Wednesday, July 6, 2016

The Prism Scope vs The Traditional Red Dot Sight

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

4 Ways to Accessorize Your AR-15 Build on the Cheap!

After saving up and finally treating yourself to a brand new AR-15, like many first time AR owners, you may be in for a rude awakening: the spending has only just begun!
 
Quad rail handguards, optical sights, custom accessories, and more… Each of which may range up to several hundred dollars.  High end rifle scopes alone can cost upwards of $2000.  In the end, accessorizing your AR can cost several times as much as the stock AR itself!
 
But fear not!
 
We here at Monstrum Tactical have dedicated ourselves to providing practical and reliable AR-15 rails and accessories at rock-bottom, no-nonsense pricing!
 
To demonstrate that you do not have to break the bank in order to deck out your new AR-15, we have put together a few practical AR builds on a sensible budget.
 
 
The Tactical Build
 
This tactical AR-15 build gives you everything you need for combat situations from close range out to several hundred yards.  You can sight in your targets at close range using the rear sight/front sight post iron sights or at a distance using the illuminated 3x compact prism scope.  The extended quad rail allows for addition of other accessories, such as a bipod or a flashlight, depending on your tactical needs.

  • AR-15 Carry Handle with Rear Sight and Optics Mount: $23
  • S330P 3x Prism Sight: $100
  • Extended Carbine Length AR-15 Quad Rail Handguard with FSP Cutout: $35
  • Vertical Front Grip: $9

Monday, July 4, 2016

AR-15 Carry Handle with A2 Rear Sight and Optics Rail Mount - Pink

Who Says you can't have that feminine touch while you put rounds down range?



The AR-15 detachable carry handle is the classic add-on to any AR-15 rifle build. Aircraft grade aluminum and steel in construction, the carry handle is both sturdy and functional. It comes equipped with a built-in A2 dual aperture rear flip-up sight with adjustable windage and elevation settings. 

The carry handle is 5" in length at its base and 7" in length altogether, and weighs 9 ounces. 

The package also includes a detachable Picatinny optics rail mount. The mount attaches securely atop the carry handle, allowing for a secondary sighting system that clears the front sight post while still retaining use of the iron sights. 5.25 inches in length, the rail accepts all Picatinny or Weaver scopes, red dots, and sights.
  • Detachable carry handle for use with AR-15 flat top rifles, attaches and detaches quickly to any picatinny rail equipped rifle.
  • Built-in A2 dual aperture rear flip-up sight with adjustable windage and elevation settings.
  • Includes detachable Picatinny optics mount for mounting scopes, red dots, or sights for clearance over the front sight post while still retaining use of the iron sights.
  • Available in black, flat dark earth, pink, or olive drab green.
  • All Monstrum Tactical AR-15 Rifle Accessory products are backed with a lifetime warranty.

4th of July


Happy Fourth of July everyone, be safe out there today and take time to remember why we have this holiday.
Does your 308 rifle use a DPMS LR-308 pattern barrel nut and handguard?
AR/LR 308 style rifles use several different barrel nut and handguard standards, depending on the make and model.  Before purchasing a handguard, please make sure you are purchasing the correct one.  View our 308 compatibility guide for more details.
Why install a free float handguard?
One of the main benefits to free-floating a DPMS LR-308 is an increase in accuracy from reduced variability in the barrel harmonics due to sling tension. The traditional LR-308 configuration has the sling mount attachment at the base of the front sight gas block, so moderate changes in sling tension can change the point of impact downrange. A direct impingement LR-308 can never be truly “free-floated” due to the attachment of the gas block and gas tube, but the addition of a quad rail or other free float style handguard can help with accuracy and also provides a stable and convenient platform for attaching bipods, lights, grips and other accessories.
What do I need to install a free float quad rail handguard?
When planning your free-float project, take a close look at the type of gas system currently on your rifle. Most standard front sight gas blocks are held onto the barrel by either tapered pins or by clamps. Make sure you have all the right tools and parts on hand for disassembly and reassembly before starting work.

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Camping Go Wild

Hey everyone checkout https://www.campinggowild.com/.
They have amazing camping products!

Hey we are friendly group of adventure loving,Survivalist camping crazy guys, and simply stated we provide quality products at a quality price.Essential piece of kit if you get separated from your camping group and you need to signal for help. You're stranded and dependent only on what you are carrying with you. What do you always have? Your paracord bracelet! We are running A FREE offer just help with shipping! get it http://bit.ly/296K1gB

Benefits of having a mounted light.



