SKU: 61001742275

Odin Works Adjustable AR-10 Buffer — 3.45–4.65 oz · .308 Win & 7.62x51 Builds

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Description

Odin Works Adjustable AR-10 Buffer — 3.45–4.65 oz · .308 Win & 7.62x51 Builds100% USA Made Odin Works Southern Idaho 3. 454. 65 oz Range AR 10 . 308 7. 62x51 In Stock ODIN Works Southern Idaho 100% USA Made Stainless steel body 3 interchangeable weights AR 10 rifle length tube compatible The AR 10 is a fundamentally different cycling equation than the AR 15 more mass, more gas pressure, more BCG energy to manage. Getting the buffer weight right on a . 308 Win or 7. 62x51 AR 10 is critical for reliability, brass life, and felt

100% USA Made Odin Works Southern Idaho 3.45–4.65 oz Range AR-10 · .308 · 7.62x51 In Stock
🇺🇸
ODIN Works · Southern Idaho — 100% USA Made
Stainless steel body · 3 interchangeable weights · AR-10 rifle-length tube compatible

The AR-10 is a fundamentally different cycling equation than the AR-15 — more mass, more gas pressure, more BCG energy to manage. Getting the buffer weight right on a .308 Win or 7.62x51 AR-10 is critical for reliability, brass life, and felt recoil. The Odin Works Adjustable AR-10 Buffer gives you 3 interchangeable weights — aluminum, stainless steel, and tungsten — covering a 3.45 to 4.65 oz range in a stainless steel body built specifically for the large-frame AR platform. Stop guessing. Start tuning. 100% USA made in Southern Idaho.


3-Weight System

Precision Tuning for the Large-Frame AR

The AR-10 buffer includes 3 weights — one of each material — covering the precise range the .308/7.62 platform demands. Load any combination of the 3 included weights to dial in your exact configuration.

AL Aluminum × 1 Light end — 3.45 oz minimum config
SS Stainless × 1 Mid-weight — intermediate tuning
W Tungsten × 1 Max weight — 4.65 oz heavy config
Why AR-10 Buffer Weight Is Critical

The AR-10 platform runs at significantly higher bolt thrust and gas pressure than the AR-15. An AR-10 that's running too light a buffer will slam the BCG rearward aggressively — beating up your receiver, your bolt, and your brass. Too heavy and it short-strokes. The Odin Works adjustable system lets you find the exact weight your specific AR-10 needs based on your gas system, barrel length, and ammunition — without buying three different fixed-weight buffers to get there.


Key Features

Large-Frame AR. Precisely Tuned.

  • Stainless steel body — heavy-duty construction built for the higher bolt thrust and cycling energy of the AR-10 / .308 platform. More durable than aluminum for large-frame applications.
  • 3 interchangeable weights — aluminum (lightest), stainless steel (mid), tungsten (heaviest). One of each, giving you precise control across the 3.45–4.65 oz range.
  • 3.45 to 4.65 oz range — covers the full practical buffer weight range for AR-10 and .308 builds. Whether you're running a 16" mid-length or a 20" rifle-length gas system, the Odin Works adjustable covers it.
  • Face-mounted set screw adjustment — swap weights from the front without punching out roll pins or disassembling the buffer. Change your configuration at the range in seconds.
  • Compatible with .308 Win, 7.62x51 NATO, and other AR-10 platform calibers — fits standard AR-10 rifle-length buffer tubes.
  • Recoil management — properly matched buffer weight reduces felt recoil and muzzle rise on the AR-10 platform significantly. Faster follow-up shots, better brass retention, longer component life.
  • 100% USA made — designed and manufactured by Odin Works in Southern Idaho. Lifetime warranty.

Technical Specs

Full Breakdown

Specification Odin Works AR-10 Buffer
Body Material Stainless Steel
Weight Range 3.45 oz – 4.65 oz
Weights Included 1 Aluminum + 1 Stainless Steel + 1 Tungsten (3 Total)
Minimum Weight Config 3.45 oz
Maximum Weight Config 4.65 oz
Adjustment Method Face-mounted set screw — no tools required
Platform AR-10 · .308 Win · 7.62x51 NATO · Rifle-Length Buffer Tube
Dimensions 1.35 × 3.80 × 8.45 inches
Installation Drop-In · AR-10 Rifle-Length Tube
Manufacturing 100% USA Made · Southern Idaho
Warranty Odin Works Lifetime Warranty
Compatible Platforms
AR-10 .308 Winchester 7.62x51 NATO 6.5 Creedmoor AR-10 Rifle-Length Buffer Tube LSD Arms AR-10
Odin Works AR-10 Buffer — In Stock
100% USA Made · 3.45–4.65 oz · Ships Fast · Southern Idaho
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Related Products

ODIN Works® is a registered trademark of Odin Works, manufactured in Southern Idaho, USA. Compatible with AR-10 rifle-length buffer tubes. All forced reset triggers are federally legal following the May 2025 DOJ settlement. State restrictions may apply — see our state legal guide.

