STANAG Magazines | Ya got some? Get these rifles!
<p>The STANAG or standard AR-15 magazine is the most common rifle magazine in the United States. Inexpensive, lightweight and available in dozens of capacities, these little ammunition delivery devices can be found in nearly every gun shop in America. But did you know that the AR-15 isn't the only gun to utilize these super-common mags?</p>
SIG Sauer P239 – Discontinued, but not forgotten
Though the Sig P239 is obsolete, it still has fans. In the mid-90’s it was Sig's smallest, lightest offering in a military cartridge. Read this review.
Why SilencerCo’s Osprey 45 is the Jack-of-All-Trades Suppressor
If you are new to the world of suppressors, I'd suggest finding one can that can work on multiple guns. The Osprey is a solid choice and has many advantages you won't find on the typical suppressor.
BCM’s 20in Government Profile Upper Review: Is Bigger Really Better?
While some long-range rifles embrace weight, most AR-15s are evolving downward. Lightweight rifles and braced pistols are the norm. Yet there's something to be said for a longer barrel, as this BCM upper demonstrates.
Tapco Intrafuse: The Most Underrated Magazine
<p><span id="docs-internal-guid-b9c06966-cbab-ddb2-456f-5bdd12d4b783"><span>Are Tapco Intrafuse Magazines the most underrated polymer mags in existence? </span></span></p>
Top Three Mags for the CMMG Mutant
<p>Half AR-10. Half AK. All-American, all-Mutant. But how should you feed this beast?</p>
Review: Tango Down Stubby Foregrip
My favorite mini vertical grip: small enough to use with a thumb-over-bore grip, but long enough to use like a traditional vertical foregrip.
Armatac CL Drum Magazine | Review
<p><span>Double drums have been in use since about 1930, where German forces employed the MG13 light machine gun using a 75-round stamped steel design, as well as the aircraft-mounted MG15. Even the precursor to, “Hitler’s buzzsaw”, the MG34, was modified to use similar drums. </span></p>