Weapon-mounted lights (WMLs) — which are white-light units designed to attach to a firearm — have become one of the most popular accessories in the industry.
Sales tip: Folks are more likely to buy a product when sellers explain the lifesaving features it can offer, and WMLs offer a number of advantages.
WMLs help in identifying a threat. There have been tragedies when an alarmed homeowner woke up, grabbed his gun and shot at a shadowy figure looming in the darkness — only to discover he had shot a member of his own household. A WML bathes the potential target with bright white light, which provides facial identification. This makes it more likely the shooter will be able to tell a keychain in the other person’s hand from a gun or a knife. So, the WML has huge potential for preventing tragedy.
WMLs also greatly increase accuracy. If you have a range attached to your shop and rent out guns, put a light-equipped pistol in the rental rack. Many of your customers have pistols with light rails, but no lights; consider having a rental WML available. If lighting can be reduced at the shooting booth, you’ll be able to show the customer the dramatic improvement that gun-attached white light delivers.
If you don’t have a range, ask your customer to point the empty gun in a safe direction, turn on the WML and align the sights in the beam as it hits the wall. In a well-lit shop, the wall will need to be close so they can see what you’re trying to show them. Now, remove the light, hand them a handheld flashlight, and let them try to coordinate with the pistol in strong-hand and flashlight in weak-hand. They’ll see a profound difference — which favors the WML. When the light is on the gun, both hands can be dedicated to a two-hand hold, providing added stability.
WMLs also provide a “stand-off” effect. While talking with a customer, ask what semiauto he or she owns and take out a similar model from the showcase (also confirming it’s unloaded for both of you). While holding the pistol in a firing grip, press the muzzle against a safe surface and pull the trigger. The expected “click” won’t happen on most, because they’ll have been pushed out of battery. In a real fight for life, that would have been a gun unable to fire. Now, slip a standard size light onto the rail, and demonstrate again: The light will hold the muzzle back, allowing the pistol to “click” now in the shop, and fire in the same situation “on the street.”

A variety of holster makers offer models compatible with WMLs,
Stock Lights For A Variety Of Uses
Crimson Trace, Glock, Insight, Streamlight and SureFire are among the top-selling pistol light brands. For a home-defense gun, a holster isn’t usually a consideration, and a bigger, brighter light may be more logical in some cases. Several of these brands are available with laser sights combined with white light; the user can employ the white beam in tandem with the red dot or selectively utilize one or the other. Most units with combined capability will be larger and more expensive than laser-only or light-only units.
For concealed carry, we now have holsters able to fit a standard WML with a full-size or compact service-caliber pistol. Concealment Solutions makes their Black Mamba in this configuration as an IWB holster, and it very comfortably and effectively conceals my full-size Glocks with a SureFire X200 light. Galco, Safariland and many more make holsters worth looking at, usually in OWB style.
For those who want something smaller, Crimson Trace offers the compact Lightguard, which as the name implies, attaches to the front of the triggerguard. While it still needs a special holster — also available from Crimson Trace — it’s the lowest-profile white-light unit I’ve seen. Given its small size, of course, it’s not as powerful as their own RailMasterPro, which, also as the name implies, slips onto dust cover accessory rails. The latter employs laser sighting as well as white light.
Don’t forget rifles and shotguns. The standard pistol lights mentioned above will fit on the Picatinny rails of AR-15s or other tactical-style long guns. There’s also a myriad of dedicated long-gun lights. Of particular interest are SureFire’s WeaponLights, which are crafted as the fore-end of a shotgun or as a forward pistol grip for an AR, and the Mako Group’s combination foregrip/bipod/flashlight.


Safety Features Of Handheld Lights
You owe the customer a warning: If a WML is used for searching out danger, it means a loaded gun is pointing at everything they look at. A “threat” could turn out to be a member of the household or even a police officer responding to a burglar alarm. Even if no shot is fired, there likely won’t be a good outcome.
Therefore, I advise students to purchase a separate handheld white light for inspecting. Once they’ve found the threat, they can drop it and go to the light on the gun as they take an identified criminal suspect at gunpoint. It’s not about selling an additional light; it’s about safety.
Your customers may have been told they can just point the beam at the floor and light spillover will let them find whoever made the “bump in the night.” True enough, but you can’t fool Mother Nature: As soon as a human figure is identified, instinct will want to see it better — and that white light is probably going to center mass.
I’ve found it useful to compare a WML to a scope on a hunting rifle. We’d all agree the slob hunter who scans for game with his riflescope is pointing his loaded gun irresponsibly; the same is largely true when searching with a WML.
But the magnification of that scope, when the hunter thought he did have a deer at dusk, has saved many people from being accidentally shot when they went into the woods wearing gray or brown. It’s likewise probable that countless people have been saved when a WML allowed the person behind the gun to identify the target before they pulled the trigger.
By Massad Ayoob

Lets get a debate going!

AR-10 or AR-15

Which platform do you prefer? Is it stopping power and the ability to have a great long range with a .308? Maybe, It's the cost efficiency and known reliability of a 5.56?