Shipping Notes
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Exchange/Return Notes
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  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
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SKU: 61001742275

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Reverend Skull
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 3
for Simpson fans
Format: Hardcover
If you're a fan of the Simpsons' neighbor, this will certainly tickle your funnybone. Good old left-handed Ned tells and shows all, God bless him.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2009
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Holly S.
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 4
Fun
Format: Paperback
A ton of fun for The Simpsons fans.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2024
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Ghost Mutt
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 3
eh
Format: Paperback
IT's not bad at all but they're other "The Simpsons" comic books are way better. I really recommend "Belly Buster" or "Madness" from The Simpsons collection.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2013
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Adam
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
It is so cool.
Format: Paperback
I like it.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2025
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mwreview
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 4
"I very nearly singed my bone!"--Melvin Van Horne
Format: Paperback
Another fun-packed issue of Simpsons Comics. This is the 15th issue I've bought and, with only a couple of exceptions, they are all as funny and entertaining as the television show. I've read them all multiple times. This issue is perfect for the Sideshow Mel fan because he is featured in a short that documents how and why he became Sideshow Mel and he is also the hero in another comic. Jimbo Jones fans will like the short about how he became a bully (he wasn't always one). Dr. Hibbert also has a short feature. Here's what this issue has to offer: "Simpson/Sideshow Sibling Smackdown": Cecil Terwilliger and Lisa have something in common--they can't escape from the shadows of their attention-grubbing older brothers. Can they find a rapport even as one is intent on destroying the other? "A Recipe for Disaster"--Marge needs a new dish for the church social pot luck and tries recipes written by "Springfieldian citizens of questionable character." "Homer's Run"--Bart becomes owner of a demanding falcoln ("I have to do everything for him. What a stupid bird") while Homer signs up for early retirement on the Hawaiian Island Garbagio--which looks (and smells) just like it sounds. "Secret Origin of Sideshow Mel"--The background story of how and why Melvin Van Horne became Krusty's sidekick (you won't believe what Mel's occupation was before he replaced Sideshow Bob). "Day of the Nerd"--Lisa finds out the truth about NASA's exploration of Mars. Meanwhile, the other geeks of Springfield compete in feats of nerdome to win the inheritance of the largest collector of TV/movie&comic book memorabilia. Interesting and unique but jumps around a lot. "Bummer Vacation"--Short about Bart's summer (his batting swing looks totally wrong) and then writing a report on it that Mrs. Krabbapal doesn't believe. "Laughter is the Worst Medicine"--Homer competes in a competitive eating contest, "The Gorge in the Gorge." As Krusty says, "Chewing is for losers! Once you swallow, it's the colon's problem." After eating the final hot dog, something goes horribly wrong. Meanwhile Krusty gets a real doctor's degree instead of an honorary one and sick people start lining up at his door. "Down Home Doctorin' Time with Doctor Julius Hibbert"--Short about Dr. Hibbert as a TV doctor forced to change the style of his show to get better ratings. Ends very abruptly. "The Permanent Record Room!"--Principal Skinner shares some stories (school stories, not war stories). (1) "Pranks But No Pranks"--Bart plays a joke on Groundskeeper Willie which has the janitor believing he's a superhero. (2) "And the Beatings Go On"--The origin of Jimbo Jones. No, he wasn't always a bully. (3) "Truant or False"--Lil' Homie gets hooked up with a young miscreant(who would grow up to become a prominent figure in Springfield). Homer thinks he's learned a valuable lesson from the breif time he spent with this rebelious kid, but perhaps it is the rebel who changes his ways. Sidenote: they wouldn't have had Noiseland Arcade if this comic was accurate. Homer's mother is in this comic and she left the family in 1969. "The Many Faces of Bob"--Sideshow Bob is released from prison but is hit by a Duff Beer truck on his way out and has to undergo plastic surgery. Bart and Lisa try to figure out who Bob could be posing as before he gets his revenge on Bart. "Homer vs. The Raccoon I & II"--I'm not sure why this was divided into two parts; it's just an 8-page short. Anyway, Homer tries to capture a raccoon that has been going through his trash.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2007

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