AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

AK-74 magazines have become increasingly expensive over the last few years. These days, surplus Bulgarian mags often retail for more than $50. Thankfully, the commercial market is stepping up to the plate with new options. This article is an examination of three of those magazines to see which is the best value.

More AK-47 and AK-74 @ TFB:

Background

There are not any disclosures for this review because no one is sponsoring or facilitating this review. I purchased the three magazines through retail channels. They were used in my AK-105 reviews with the ammo that I purchased. I don’t have any relationship with the companies that make or sell these mags, except that I’m a frequent shopper at both RTG Parts and GunMag Warehouse. With all that out of the way, let’s take a look at the competitors.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

PSA  AK-105

Magpul PMAG

Magpul’s PMAG 30 AK74 MOE is definitely the most common option. It is the only AK74 mag you can find at big box shops. It generally retails right around $16. Many US-market AK74s include this magazine in the box.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

PMAG, fully loaded

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Magpul includes a pictogram to show which way the bullets point

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Magpul includes a dot matrix on the magazine for numbering and identification marking.

AC Unity

AC Unity makes magazines, furniture, and gun parts in Bosnia. They are relatively new on the US-domestic market, and RTG Parts is the main importer. This particular magazine is the windowed model. The list price is $13.95, but they do go on sale for $9.95. AC Unity also makes an AK-12 style magazine, one made of clear plastic, and a 45-round version.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Note the steel reinforcement in the front lug

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The rear lug is steel, and the follower has a steel-reinforced bolt hold open feature

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The AC Unity is a windowed design

GunMag Warehouse Bulgarian

GunMag Warehouse imports a few AK-74 magazine options from Bulgaria. This particular model is the “Bulgarian AK-74 5.45x39mm 30-Round Reinforced Steel Lug Polymer Magazine.” I’ll just call it the Bulgarian or the Bulgy mag. As stated in its name, this magazine has steel reinforcements in the lugs and feed lips. The list price is $19.99 but they are normally around $13.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The Bulgy floorplate is steel

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The Bulgarian origin is very clearly marked

Drop Testing

All three of the competitors have predominantly plastic construction. Modern polymers are extremely robust, but some of the plastic mags of the past simply did not hold up. A series of drops and throws seemed like a good way to see if these three were tough or not.

I loaded 30 rounds of Tula 60-grain FMJ into each magazine and dropped them in various ways. All drops were from shoulder height (about 5’ 3” for me) onto a concrete floor covered in terrible, thin industrial carpet.

1) Drop onto magazine floor plate – The magazines landed on the floor plates. All three mags allowed the top round to slide forward slightly. AC Unity slid the most, about 0.25” past the front edge. No rounds were lost.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The top round was slightly dislodged by the floorplate drop on all three, as shown

2) Drop onto the feed lips – Each magazine landed on the feel lips, floor plate up. The Bulgy and PMAG each released one round, AC Unity passed without issue.

3) Drop onto the spine – All passed, no issues.

4) Drop onto the front edge – Bulgy lost 1 round, AC Unity and PMAG passed.

5) Drop flat onto the side – All passed.

6) Random spinning toss – I tossed all three up with a wild spin. AC Unity and PMAG passed, but the Bulgy partially remained three rounds which stuck out wildly as shown in this picture.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The spinning toss was not kind to the Bulgy mag

7) Fumbled pass -This was an underhand toss about 20 feet, as in the case of throwing a mag to a friend who fails to catch it. AC Unity and PMAG passed, and the Bulgy lost one round and one halfway out. 

Final inspection – The only damage noted was a crack in the feed lip of the Blugy. No damage was noted on the other mags.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Note the small crack in the feed lip

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Century Tantal (top) with PMAG, PSA AK-105 (bottom) with Bulgy mag

Function Testing

I ran all three magazines in a Century Tantal (one that has the correct barrel in it…) and two PSA AK-105s. One of the AK-105s was a pistol, and it was very picky with magazines. The Bulgy did not feed well in that gun, but out of my whole pile of surplus and commercial mags, only the Magpul and AC Unity worked consistently in that gun. The second AK-105 (which replaced the first when it developed major issues) worked well with all three.

The AC Unity mag is equipped with a steel insert on the follower that is billed as a bolt hold open. This feature worked consistently with my Tantal but not at all in the AK-105. However, my 45-round AC Unity magazine locks the AK-105 open every time. This is a nice feature, but don’t count on it working 100% in every gun. A bolt hold open also helps cool the gun when it is hot from mag dumping into trash.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

The bolt hold open feature of the follower does not work in all guns

I ran the magazines in the guns again after all of the abuse. All three worked in both guns despite the rowdy handling. Of note, the damage to the Bulgy mag has not yet impacted its performance once it is inside the gun. This includes being used in burndown testing on the new AK-105.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

PSA AK-105 fresh off of the burndown

One other minor note relates to the PMAG. I flubbed a reload while trying to go fast and I locked the rear lug in place without first securing the front lug. Instead of “rock and lock” I just did the lock, then smashed the part that should have rocked into the underside of the receiver. I had to smash the magazine toward the muzzle to get it to release. This resulted in some gouging in the plastic, but it seems to be cosmetic and functionality remains unchanged.

AK-74 Budget Magazine Shootout: Who Does It Best?

Note the gouge near the top of the front lug

Summary

TYPE COUNTRY CAPACITY WEIGHT FEED LIPS LOCKING LUGS WINDOW FLOORPLATE
 AC Unity  Bosnia  30  6.9 oz  Steel  Steel  Yes  Plastic
 Bulgarian  Bulgaria  30  6.4 oz  Steel  Steel  No  Steel
 Magpul  USA  30  6.0 oz  Plastic  Plastic  No  Plastic

I weighed a few other magazines to provide context. Those weights are:

  • Circle 10 & 21 – 7.0 oz
  • Tapco – 6.3 oz
  • Romanian Steel – 11.0 oz

Everything except the steel Romanian mag weighs between six and seven ounces, so weight is not much of a differentiating factor.

Conclusion

Surplus magazines are still the gold standard and would be my first choice if money was no object. But money does matter quite a lot and $50 per magazine (or more) adds up fast. Based on my testing, all three were great. However, I think AC Unity is the best option among the types tested. It combines metal reinforcements with a competitive price point and solid performance. All three were good, but I think you get the most for your money with the AC Unity mags.

This post was originally published on this site