Range-Ready Haul Double Carbine Case - Black
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Sun’s not up yet over the lease lot, but the Range-Ready Haul Double Carbine Case is already on the tailgate. Two rifles up to 52 inches ride in closed-cell foam, strapped down so they don’t walk on washboard county roads. Pistol, mags, ear pro, logbook – they all disappear into the padded secondary compartments and front pouches. Sling it with the backpack straps, grab the handle, and you’re walking in with your whole range day squared away in one low-profile black case.
Range Mornings and County Roads
The thermometer on the truck says 37, but the wind cutting across that Panhandle range dirt makes it feel colder. You drop the tailgate, swing out the Range-Ready Haul Double Carbine Case, and nothing shifts or rattles. Two rifles up to 52 inches sit buried in closed-cell foam, muzzles and stocks caught in diagonal pockets, held tight with hook and loop straps that don’t give when the road’s washboarded from the last caliche truck.
This isn’t a case you baby. It’s heavy-duty PVC that shrugs off dust, diesel, and the occasional drop on gravel. The profile stays slim and flat, easy to slide behind a truck seat or into the bed without catching on everything else you carry. It feels like gear built for the drive from town to the range off the farm-to-market road, not something that lives on a shelf.
How This Texas OTF Knife Buyer Thinks About a Rifle Case
The same person who looks for a reliable Texas OTF knife cares about quiet, secure carry for long guns. In this double carbine case, the main compartment is fully padded, not just along the bottom. Closed-cell foam wraps around both rifles, keeping optics from kissing each other when you hit a cattle guard too fast. The zippers run the full length, so you can lay the case flat on a bench in Kerrville or Lubbock, unzip it, and have both guns ready without wrestling them past tight corners.
Diagonal pockets at stock and muzzle catch each rifle, giving you a repeatable spot every time. Two hook and loop straps per rifle lock them in. You’re not worried about a scope getting knocked off zero or a muzzle punching the end of the case when you pull into a caliche lot.
Secondary Storage Built for Real Range Days
The secondary compartment feels like the glovebox you always wanted. Two zippered pockets swallow cleaning kits, spare parts, batteries, and a folded target stapler. Two padded compartments with hook and loop closures hold handguns, optics, or a rangefinder, protected from the buttstock and barrel steel riding behind them.
Out front, three pouches run across the case, each with hook and loop plus quick-connect buckles. Load them with AR mags for a match down in Pearland, eye and ear protection for the sheriff’s range in the next county, or boxes of .308 for a zero check before deer season. Adjustable bungee cording across the pouches lets you cinch down odd-sized gear—an extra glove, a rolled-up target backer, a throwaway rain jacket.
MOLLE webbing along the secondary compartment sides turns the whole thing into a modular platform. Add a blowout kit, another mag pouch, or a small tool roll. If your belt and plate carrier already run MOLLE, this case just falls into that same rhythm.
Texas OTF Knife Mindset, Same Carry Discipline
If you’re the sort who keeps an OTF knife clipped in the same spot every day, this case hits that same sense of order. Two top and two bottom compression straps with quick-connect buckles let you cinch down the whole load. Once you pull those straps tight, nothing swims inside when you shoulder it and walk the last hundred yards from the truck to the benches.
A low-profile hook and loop patch panel on the center pouch flap keeps IDs or unit tags where you can see them. That panel runs about three and a half by two inches—just right for a name tape, Texas flag patch, or range club logo. You know at a glance which case is yours on a crowded covered line.
Texas Rifle Transport, Quiet and Legal
Texas law doesn’t fight you for owning rifles or carrying a Texas OTF knife, but common sense and respect still rule. A soft double carbine case like this keeps long guns covered and controlled from the house to the truck to the private range or long lease road. No exposed actions, no muzzles waving over a crowded parking lot at a local gun club.
Soft Case Carry and Texas Common Sense
Closed-cell foam padding keeps rifles from printing hard edges through the case, making it easy to move through apartment breezeways in Houston or up a narrow stair in an older Fort Worth house without drawing extra attention. Zippers stay shut, compression straps snug the profile down, and you look like someone carrying gear, not making a scene.
Truck, Trunk, and Back Seat Reality
In a crew cab heading from San Antonio out toward Hondo, this 52-inch case lays flat across the back seat or angles into the floorboard, still letting you close the door clean. In a sedan trunk, it rides under a duffel and tool bag, the black PVC shell taking the scuffs so your rifles don’t. However you haul it, everything stays contained in one piece of kit.
Backpack Straps for Long Walks Past the Gate
Some ranges in Texas are a short walk from the parking area. Some aren’t. Heavy-duty carry handles work fine from truck bed to bench, but those padded backpack straps matter when the walk runs uphill past two berms and a gate. The straps are adjustable, built to spread the weight of two rifles, ammo, and support gear across your shoulders instead of biting in.
A sternum strap with a quick-connect buckle ties it together, keeping the whole load centered so the case doesn’t slide off one shoulder when you’re stepping over a low fence or navigating muddy ground after a rain. Metal D-rings give you extra tie-in points for carabiners or slung gear you want clipped on and secure.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Texas OTF Knife Gear and Rifle Cases
Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?
Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives—along with other automatic and switchblade-style knives—are legal to own and carry for most adults. The bigger concern is location: certain places like schools, secure government buildings, and some posted properties restrict all weapons, not just blades. Just like you treat this double carbine case with care when transporting rifles, you treat your OTF knife the same way—carried responsibly, kept sheathed or clipped, and out of restricted areas.
Will this double carbine case handle a full Texas match loadout?
For most matches in Austin, College Station, or out at smaller club ranges, this 52-inch case carries plenty. Two rifles in the main padded compartment, a couple of pistols or optics in the padded secondary pockets, AR mags and pistol mags in the front pouches, and loose ammo stacked in the zippered sections. With MOLLE webbing for add-on pouches, you can walk from the truck to the firing line with everything for the day on your back.
Hard case or soft case for Texas driving?
On long highway runs from Dallas to a lease in West Texas, some shooters still like a hard case. But a padded soft case like this wins when you’re in and out of the truck often, hitting local ranges, or stacking gear in a crowded cab. It gives you protection from bumps, keeps rifles covered, and stays easier to handle in tight spaces. If you already trust a Texas OTF knife for everyday carry, this case hits that same balance of toughness and practicality.
Walking Off the Line
End of the day, steel’s cooling and the sun’s dropping behind the berm. You clear both rifles, wipe the dust off your optics, and slide them back into the padded main compartment. Mags go back into the front pouches. Ear pro and pistol disappear into the secondary pockets. Zip it all shut, snug the compression straps, and swing the backpack straps onto your shoulders.
From a Hill Country range to a private pasture outside Abilene, you walk back to the truck with everything that matters riding quiet in one black case—rifles secured, gear squared away, carry handled with the same steady discipline you bring to the Texas OTF knife clipped in your pocket.