In a world where every square inch of a gun room counts, this simple 3D-printed hanger proves that innovation doesn’t always need a patent or a six-figure R&D budget—just a few strong magnets and a little ingenuity. By marrying Magpul’s lightweight MOE X22 stock with off-the-shelf neodymium magnets rated at 75 pounds each, the maker has turned wasted vertical space into secure, instant-access storage for a Ruger Charger. The result is more than a clever bracket; it’s a reminder that the same tools that let hobbyists customize their rifles also let them re-imagine how those rifles live when they’re not in use.
For the 2A community, this kind of grassroots problem-solving carries weight beyond one cabinet door. As states tighten storage mandates and homeowners face shrinking square footage, solutions that keep firearms secure yet seconds-away become practical exercises in responsible ownership. A printed hanger that costs pennies in filament and holds firm under recoil-ready weight shows how decentralized manufacturing can outpace both regulatory creep and commercial product cycles. It also quietly reinforces the principle that lawful gun owners are tinkerers and stewards, not passive consumers waiting for the next catalog to solve their problems.
Perhaps most telling is how quickly the design can spread: upload the files, hit print, and the same bracket can appear in gun rooms from Anchorage to Atlanta. That viral potential turns a single afternoon project into a distributed network of storage options that no single company or legislature can fully regulate or restrict. In an era when every new restriction tries to complicate ownership, the ability to fabricate your own solutions in hours rather than weeks is a quiet but potent affirmation of the right to keep and bear arms—and to keep them exactly where you need them.