Debate on! 

Speaking from personal experiences, I prefer the time ole 5.56. Most likely due to my stint in the Marine Corps. I find the platform and round in general to be fantastic for multiple uses from hunting small game to larger animals, as well as self defense. With a variety of rounds and twist options for barrels its virtually a perfect system for anyone. Not to say a AR-10 isn't a great platform either it all comes down to personal preferences.

Please comment and let me know what you prefer and maybe convince me to join the darkside and build a AR-10.

3-12x Magnification Tactical Rifle Scope with Adjustable Objective Lens and Mil-Dot Reticle

The Monstrum Tactical S31242-M-RGAO is a full-featured scope suitable for hunting, target shooting, or tactical use. The scope comes equipped with:

  • Adjustable 3-12 times magnification, for targeting out to 500 yards and beyond..
  • Adjustable reticle illumination with 5 brightness levels in both red and green, allowing for better reticle visibility at night or in low light environments.
  • 1/4 MOA/click windage and elevation adjustment dials with locking turrets.
  • Adjustable objective lens - or AO - that allows for sharper focus of the target image, elimination of parallax, and range estimation.
  • Mil-dot reticle with markings that allows you to estimate range or compensate for bullet drop.
  • Aircraft grade 6061 aluminum construction, for lightweight and durable performance.
  • Sealed, nitrogen charged scope tube for resistance to fog and water.
The S31242-M-RGAO weighs 1.4 pounds. It has a 1 inch diameter tube and requires a mount with 1 inch diameter scope rings. The scope is 11.5 inches in total length. The cylindrical segments of the tube where the mounts can be attached are 2 and 1.4 inches in length and are spaced 1.3 inches apart.

The package includes a pair of Monstrum Tactical Offset Reversible 1" Scope Rings. The rings mount to any flat top Picatinny rail equipped rifle.

Also included is one 3V CR2032 battery and a set of lens caps.

Choosing the Right Rifle Scope for your Gun

When choosing a scope for your gun, there are many considerations to take into account. The first and biggest decision is deciding how the scope will be used. This will determine the type, magnification and other features you should look for when making your choice. Some general things to consider are target distances, target size & speed, and the lighting conditions you expect to be shooting in.
Another consideration is the type and caliber of firearm that you’re installing your scope on. Think about the distances you’ll realistically be shooting at, and what the particular cartridge is capable of. Is it a rimfire pistol or a magnum hunting rifle? Lower power magnification is usually more suited for shorter distances and smaller calibers, and higher magnification for longer distances and larger calibers. Ideally, you’ll want to match the capability of the scope to the range of the cartridge.
If you’re shopping for a hunting scope, you’d probably consider a lightweight design that’s easy to carry, maybe with a rangefinder and a large objective lens for stalking at dawn and dusk when your quarry may be active. You’d want an optic that makes vital shot placement easy – and at the distances you expect to engage your target.
For a purpose-built carbine dedicated to urban environments, you may want to choose a fixed low-power optic. Because of the relatively short engagement distances this style rifle is designed for (usually up to around 200 meters), a prism scope is a great solution, blending its compact size with a wide field-of view to maintain situational awareness. Better quality prism scopes also incorporate illuminated reticles to aid in quick target acquisition.
For medium to long distance work on a shooting range, consider a high magnification scope with an adjustable objective. The high magnification will help identify targets farther away, while the adjustable objective will reduce parallax at given distances, and can also assist with rangefinding. First focal plane scopes are ideal for long distance shooting because the reticle grows larger as the magnification increases, making relative shot placement easier.
For a 3-gun scope, you’ll probably want an extremely versatile optic to handle everything from “door-kicking range” out to the bonus target distances beyond 500 yards. This large variation requires a scope that can quickly handle up-close-and-personal shots while moving or shooting offhand, as well as barrier-supported or prone long-range shots. A one-to-four, or one-to-six power scope with an illuminated reticle is an easy way to split the difference.
As you can see, there are many things to consider when deciding which scope is best: magnification, focal plane, weight, reticle type and more all need to be evaluated. But the most important thing is to match the scope to your own usage. 

