Inebriated
Member
Absolutely. Milspec is a great baseline, and whether or not a user needs it is completely up to them. Best thing is for them to educate themselves on what milspec means for each part, and how that affects it in their real-world, practical use, and go from there.Jackal said:Problem here is, almost no one wants a "mil spec" rifle. I certainly dont. I dont like A2 flash hiders, I unstake the castle nut as soon as I install a sling plate, I remove the crappy "milspec" trigger for a better one, I prefer non "milspec" free float tubes, I dont like standard charging handles, milspec grips, trigger guards, stocks,etc,etc,etc. Mil Spec doesnt mean "the best", its simply good a jumping off point to improve upon and tailor to the end user.