The Springfield Armory KUNA 9mm 30-round magazine delivers extended firepower for competitive shooting and tactical applications. This high-capacity magazine extends shooting sessions while maintaining the reliability Springfield Armory is known for.
What Makes This Different
The KUNA magazine features a robust steel construction with an anti-tilt follower system that ensures consistent feeding across all 30 rounds. Unlike standard capacity magazines, this extended design provides triple the ammunition capacity without compromising feed reliability. The reinforced magazine body withstands repeated loading cycles and maintains dimensional stability under stress.
Key Features
- 30-round capacity for extended shooting sessions
- Steel construction with corrosion-resistant finish
- Anti-tilt follower prevents jams and misfeeds
- Compatible with Springfield Armory 9mm pistols
- Witness holes for round count verification
- Removable floor plate for easy maintenance
- Heat-treated spring maintains tension over time
Field testing demonstrates consistent cycling through various ammunition weights from 115 to 147 grains. The magazine performs reliably in competitive shooting environments where rapid reloads and high round counts are essential. Temperature variations from -20°F to 140°F show minimal impact on spring tension and feeding performance. The extended length provides a stable grip extension for better control during rapid fire sequences.
Technical Specs
- Caliber: 9mm Luger
- Capacity: 30 rounds
- Construction: Steel body with polymer follower
- Finish: Black oxide coating
- Overall Length: Approximately 8.5 inches
- Weight: 8.2 ounces (empty)
- Spring: Heat-treated chrome silicon wire
- Country of Origin: USA
This magazine represents a practical solution for shooters requiring extended capacity without sacrificing reliability. The Springfield Armory engineering ensures consistent performance across thousands of rounds. Professional competitors and tactical users rely on this magazine when standard capacity limitations become a tactical disadvantage.