Best Stock for Your AR-15 in 2026
We compared 5 AR-15 stocks from $35–$200. A wobbly mil-spec comb forces your cheek to hunt every shot – the B5 SOPMOD Bravo fixes that for $60.
We compared 5 AR-15 stocks from $35–$200. A wobbly mil-spec comb forces your cheek to hunt every shot – the B5 SOPMOD Bravo fixes that for $60.
We compared 5 shot timers from free apps to $130 dedicated units – because without a timer, you just feel fast. Here’s what actually works.
We compared 5 Glock 19 holsters from $40–$160 – the Tenicor Certum3 wins, but your carry position matters more than the holster itself.
We tested 5 laser bore sighters from $15–$60. A bore sight gets you on paper – not zeroed. The SiteLite Mag wins, but a $25 cartridge-style saves more ammo long-term.
We compared 5 AR-15 lower parts kits from $30–$90. The real secret – skip the trigger in your LPK and put that $15 toward a real one instead.
Your mil-spec handguard touches the barrel – sling tension alone shifts POI 1-2 MOA. We tested 5 free-float M-LOK options from $130–$300 to fix that.
We compared 5 muzzle brakes from $50–$150. The right brake cuts recoil 40%+ – but if a suppressor is in your future, buy a mount-brake now or you’ll pay twice.
Choosing the right shooting mat can make or break your prone session, whether you’re competing in PRS or just hitting the range.
Choosing the right bipod can make or break your accuracy at distance, so we tested Harris, Atlas, and Magpul side by side.
We tested 5 battle belts from $50–$180. Without an inner belt anchor, your loaded war belt slides down in minutes – and a floppy belt costs you half a second every draw.