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Urban Recon Modular Shotgun Scabbard - Urban Gray

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20.99


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Concrete Line MOLLE Shotgun Scabbard - Urban Gray

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4498/image_1920?unique=030634f

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Rolling I-35 before sunrise, that short-barrel shotgun rides where you can reach it, not where it beats you up. This MOLLE shotgun scabbard lays flat against armor, packs, or a truck seat, padded from muzzle to receiver and expandable for different builds. The shoulder sling carries clean when you step out. Five external shotshell loops, solid retention strap, drainage grommet, and four detachable PALS straps keep it locked down. For Texans who stage a shotgun like they mean it.

20.99 20.99 USD 20.99

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Concrete Line Carry for Short-Barrel Shotguns

There are stretches of loop around Dallas where traffic can go from seventy to stopped in a hundred yards. Same thing rolling past refineries in Houston at shift change, or easing into a dim caliche lot outside a Hill Country dance hall. If you keep a short-barrel shotgun close in those places, this scabbard gives it a quiet, padded home that doesn’t fight your gear or your truck.

The padded body runs from muzzle to receiver, built for short barrels in the twenty to twenty-five inch range. It’s tight enough that the gun doesn’t rattle, generous enough to handle common forend lights and side saddles. The shell keeps hard edges off your seat fabric, console plastics, and door cards when the shotgun rides inside, and it does the same for armor carriers and packs when it rides on you.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers, Same Mindset—But This One Holds Your Scattergun

If you’re the kind of person hunting for an OTF knife Texas sellers trust, you already think about fast access and controlled carry. This scabbard answers that same need for your shotgun. In a patrol Tahoe on 290 outside Austin or a ranch truck outside Junction, a loose shotgun sliding on the floorboard is a problem waiting for hard braking. Slipped into this scabbard, the gun rides where you choose, facing the way you want, with a retention strap that pops free in one motion.

The padded shoulder sling adjusts long enough to throw cross-body over body armor or a soft shell. Step out on a service call in San Antonio or a hog run along the river bottom near Refugio and the scabbard stays put, muzzle down, barrel protected from mud and rock. You’re not wrestling bare steel against brush, fencing, or door jambs. You’re walking with the gun contained but close.

Texas OTF Knife Mindset, Shotgun Scabbard Build

People who shop Texas OTF knife options care how gear sits, snags, and deploys. The same principles live in the MOLLE grid that runs this scabbard’s spine. Four detachable PALS straps let you lace it tight to a plate carrier, passenger seatback, range bag, or UTV rack. You can run it muzzle-up for quick grabs leaving a San Angelo lease gate, or muzzle-down along a backseat for low profile rides through town.

The webbing is bar-tacked where it should be, not just for show. Two metal D-rings near the upper end give anchor points if you want to rig alternate slings or clip in to existing chest harnesses. Five exterior shotshell loops hold ready rounds where your support hand naturally lands. Roll through Midland on a dusty FM road with buckshot and slugs staged, and you won’t be digging in pockets or console trays when it matters.

Built for Texas Dust, Rain, and Range Days

From Gulf humidity to Panhandle dust, Texas is hard on soft gear. This shotgun scabbard leans on a heavy synthetic shell with a matte, non-reflective finish that shrugs off light rain and grime. The fabric is stiff enough to keep its shape when empty so you’re not trying to thread a barrel through a collapsing tube in the dark. Edge binding and reinforced stitching at stress points keep seams from blowing when you drag it across mesquite, concrete, or the tailgate.

At the bottom, a drainage grommet lets water and grit work their way out. Walk out of a muddy dove field near Hondo, or bail from a truck into a storm-swollen ditch outside Beaumont, and you won’t trap water around the muzzle. The quick-release buckle on the lower strap lets you snug or relax fit depending on the shotgun’s furniture and attachments, so it stays quiet even when you’re moving at a jog across a gravel lot under sodium lights.

Texas Carry Reality: How This Scabbard Rides

Texas carry culture isn’t just about sidearms and an OTF knife; it’s about where the long gun lives, too. In a King Ranch cab, space is gold. This scabbard lets a short-barrel shotgun ride flat along the back of a seat or up against the transmission tunnel, lashed through its MOLLE and PALS straps to whatever anchor points your truck gives you. The urban gray color disappears against most modern interiors and duty gear, more like shadow than gear.

On foot, the wide, padded shoulder sling spreads weight so it doesn’t dig in during a long walk to a blind in Brazos County or a hike down a creek bed outside New Braunfels. Sling it cross-body and the scabbard stays tight against your side, not swinging wide where it catches on brush or door frames. The removable retention strap rides over the receiver, locking in with a quick-release buckle that can be popped with gloves on during a cold North Texas morning.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Gear and Shotgun Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry for adults in most places. The state removed the old switchblade restrictions several years back. The main limits now focus on blade length and on certain sensitive locations like schools, courts, and some government buildings. If you carry an automatic alongside a shotgun staged in this scabbard, stay aware of local policies and posted signs, but state law generally allows both.

Will this shotgun scabbard work with my truck and MOLLE seat covers?

Texans run everything from MOLLE-backed seat covers in oilfield pickups to simple cloth in older half-tons. This scabbard’s four detachable PALS straps are built for that spread. You can weave them directly into a MOLLE panel on a seatback, clip to cargo loops with the D-rings, or run the shoulder sling around a headrest to hang the gun vertically. In a UTV crossing a pasture outside Lubbock or a patrol unit easing through a San Marcos neighborhood, the scabbard adapts to whatever interior you’ve got.

How do I choose between this and a hard case for Texas use?

If your shotgun mostly travels locked in a trunk from house to established range, a hard case keeps everything boxed and protected. But if you run backroads at night, step out on rural properties, or work shifts where a shotgun may need to come out of the vehicle quickly, this soft scabbard makes more sense. It’s faster to access, quieter in tight spaces, easier to strap to armor or a pack, and slim enough to tuck behind a truck seat. For a lot of Texans, the hard case is for storage; the scabbard is for work.

First Use: A Texas Night, A Ready Shotgun

Picture a two-lane just outside of town, August heat still holding the pavement after sunset. You pull into a gravel lot behind a metal building, kill the lights, and step out into cicada noise and distant train horns. The short-barrel shotgun rides in this scabbard behind your seat, muzzle down, shells in the loops. You swing the door, reach back, thumb the buckle on the retention strap, and the gun’s in your hand without clatter or fuss.

No wrestling with cases, no barrel banging plastic, no loose gun sliding around the cab. Just a quiet piece of gear doing its job, the way Texans expect their tools to work when the daylight’s gone and the stakes feel higher than a simple drive across town.

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