
Tapco Intrafuse 10/22 Standard Stock System, Black Product Description:
- Package Includes: TAPCO T6 Stock Body, 1 Straight 6 position stock tube, 1 Angled 6 position stock tube, TAPCO SAW Style Pistol Grip, Intrafuse Top Barrel Cover, Intrafuse Standard 10/22 Stock Chassis, Lower Rail Cover
- This product will not work with the Heavy-Inch Bull-Inch .920-Inch Barrel
- Length of Pull: 10.75-Inch (fully collapsed), 11.25-Inch, 12-Inch, 12.75-Inch, 13.5-Inch, 14.25-Inch (fully extended)
Product Description
Are you bored with your 10/22? Do you feel like it needs to be beefed up a bit to compete with the other rifles out there? TAPCO wants to change how people are looking at the 10/22 with the Intrafuse 10/22 Standard Stock System. Weve put together an easily installed stock system that updates the style of your 10/22 by being completely made of military grade composite. The system will upgrade the ergonomics of your rifle by giving you a 6 position adjustable butt stock, SAW Style Pistol Grip, and two different receiver extensions. The straight extension offers you a perfectly aligned cheek weld while using optics and the angled tube enables you to use the iron sights without restrictions. Featuring a Picatinny rail on the top barrel cover and also a concealable bottom rail at the forearm, our stock system gives you plenty of options to add lights, lasers, or forward grips. Get the Intrafuse 10/22 Standard Stock System, grab your 10/22 from the dusty closet, and fall back in love with this classic rifle.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
39 of 41 people found the following review helpful.great product
By Steven T. Blades
I purchased this stock system in the desert tan. It looks and feels great and makes the rifle a lot of fun to shoot. I put a red-dot sight system on the gun and it works very well. I built this gun because my AR-15 is so expensive to shoot. The first time I took this out I shot with a friend for over 2 hours and went through 500 rounds of 22 ammo (less than $15). That would have been about 30 rounds of 223 for my AR-15 and about 5 minutes of shooting for the same price. This gun is almost as much fun to shoot as my AR-15 but without the care of how much ammo I am burning through. I was emptying 25 round magazines without constantly thinking about the cost. The Tapco system was easy to install and everything fit together properly. Sometimes aftermarket products don't quite fit together right but with this one everything fit just right. I did it at my coffee table with a few basic tools (screwdrivers and a socket set, you need an Allen head screwdriver bit) and no gunsmithing skills. It took about 20 minutes to do it. The composite plastic is very durable. I can't imagine how you could break it accidentally. The rails also make it possible to mount a number of accessories to it (lasers, tactical lights, etc...). The stock is just like the stock on an AR-15 carbine or the M4. It comes with a straight and an angled post. I would recommend the straight post if you are using optics (scope, red-dot, or holo sight) and the angled post if you are going to use open sights. This kit does not come with a magazine or a scope rail, however the gun comes with a 10 round magazine and a scope rail. I highly recommend geting a 25 round magazine, however you must do some research on these mags. Aftermarket mags are a mixed bag, some are very good and others are complete junk. It sucks to spend $30 to $40 dollars on a magazine and it does nothing but jam and misfeed. A general rule is to look for metal feed lips on the mag instead of plastic, but this is not a guarantee. The metal feed lip mags are more expensive, sometimes double the cost of plastic. Also, I have a Butler Creek mag with plastic lips and it works flawlessly, I have not had 1 misfeed. If you are looking for a low cost assault style rife that is tough and a lot of fun to shoot, you can't go wrong with this great product.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.Are you kidding me?
