of work per mag but well worth it.
Not sure why you would polish the retaining plunger because you can’t see it while it’s installed and it does not move while in normal operation. It holds the base plate in place and that’s it.
Why not...? Is the real question.
@@Jaykeev If you have to ask you will never know!!!
I guess so the spring feeds smoothly off the plunger as it extends.
What is the substance used in 3:44?
5 years later I have to try this. Getting fail to feed every other shot with white box ammo. Only feeds automatch reliably.
It's definitely worth a try! I think you'll be happy with the results.
@@TANDEMKROSS worked great. My 22/45 ran a whole box of 333rds not a single fail to feed with +1 base pads.
Start to finish what's the time frame for one mag approximately?
For me it took about 15 minutes per mag. None of it is difficult. I didn't take much off to round the corners of the rear feed lips but no more stovepipes so it doesn't take much!
Can this exact method apply for mk2 mags? Thanks
Yes, I have a Mkii that stovepiped and I hated the gun. After seeing this I did the mods and it eats anything now. Made the gun I hated into a fun gun.
Excellente !!!!!
Please get more stock . 🙏
Trying our best =)
What is the purpose of the upper notch ~1:47? I notice is not on my 22/45 Mark II.
melloyello1125 If memory serves, that notch engages the magazine safety on the Mark 3. Probably says something that the most popular mod options on the market for the Mark 3 involve disabling that feature, eh? The loaded chamber indicator, too.