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Hardware: TriStar Viper Max

TriStar finally has a 3½-inch autoloader. So just how does the Viper Max stack up?

Bookshelf: 3 Must-Read Books for Summer 2017

Looking to beef up the library? Here are three new books that are well worth your time.

Hardware: Winchester Super X4 Shotgun

An upgraded model that features a downgraded price tag? It seemed too good to be true—but the Winchester SX4 proved us wrong.

Review: 2018 Jeep Wrangler

Jeep has just released the all-new 2018 Wrangler lineup with a comforting connection to the past and a practical emphasis on extreme performance.

Hardware: Barrett Fieldcraft

The Fieldcraft is a sweet little rifle for a mountain hunt for sheep, goats or elk, where sometimes even your boot laces are too heavy.

Hardware: Bergara B-14 HMR

The nicely balanced B-14 HMR (Hunting & Match Rifle), perhaps more than any other offering from Bergara, proves the company's considerable capabilities as a rifle maker. It isn’t too heavy or bulky for carrying through the foothills, and its adjustable stock, compatibility with AICS-pattern detachable box magazines and heavier-than-average barrel make it worthy of a precision rifle match, too.

Broadheads for Turkeys

These reviews and recommendations for turkey broadheads are sure to help you take plenty of gobblers this season.

TriStar Viper G2 Synthetic

Despite the many naysayers, American Hunter contributor David Draper has long been a fan of shotguns from Turkey and has carried one waterfowling for the past decade—which made him the ideal man to put TriStar's new Viper G2 Synthetic to the test.

Hardware: Browning A5 Stalker

In 2012, after Benelli’s patent on its inertia action expired, Browning seized opportunity with a new-aged Auto-5, simply called the A5. Today the A5 line includes Mossy Oak bedecked guns and the shoot-all shown above, the new 31/2-inch Stalker, a semi-auto that looks and feels much like the old but that outperforms it in every way.

Review: Volquartsen .17 WSM Autoloader

The high-velocity, high-energy .17 Winchester Super Magnum rimfire is a welcomed cartridge for many wishing to engage everything from destructive rodents to marauding coyotes, especially in regions where centerfires are noisy, frowned upon or even illegal. But finding a rifle to shoot the world’s fastest rimfire has been a challenge.

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