The real stock-fit differences between Remington 700 Short and Long Actions. Check receiver geometry, screw spacing, bottom metal, and magazine pattern before choosing a WOOX stock.
How Mossberg Shockwave furniture fit differs from Mossberg 500/590 fit. Check action-tube length, gauge, clearance, and WOOX Gladiatore configuration before ordering.
What a rear M1913 stock interface actually requires, how 1913 stock adapters affect fitment, and the compatibility checks that prevent costly mounting mistakes.
Length of pull is not a fixed AR-15 number. This guide explains how trigger-to-stock distance changes with LPVOs, red dots, body armor, winter layers, and shooting position—and how the WOOX Vigilante’s 11.5-inch to 14.5-inch LOP range helps set a repeatable rifle mount on compatible Mil-Spec carbine receiver extension tubes.
Geometry decides whether the WOOX Gladiatore fits—not the shotgun name alone. This guide explains how receiver pattern, gauge, action-tube length, and product configuration determine Gladiatore compatibility across Mossberg, Maverick, Shockwave, Remington 870, and Tac-14 platforms before ordering.
Check Ruger American Gen II fitment for the WOOX Exactus stock, including supported Short Action Centerfire models, Ranch/Rimfire exclusions, and AICS-pattern magazine requirements.
Choose the right WOOX stock or chassis for your Weatherby Vanguard Check action length, BDL magazine fit, barrel clearance, inlet pattern, and torque before you buy.
Not all Remington 700 stocks interchange. Learn how ADL, BDL, short action, long action, bottom metal, barrel contour, magazine setup, and inlet fit affect stock compatibility.
A Mossberg 590 can feel quick and controlled, or awkward and slow, with only a small change in stock geometry. For most owners, the first dimension to check is Mossberg 590 stock length of pull.