By Caveman
I had always wanted a Ruger 10/22, but for some reason, I never bought one.That is, until recently, which is in no small part due to my renewed love for .22's. All the principles are the same and they're super-cheap to shoot, which makes them the perfect practice caliber.I've had a few surgeries on my right wrist and have a limited range of motion, which actually helps my accuracy with handguns, but makes it very difficult to hold the standard stock of a rifle.So, I started looking at all the aftermarket stocks for my new 10/22. Naturally, I wanted something that was functional but I wanted it to look pretty cool too.There are almost too many to choose from out there! I finally settled on this Tapco because it looked functional, and wicked cool. I was also considering the Archangel, but the reviews for that weren't nearly as favorable as the reviews for the Tapco.When everyone else said that this Tapco was truly a drop-in fit, they weren't kidding!I didn't have to even think about bringing a file, sandpaper, or emery cloth anywhere near this new stock!And better still, it's such a perfect fit that although it dropped right in, there isn't ANY play or rattles!The only part that has any "rattle" or "play" to it is the six-position adjustable butt stock. But, in all honesty, there has to be a little in order for it to move.I knew from the all the pictures and reviews that the butt plate was flat (no curve to fit the contour of your shoulder), but I was impressed that it's covered with ribbed rubber. So, it does stay put when you tuck it in for the firing position.The SAW-style pistol grip is very comfortable for me (big palm and short fingers). The storage compartments in the bottom of the grip and in the end of the butt stock seem useful.I'm using the receiver-mounted rail that came with the gun for the optics, but the bottom rail on the fore-end is great! It's just long enough to mount the vertical foregrip (purchased separately), and the folding bipod (also purchased separately) without getting in each other's way.The composite material it's made of is thick and very rigid, so there's absolutely no flex, yet it's pretty light. As long as you've got at least 10 or 12 brain cells, you can figure out how it goes together without looking at the instructions. When screwing down the top rail, which clamps down on the barrel, it feels like you could probably strip out the holes if you went crazy on it. You only have to snug them pretty good, and it holds nicely.All that, plus it's got integrated loops for a sling and it comes with an angled "buffer tube" as well as a straight one, to easily change the fit/height of the rifle in relation to the butt stock.I was so impressed with this stock that I brought the gun to show a few friends, whom I had been telling about my plans for my new "toy".Two of them have a little experience with tactical weapons (one retired Army, the other retired Marine Corps, both spent time in Iraq), and when they both saw the Ruger with it's new outfit on, they BOTH said, "Whoa! What is THAT?"When I told them that it was the 10/22 I had been talking about, they were both saying how badass it looked and were both eager to get a closer look!Their faces lit up when they each handled the weapon, and commented how great it felt, and how much it reminded them of the AR's they were married to during their trips to the Middle East.I was almost a little concerned that I wasn't going to get it back! The Marine honestly didn't want to give it back!So, would I recommend this stock? Without question, absolutely, yes... Period.It's an inexpensive upgrade to an already great rifle, and well worth every single penny (and maybe worth even more).In fact, in the spring, I want to get another 10/22 and make it into a "match" gun (trigger, hammer, sear, polished bolt, match barrel, etc.). And when I do, there's no doubt that I'll be using another stock from Tapco! I really don't think you can beat it (at least not without spending 2 to 3 times more).I was originally only going to give it 4 out 5 stars, but then I really couldn't see any reason why it didn't deserve that 5th star. It's impressed me THAT much, and that's hard to do. So, there ya go!
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful.great product
By Steven T. Blades
I purchased this stock system in the desert tan. It looks and feels great and makes the rifle a lot of fun to shoot. I put a red-dot sight system on the gun and it works very well. I built this gun because my AR-15 is so expensive to shoot. The first time I took this out I shot with a friend for over 2 hours and went through 500 rounds of 22 ammo (less than $15). That would have been about 30 rounds of 223 for my AR-15 and about 5 minutes of shooting for the same price. This gun is almost as much fun to shoot as my AR-15 but without the care of how much ammo I am burning through. I was emptying 25 round magazines without constantly thinking about the cost. The Tapco system was easy to install and everything fit together properly. Sometimes aftermarket products don't quite fit together right but with this one everything fit just right. I did it at my coffee table with a few basic tools (screwdrivers and a socket set, you need an Allen head screwdriver bit) and no gunsmithing skills. It took about 20 minutes to do it. The composite plastic is very durable. I can't imagine how you could break it accidentally. The rails also make it possible to mount a number of accessories to it (lasers, tactical lights, etc...). The stock is just like the stock on an AR-15 carbine or the M4. It comes with a straight and an angled post. I would recommend the straight post if you are using optics (scope, red-dot, or holo sight) and the angled post if you are going to use open sights. This kit does not come with a magazine or a scope rail, however the gun comes with a 10 round magazine and a scope rail. I highly recommend geting a 25 round magazine, however you must do some research on these mags. Aftermarket mags are a mixed bag, some are very good and others are complete junk. It sucks to spend $30 to $40 dollars on a magazine and it does nothing but jam and misfeed. A general rule is to look for metal feed lips on the mag instead of plastic, but this is not a guarantee. The metal feed lip mags are more expensive, sometimes double the cost of plastic. Also, I have a Butler Creek mag with plastic lips and it works flawlessly, I have not had 1 misfeed. If you are looking for a low cost assault style rife that is tough and a lot of fun to shoot, you can't go wrong with this great product. A word of warning, the picture in this add of the guy shooting the gun is the wrong picture. That is not a Ruger 10/22. It looks like a Mini-14. The picture above him of just the gun is the 10/22.
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