As I was leaving for work, my wife commented while patting herself on the back for buying me a perfume for Father’s Day,
“now you smell good, unlike that cheap cologne you bought.”
She didn’t know I cleaned my pistol last night.
As I was leaving for work, my wife commented while patting herself on the back for buying me a perfume for Father’s Day,
“now you smell good, unlike that cheap cologne you bought.”
She didn’t know I cleaned my pistol last night.
I have an AR multi-tool that works on most of the AR platforms. Works on my AR15s, AR10s and a couple of SKS that I converted to an AR platform.
Always convenient to have a good multi tool with or in close proximity to your AR. I keep a dedicated multi tool for every firearm I own.
Of course I lost everything in a boating accident! So right now I can only offer advice!
I’ve had good luck using Wheeler tools when working on AR15 Upper Receivers, especially their torque wrench and upper vise block. Makes things way easier and helps avoid messing something up by over-tightening. A decent armorers wrench and some punches are pretty much must-haves too. Keeping everything stable really matters when you’re swapping barrels or installing a new handguard.