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Blackout Quad-Mag Tactical Rifle Case - Black PVC

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29.99


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Blacktop Quad‑Mag Range Rifle Case - Black PVC

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South of Fort Worth, you step out onto a dusty private range with one rifle and a plan to stay awhile. This 42‑inch soft rifle case rides quiet in the truck, padded and slim, with four exterior mag pouches set for easy reloads. The black PVC shell shrugs off caliche dust and light rain, while lockable metal zippers keep things calm on the drive home. For Texans who live between pasture gates and range berms, this is how a rifle travels.

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CVCP2960B42

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Blacktop Carry for Rifle Days That Start Before Sunrise

The morning starts dark on a lease road outside Abilene. One rifle, a box of ammo, a steel rack tucked against a mesquite line. Your 42‑inch setup rides on the backseat, zipped into a soft rifle case that doesn’t rattle, doesn’t shout, and doesn’t take more space than it has to. Padded walls keep glass and zero intact on washboard caliche, and four loaded mags ride in their own pockets so you’re not digging in a loose range bag when the light finally comes up.

This is what the Blacktop Quad‑Mag Range Rifle Case is built around: quiet movement between house, truck, and range. No hard case bulk. No bright stitching. Just a slim, black profile that matches the way most Texans actually move with a rifle.

Why This Soft Rifle Case Works for Texas Range Runs

Most days, a rifle in Texas isn’t flying across the country. It’s riding from a garage in Katy to an indoor lane off I‑10, or from a barn near San Angelo out to a private berm on the back forty. In those miles, padded protection matters more than airline armor. This 42‑inch soft rifle case gives your AR or similar‑length rifle a fitted bed of padding, with internal straps to keep it from shifting when you hit a cattle guard a little too fast.

The full‑length metal zipper runs clean around three sides, so the case opens flat on a tailgate, shooting bench, or gravel. You don’t have to wrestle a half‑open mouth just to clear a muzzle. The padded carry handle lands dead center, balanced for one‑hand carry from truck to firing line. When the walk is longer or the August heat is already pushing up, the shoulder sling lets you free both hands for ammo cans, staplers, and steel paint.

Outside, the black PVC shell shrugs off morning dew on a Hill Country range bench and the grit that blows through West Texas parking lots. It wipes clean with a rag and doesn’t soak up oil, dust, or rain. That’s the difference between gear you baby and gear you use three times a week.

Discreet Rifle Transport That Fits Texas Gun Culture

Plenty of Texans live in neighborhoods where neighbors don’t need to see every rifle that comes out of the house. This soft rifle case keeps things low‑key. The all‑black PVC, slim profile, and lack of loud branding help it pass as just another piece of black luggage from the porch to the truck.

Inside apartment stairwells in Austin or townhomes north of Dallas, you can move from door to elevator to garage without flagging everyone in the building. In small towns where everyone knows your truck, the low‑profile look still works—nothing about it screams tactical; it just reads as a straight black gear case built to work.

Four exterior mag pouches give you honest capacity without turning the case into a bulky panel. Three, sometimes four loaded thirty‑rounders are enough for a solid hour on an indoor lane in Houston or a simple three‑gun practice run out near New Braunfels. Flaps keep mags from dumping if the case tips, yet stay quick to open when the timer beeps.

Texas Rifle Transport, Law, and Peace of Mind

Texas is firearm‑friendly, but experienced owners still think about how they transport rifles. On the road to the range, you want the gun cased, mags controlled, and access limited. This soft rifle case answers that with its lockable metal zippers. Add a small padlock, and you’ve put one more barrier between your rifle and curious hands when you stop for fuel or a drive‑through on the way home.

State law doesn’t require a case like this, but Texans who drive with rifles in the truck know that secure, covered, and out of sight is the right way to run. In a crew cab parked at a Buc‑ee’s outside Temple, the black case lies low on the floorboard or the back seat, looking more like a generic gear bag than a long gun carrier.

For ranch work, that same lockable zipper helps when kids or guests are around the house or barn. The rifle stays padded and zipped, with mags in their own pouches, until it’s time to head back out among the mesquite and prickly pear.

Built for Real Texas Conditions, Not Catalog Photos

Texas is hard on gear. Summer range days hit triple digits in San Antonio, and winter north winds can strip heat off the Panhandle plains. The black PVC shell on this rifle case handles both. It doesn’t fade fast in the sun, doesn’t swell with humidity, and doesn’t mind being set down on a damp concrete slab at an outdoor club near Corpus Christi.

