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Urban Shield Transit-Ready Double Carbine Case - Urban Gray

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83.99


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City Run Low-Profile Double Carbine Case - Urban Gray

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7421/image_1920?unique=7c07cb5

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You’re rolling from a townhouse garage to an indoor range off the loop. The City Run Low-Profile Double Carbine Case rides in quiet, gray and unremarkable. Inside, two 36-inch rifles sit split by thick padding, locked down with hook-and-loop straps. Three front pockets stage mags, eyes, ears, and a small tool kit. Heavy-duty PVC takes curb rash and truck-bed grit without complaint. It doesn’t shout, doesn’t snag attention—it just moves your rifles cleanly through crowded parking lots and tight storage spaces.

83.99 83.99 USD 83.99

CVDC2946U36

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From Garage to Range Without Drawing Eyes

Morning’s already warming up and the alley behind your Houston townhouse is full of parked trucks and recycling bins. You slide the City Run Low-Profile Double Carbine Case out of the back seat. Urban gray against concrete and asphalt, it disappears into the background. No logos screaming, no tactical peacocking—just a 36-inch soft case that looks like luggage to anyone not paying close attention.

Inside, two carbines ride nose-to-tail, padded divider between them, four hook-and-loop straps cinched tight. The heavy-duty PVC shell shrugs off the brick scrape as you clear a tight corner. You’re headed for an indoor range off 610, carrying enough rifle for real work, without broadcasting it to the whole parking lot.

Urban Shield for Texas Rifle Owners Who Actually Move Around

Most days in Texas, your rifles aren’t sitting on a bench at some quiet Hill Country lease. They’re in motion—apartment to truck, truck to indoor range, office parking lot to buddy’s place in suburbia. That’s where this double carbine case earns its keep. The 36-inch length fits common AR-style carbines with collapsible stocks, so you’re not fighting zippers or jamming muzzles into corners.

The padded divider between the two rifles matters on Austin’s pothole-heavy side streets and San Antonio’s stop-and-go traffic. You don’t want optics smacking receivers every time someone slams on the brakes. Four hook-and-loop straps anchor each gun down at key points—stock, handguard, or wherever your setup needs control—so your zero doesn’t pay the price for a rough ride in the back of an F-150 or a cramped SUV.

Up front, three gusseted pockets handle the rest of your range life: loaded mags, a stapler and targets, eyes and ears, even a simple cleaning kit if you like to wipe things down before you leave. Side-release buckles and hook-and-loop close fast when you’re hustling out of a hot parking lot, but stay shut when you toss the case across a tailgate in Lubbock wind.

Texas Gun Transport Culture, Without the Drama

Carrying long guns across the state these days is less about whether you can, and more about how you choose to do it. This double carbine case doesn’t pretend to be a hard vault or a showpiece. It’s built for the real middle ground: protecting your rifles from dings, dust, and road rash while keeping a low profile in busy Texas corridors.

The urban gray color is deliberate. In a Dallas apartment elevator or a downtown parking garage, black tactical nylon with bright branding stands out. This gray looks like camera gear, maybe a tripod case, maybe nothing at all. When you’re loading up on a Sunday morning with neighbors walking dogs and hauling groceries, that subtlety is worth more than one more flash of MOLLE.

Speaking of MOLLE, the webbing panel on the right front gives you options when you do want to build it out—attaching a med pouch, extra mag sleeves, or a small utility bag for tools on longer trips out toward West Texas or the Panhandle. But if you leave it clean, it still reads as just another piece of workmanlike luggage.

Texas Rifle Transport Concerns: Protection, Privacy, and Practical Use

When you’re moving rifles through Texas cities, you’re thinking about three things: are they protected, are they under control, and are you keeping attention to a minimum. This soft double carbine case answers all three without overcomplicating the job.

Protection comes from the heavy-duty PVC exterior and the internal padded divider. That PVC doesn’t care if it slides across dusty concrete at a Waco range or picks up grit from a San Angelo truck bed. The padding inside keeps rifles from beating on each other when you hit washboard county roads or rough parking lots around older indoor ranges.

Control shows up in the simple hardware choices: dual top handles with a wrap-around grip that won’t dig into your fingers when the case is fully loaded with two rifles and a row of loaded mags, plus the internal straps that keep barrels and stocks from wandering. Whether you’re crossing a gravel lot in Midland wind or squeezing between cars in a Plano garage, you’re not wrestling a floppy, shifting load.

Privacy is baked into the silhouette. The case is rectangular, streamlined, and quiet in color. No oversized logos. Nothing that screams “range toy” or “tactical operator” when you’re just a Texan getting in some trigger time after work.

How This Double Carbine Case Fits Texas Range and Travel Life

On a quick evening run to an indoor range in El Paso, you grab the City Run Low-Profile Double Carbine Case, toss it in the back seat, and you’re gone. The front pockets already hold mags and ear pro from the last trip; you just check the zippers and go. No rattling hard case, no oversized coffin drawing stares when you slide it out in a crowded lot.

On a longer weekend ride to a family place outside College Station, it rides in the truck bed under a tonneau, stacked with cooler and tool bags. The heavy-duty PVC shrugs off the scrape against a jack handle and doesn’t soak up dust like canvas. When you roll in, you unzip once and everything you need—two rifles, mags, basic gear—is where you left it.

If you live in a smaller house or a third-floor apartment in San Marcos, that 36-inch profile tucks into a closet, behind a door, or along the back of a bedroom wall without dominating the space. It’s easy to grab quickly when you’re headed out before daylight for a drive north, and just as easy to stow again when you get back late and tired.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Double Carbine Cases

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law no longer bans automatic knives or switchblades. Adults can legally own and carry OTF knives, even in cities, as long as they’re not bringing them into specific prohibited places like schools, certain government buildings, or secure areas where weapons are restricted. Length limits that used to matter for some blades have been relaxed, but it’s still on you to know the rules for any courthouse, school zone, or posted location you step into.

Will this 36-inch double carbine case fit my Texas truck and typical AR setups?

If you’re running standard AR-style carbines with collapsible stocks in a Texas truck or SUV, this soft 36-inch case is built for that world. Most 16-inch barreled rifles with adjustable stocks collapse down to fit without forcing the zippers or angling the muzzle. In a crew cab or extended cab, it slides flat across the back seat or floorboard. In a bed with a cover, it tucks against the cab wall without chewing up space you need for coolers, tools, or feed.

Soft double carbine case or hard case for Texas use—how do I choose?

If you’re flying out of DFW or Hobby or checking rifles through an airline, you need a lockable hard case that meets airline rules. If you’re mostly driving across town to indoor ranges in Houston, San Antonio, or Dallas, or making weekend road trips to rural property, a soft double carbine case like this is faster, lighter, and easier to live with. It gives you padded protection, divided rifle storage, and organized front pockets without turning every range run into a production. For most Texas drivers who aren’t flying, this is the practical choice.

Picture Your Next Texas Range Run

End of the workday in Dallas, sun still high, heat rolling off the blacktop. You pop the trunk, grab a single gray case, and shut it again before anyone gives it a second look. Inside, two carbines ride quiet, mags and eyes and ears laid out in the front pockets the way you like them.

You carry it by the dual handles through a parking lot lined with sedans and work trucks, slip through the door of the range, and set it on the bench. No clatter, no drama. Just a case that moved your rifles from home to lane like it’s done it a hundred times before. That’s the point: quiet, reliable, organized. Built for the way Texans actually move their rifles—not just on a catalog page, but across real streets, real distances, every week.

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