Best Shooting Rest for the Range in 2026
We tested 5 shooting rests from $30–$450. Your Lead Sled groups don’t reflect field accuracy – bags do. The Caldwell DFT 2 wins overall.
We tested 5 shooting rests from $30–$450. Your Lead Sled groups don’t reflect field accuracy – bags do. The Caldwell DFT 2 wins overall.
Two proven semi-autos face off for field duty.
We tested 5 nightstand pistol safes from $100–$350. Your biometric reader fails with sweaty hands at 3 AM – the Vaultek VT20i wins with redundant access.
308 Win vs 6.5 Creedmoor for deer hunting: compare energy on impact, bullet expansion, trajectory, and top loads to find which cartridge hits harder.
Before you buy, know this – shooting 5.56 in a .223-only chamber is a real pressure risk. We compared 5 loads from $0.35 to $1.20 per round so you don’t waste money or blow up your rifle.
270 Win vs 6.5 Creedmoor for deer hunting: compare ballistics, recoil, accuracy, and real-world performance to find the best cartridge for your needs.
We tested 5 AR-15 slings from $25–$75. Skip padded – it snags on gear. The Vickers wins, but a $25 sling handles most jobs fine.
We compare 223 Rem and 300 BLK for hog hunting.
We tested 5 hunting binoculars from $150–$500. Spoiler: “HD” is a marketing term anyone can use. ED glass is the real spec worth chasing.
Science finally catches up to the caliber wars