Inside, the padding takes the sting out of rough travel. Toss it into the back of a side‑by‑side headed down a lease road in East Texas; the rifle rests on a cushioned bed, with the muzzle and stock protected from hard knocks. The interior straps keep the gun from sliding to one end when the trail tilts or the ruts deepen.

The 42‑inch length hits a sweet spot. It’s long enough for a typical AR‑15, many carbines with optics, and plenty of hunting setups with collapsible stocks, yet short enough to fit sideways across a truck backseat or stand upright inside a closet. That balance makes it a natural daily range companion instead of a once‑a‑year case.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Ask About Gear Like This Too

Texans who search for an OTF knife Texas shops trust are usually the same folks who care how their rifle travels. Range days aren’t just about the pistol on your hip or the Texas OTF knife in your pocket; they’re about having a rifle case that works cleanly in the same world—truck cabs, ranch gates, and back‑road gas stations.

This soft rifle case fits that mindset. It doesn’t fight for attention with your other gear. It just protects the rifle, holds the mags, and lets your knives, pistols, and tools handle the rest of the work.

Range Use from Dallas Lanes to Hill Country Pastures

In Dallas, you pull into a multi‑level parking garage, rifle cased in the back. The Blacktop Quad‑Mag Range Rifle Case comes out first, balanced at the center handle, black against the concrete. In ten minutes you’re on an air‑conditioned lane, case open flat on the bench, mags drawn from the exterior pouches without reaching into a loose bag.

Out in the Hill Country, the same case rests on a truck tailgate, sun coming over a limestone ridge. Dust blows, brass collects under your boots, and the PVC shell wipes clean before you throw it back in the cab. The rifle stays padded either way.

Truck Culture and Everyday Rifle Storage

Across Texas, the truck is the gear room that moves. This soft rifle case fits that culture. It slides behind a pickup seat in Lubbock, tucks in a crew cab floorboard outside Beaumont, or leans in a closet in a San Marcos duplex without drawing comment. When it’s time to go, you grab the handle or shoulder sling and you’re gone.

For Texans who like a Texas OTF knife in the console and a clean rifle setup in the back, the case becomes part of the same quiet system—everything has its place, everything rides secure, nothing shines more than it should.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Gear and Rifle Cases

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives—often called switchblades—are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old ban on automatic knives was removed years ago. The key concern now is location and blade length. Large blades can be restricted in certain places like schools, courthouses, and some government buildings. Most everyday Texans can carry a Texas OTF knife in a pocket, on a belt, or in a truck without issue, but it’s smart to stay current on local rules and posted signs wherever you go.

Will this 42‑inch soft rifle case fit my setup with optic and mags?

If you’re running a standard 16‑inch AR‑style rifle or similar carbine with an optic, this 42‑inch soft rifle case is built around that footprint. The padded interior and full‑length cavity handle a scoped upper without crowding the glass. Internal straps lock the rifle down so it doesn’t slam around when you hit rough county roads. Four exterior mag pouches handle your primary magazines, so you don’t have to haul a second bag just for reloads on a quick afternoon in a San Antonio or Midland range bay.

Hard rifle case or soft rifle case for Texas driving—how should I choose?

For most Texans who drive to local ranges or out to a lease, a soft rifle case like this is easier to live with. It’s lighter, slimmer, and fits better behind a truck seat or in a crowded SUV. A hard case makes sense if you’re flying or shipping guns often. If your miles are mostly between home, range, and pasture, this padded soft rifle case brings enough protection for the rifle and optic, offers lockable zippers for peace of mind, and won’t eat your cab space the way a big plastic coffin will.

From Driveway to Range Line, Built for the Way Texans Move

Picture an October morning outside Waco. You load the truck in the half‑light—targets, a small tool roll, the Texas OTF knife that lives in your pocket, and this black soft rifle case holding the gun that ties it all together. It lays flat on the tailgate while you gear up, then rides quiet on the backseat as county roads unwind.

At the range, you grab the padded handle, walk past the berms, and lay the case down. Zipper runs smooth, rifle comes out clean, mags are lined up exactly where you expect them. No fuss, no waste, nothing extra. Just a 42‑inch rifle case that fits the way Texans already live with their rifles—on the road, on the land, and always ready for the next string of shots.

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