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Ready-Load Double Carbine Rifle Case - Tan

Price:

83.99


Range Recon Double-Carry Tactical Rifle Case - Black
Range Recon Double-Carry Tactical Rifle Case - Black
95.99 95.99
Low-Profile Range Ready Carbine Gun Case - Blue
Low-Profile Range Ready Carbine Gun Case - Blue
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Range Convoy Double Carbine Rifle Case - Tan

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9128/image_1920?unique=d588853

3 sold in last 24 hours

South of San Antonio, the caliche dust gets into everything. This double carbine rifle case keeps two 36-inch rifles padded, strapped, and locked down, plus pistols, mags, and optics in their own pockets. Heavy PVC shrugs off truck beds and gravel. Backpack straps free your hands for range gates and gear. It’s the kind of case a Texas shooter buys once, then drags to every match and pasture range for years.

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CVDC2946T36

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Range Convoy Double Carbine Rifle Case Built for Long Texas Drives

Leave San Angelo before sunup and you’ll see this case a lot. Tan, low-profile, riding in the bed with steel targets and a folding table. Inside: two carbines strapped down, pistols and mags sorted, nothing knocking itself loose on washboard county roads.

This soft case holds up to two rifles up to 36 inches, each cradled by thick padding and split by a center divider so optics don’t kiss under hard braking. Four hook-and-loop straps cinch each carbine down, so when you roll up to the lease gate outside Eden, you unzip to find your rifles exactly where you left them.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Still Need a Solid Rifle Case

If you’re the kind of person searching where to buy an OTF knife in Texas, odds are you’re hauling long guns too. This double carbine case fits right into that same carry mindset: organized, fast to access, built to ride in a dusty truck and still open clean at the range.

Three exterior pockets swallow AR mags, loose boxes of .223, or .308 for the hog gun. Behind them, a flat zippered compartment runs the length of the bag, a good place for targets, a log book, or that folding mat you lay out on the mesquite roots. It’s the same deliberate approach Texans take to knives and rifles alike—everything has its place, everything earns its weight.

Why This Double Carbine Rifle Case Works Across Texas Country

On a coastal range near Corpus, the wind throws grit at everything. Up in the Panhandle, red dirt will stain gear the first week you own it. This tan PVC case is built for that kind of abuse. The shell is heavy-duty and stiff enough to keep its shape when loaded, with padding thick enough to buffer your rifles from the jolt of a cattle guard or rutted lease road.

Compression straps at the top and bottom pull the whole load tight, so your rifles and gear don’t shift when you drag the case from truck bed to shooting bench. PALS webbing on each end lets you clip on extra pouches—rangefinder, med kit, that one odd tool roll you always bring when you drive two hours to shoot and don’t intend to cut a trip short over a loose screw.

Carrying a Loaded Rifle Case the Texas Way

Some days the parking is close and the walk is short. Other days you’re humping gear across a dusty pasture when the landowner doesn’t want trucks near his fence line. This case handles both.

The wrap-around carry handles are broad and padded, good for quick moves from truck to bench in a Dallas indoor range. When the walk is longer—down a sendero in South Texas or up a draw in the Hill Country—you clip in the two adjustable shoulder straps, cinch the sternum strap, and wear the case like a backpack. That frees your hands for steel stands, cooler, and the gate chain that always seems to be hung too tight.

Weight sits high and close, not dragging behind you, so you can cross loose rock or cracked gumbo soil without fighting your gear. The case doesn’t try to look clever; it just rides steady and keeps your rifles out of the dirt.

Texas OTF Knife Owners Ask About Laws; Rifle Owners Think Transport

Texans who look up whether OTF knives are legal here usually keep an eye on transport laws for rifles too. Knives and guns fall under different parts of the code, but the mindset is the same: carry clean, carry secure, and avoid giving anyone a reason to question intent.

Secure Transport on Long Texas Highways

When you’re headed from Houston to a private range outside Sealy, or from Lubbock to a match in Amarillo, this case keeps your rifles zipped inside, with double heavy-duty zippers you can lock together if you want that extra layer of security. It’s not a hard case, and it’s not a safe, but it presents your rifles in a controlled, padded environment that shows you’re treating them like tools, not toys.

Organized Carry From House to Truck to Range

Handguns, optics, cleaning gear, even your log book all live in the secondary compartment and external pouches. That means no juggling pistol boxes, no loose oil bottles rolling around the floorboard, no "where did I put that" moment when the line goes hot. It’s the same straightforward order a lot of Texans want from their EDC setup—just scaled to carbines and rifles.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Double Carbine Rifle Cases

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF and switchblades—are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not in specific prohibited places like certain schools, courts, or secure government facilities, and you’re not otherwise barred from possessing weapons. Length limits apply to what the law calls "location-restricted knives," but for most everyday carry situations, a modern OTF is legal. Always check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules before you carry.

Will this double carbine rifle case fit my setup for a typical Texas range day?

If your rifles are 36 inches or shorter, this case is built for that. Two carbines with optics mount in the main compartment, each strapped and padded. The secondary compartment swallows pistols, hearing protection, bore snakes, and tools. Three front pouches hold loaded mags and ammo. For a Saturday at an outdoor range outside Austin or a quick trip to an indoor lane in Fort Worth, you load this once and don’t need a second bag.

Backpack straps or carry handle—what makes more sense in Texas conditions?

If you mostly shoot at indoor ranges or drive right up to the berm, the wrap handles will see the most use. But in much of the state, parking lots are uneven gravel, and pasture ranges demand a walk. In that terrain, the backpack straps and sternum strap matter. They keep the case tight to your back when you’re stepping over mesquite roots or cracked clay, leaving your hands free for gates, target stands, or a cooler you promised to bring.

Where This Rifle Case Makes Sense in Your Texas Week

Picture a late October afternoon outside Abilene. The wind’s laid down, the light’s soft, and the berm at the back of a caliche pit glows almost orange. You drop the tailgate, swing this tan double carbine case out, and set it on the steel table. Zippers run easy, nothing snags. Two rifles right where you strapped them, mags lined in the front pocket, pistol tucked into its own sleeve.

There’s no fidgeting, no rummaging, no wondering if the drive in tore something up. You shoulder the case back on when you’re done, rifles unloaded, ammo spent, tired in the way that feels right after a long day on the gun. For Texans who live this rhythm—work, drive, shoot, backroads home—this isn’t just another bag. It’s the quiet piece of gear that keeps the rest of your kit squared away every time you roll through the gate.

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