Building vs Buying your first AR-15



Have you caught the AR-15 bug yet? It’s America’s most popular rifle, and it’s not hard to see why. It’s lightweight, easy to shoot, easily customized, and increasingly affordable. It’s been in production since 1959, served as the basis for the M-16 in 1963, and it still continues to be popular worldwide. Although Colt still holds the trademark to the AR-15 name, variants of the firearm and the various components to modify them are made by dozens of companies in the present day.
That brings us to one of the biggest advantages of the AR-15 platform: modularity. Because it has been around for so long, and so many companies have made parts for it, the prices of those parts have gone way down, and the options available to the civilian consumer are richly diverse. Like Barbie dolls or Legos, you’ve got lots of ways to accessorize.
Customizing your AR-15 isn’t rocket science, either. If you can put together that Lego set or Barbie dollhouse, you can probably put together the parts to make an AR-15. Some modifications will take a basic hand tool or two, but nothing that you couldn’t figure out with five or ten minutes of fiddling, or a quick trip to YouTube. As a result, many gun enthusiasts like assembling their entire rifle part-by-part, picking up components that specifically contribute to the kind of rifle they want to shoot.
 So, the question we’re discussing is this: Should I build or buy my first AR-15? Let’s talk about the advantages and disadvantages of both.
BUILDING YOUR AR-15
 Cost: If you wait for sales on components, or even full rifle kits, you can get your rifle for far cheaper than buying it outright. There are some really great deals to be had if you’re willing to wait for them and shop around. Even without the sales, though, you’ll almost always get more value for your money by building instead of buying. However, you still have to decide your budget, and it’s easy to spend more money than you intended when you’re buying a piece here, a piece there, and not paying attention to what your total cost is.
Familiarity: I can tell you from experience that putting together your first rifle will make you appreciate its internal workings more. If you have a problem on the range, you’ll be more likely to know how to troubleshoot the problem, because you’re the one that put all those parts together and you’ll know which parts are probably not working. The flip side to this is that if you have a problem that you can’t fix, there is usually no warranty or customer support beyond the man in the mirror. 
Customizability: You will build exactly the rifle you want. You will have a fine-tuned shooting machine that does exactly what you want it to do, and nothing you don’t want or need. There’s a lot of satisfaction that comes from that kind of customization. If you buy one out of the box, and then spend the money to upgrade all the parts you don’t like, you’ll be spending a lot more money than if you just bought the parts you wanted in the first place. However, if this is your first rifle, and you haven’t shot a whole bunch of them before, you may not know exactly what you want.  Options range from grips to handguards to sights and triggers. 
BUYING YOUR FIRST AR-15
Instant gratification: You walk into a store, you plop down your money, get a background check, and you go shooting that same day. Buying your first AR-15 will get you shooting much sooner. If tinkering isn’t your thing, then I would definitely suggest buying a rifle that suits your needs as closely as possible.
No hard decisions: Seeing how this is your first rifle, you might not even know what you’re looking for. Starting with a basic off-the-shelf model gives you a good opportunity to figure out what you actually want in your rifle. Once you’re familiar with the platform, it’s easier to know what you like and don’t like, so then you can know what to buy to build the second, third, fourth, and fifth AR-15s. 
Manufacturer’s warranty: The major manufacturers of sporting rifles will stand by their products and fix them if something major goes wrong. That’s peace of mind that you’ll rarely have with the creation of your own hands, even if you don’t have the sense of pride that goes with making it yourself.
For an entry-level AR-15, you have lots of options. I would take a look at the Smith & Wesson M&P Sport, Ruger AR 556, Colt 6920, or a Palmetto State Armory prebuilt. Other popular options include STAG Arms, Larue Tactical, Windham Weaponry, and Spikes Tactical.

AR-15 Extended Quad Rail Handguard with FSP Cutout | Carbine Length | Drop-in

AR-15 Extended Quad Rail Hand-guard with FSP Cutout | Carbine Length | Drop-in
The Monstrum Tactical drop-in AR-15 extended quad rail handguard with FSP cutout is a quick and easy install on any carbine length AR-15 rifle platform. It allows for the mounting of tactical accessories such as bipods, flashlights, and sights. The unique forward extension installs in place around your front sight post and provides for added rail space for accessory or hand placement.

Crafted from aircraft grade aluminum, both sturdy and lightweight, it weighs in at 18 ounces. It is 10.5 inches in total length, 2.5 inches in height, and 2.5 inches in width. The internal diameter is 1.7 inches at its narrowest.
  • Easy install drop-in design, installs in minutes without gunsmithing tools or expertise.
  • Allows for the mounting of standard picatinny rifle and AR-15 accessories such as bipods, grips, lights, and sights.
  • All Monstrum Tactical AR-15 Quad Rail Handguard products are backed with a lifetime warranty.
  • Available in black.
Please note that the Extended Carbine Length Quad Rail with FSP Cutout will not fit on Ruger AR-556 model rifles without modification.  For more details, please read the following: Quad Rail with A2 FSP Cutout Modified for Ruger AR-556

Welcome to Rifle Talks


Welcome and thank you to everyone for checking out my blog! Everything posted or updated on here will mostly be information on rifle parts and current hot topics in the Tactical world. Thank you and I hope you enjoy!

Disclaimer I am a Affiliate for Monstrum Tactical and will periodically have items from them in my posts, but that means I also have to ability to post discounts.