The AR-15 is a shrunk AR-10.
Modern .308 ARs aren't really more developed and refined AR-10s; they're enlarged AR-15's.
The trigger group is the most obvious place to spot differences.
The reason for this is pure economics. Why reinvent the wheel?
Keeping parts commonality with the smaller AR-15 means you get to take advantage of the scale of production already established and you also get proven parts. Win win.
It's a little amusing how most .308 ARs share parts with AR-15's, but except for those commodity parts, don't share parts between manufacturers.
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