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Ranger Loadout Double Carbine Rifle Case - Tan

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91.99


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Rangeline Double Ready Rifle Case - Tan 42 Inch

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8599/image_1920?unique=546ff81

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Outside San Angelo, the road to the lease is all washboard and caliche. The Rangeline Double Ready Rifle Case keeps two carbines padded, strapped, and quiet in the back seat. Heavy-duty PVC, full-length padding, and a center divider protect rifles up to 35 inches. Three front pockets swallow mags and ammo, while backpack straps free your hands for gates and gear. This is how Texans haul their rifles: organized, ready, and built for bad roads.

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CVDC2946T42

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Range Roads, Two Carbines, One Dependable Case

Headed west out of Kerrville before sunrise, the highway turns to chip seal, then to a chalky ranch road. In the back seat, the Rangeline Double Ready Rifle Case rides steady, two carbines strapped down inside, magazines sorted up front, nothing banging around when the ruts get deep.

This soft rifle case was built for that kind of Texas use. Not for the closet, but for the truck, the lease, the range on the edge of town where the wind never stops. It holds two carbine-length rifles, keeps them padded and separated, and carries like a pack when you've still got a cooler, a target stand, and someone's forgotten range bag to haul.

Why This Texas Rifle Case Earns Its Place

Inside the main compartment, two carbines up to about 35 inches in overall length ride muzzle to stock against thick padding, split by a padded center divider so optics don't clash and stocks don't chew on each other. Four hook-and-loop straps lock each rifle in place, so when you hit a cattle guard outside Laredo, nothing shifts, nothing slams.

The heavy-duty PVC shell isn't pretty, it's useful. It shrugs off dust in Amarillo wind, wet grass in East Texas, and the kind of mud you get near the coast when a storm blows in off the bay. The matte tan color disappears against truck seats and hunting blinds, and doesn't turn into a heat sink when you leave it in the bed for a few minutes in August.

Texas OTF Knife Owners Still Need a Solid Rifle Case

The kind of buyer who searches for an OTF knife in Texas usually isn't running just one tool. There's a carbine behind the seat, maybe another one set up different for hogs, and a truck that sees more caliche roads than city parking garages. This double rifle case fits that world.

While an OTF knife rides in your pocket or console waiting on fence wire, feed bags, or whatever else the day throws at you, this case handles the heavier end of your loadout. It doesn't compete with your Texas OTF knife; it completes the way you move with your guns, gear, and spare ammo from house to truck, truck to range, range back home.

Organized For Real Texas Range Days

Open the secondary compartment and it feels like the tailgate of a seasoned shooter's truck in Abilene—everything has a place. Pockets for a handgun, extra optics, a bore snake, cleaning oil, a log book where you actually track your dope instead of trusting your memory after a 12-hour shift.

Along the front, three large exterior pockets swallow AR mags, loose .223 or 5.56 in boxes, ear pro, and gloves you've already stained with CLP. Each pocket closes with heavy-duty zippers and side-release buckles, so when a gust kicks up at the range outside Midland, your gear stays put instead of spilling across the gravel.

Extra PALS webbing on the ends lets you strap on what matters to you. Maybe it's a blowout kit for a West Texas hog hunt, maybe it's a dump pouch or an extra utility pocket that also sees duty on your plate carrier. The case doesn't tell you how to run your setup; it just gives you the grid to build it.

Carrying This Case Across Texas Ground

Not every range in Texas has a clean concrete walkway. Some are a quarter mile from the parking area, out past mesquite and prickly pear. That's why this case wears two adjustable shoulder straps and an adjustable sternum strap, so it carries like a backpack when your hands are full of targets, stands, and the cooler somebody swore they'd bring lighter this time.

When the walk is short—from garage to truck, from truck to a covered bay in Dallas or San Antonio—the wrap-around carry handle does the job. Those straps run underneath the body of the case, not just tacked on at the ends, so the weight of two carbines and a dozen loaded mags doesn't scare the stitching.

Top and bottom compression straps cinch everything tight. On a washboard lease road near Junction, that matters. Tight gear doesn't wear on zippers, doesn't grind optics against padding, and doesn't turn your truck bed into a rattletrap chorus.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers, Texas Gun Owners, Same Law Book

How This Rifle Case Fits Texas Carry and Transport

Texas gun owners who care enough to read up on whether OTF knives and switchblades are legal also care how they move rifles. This soft case doesn't claim to solve legal questions for you, but it does make it easy to keep firearms cased, covered, and under control from house to vehicle to range.

Heavy-duty zippers with pull cords work clean with gloves on—a winter morning at the range in the Panhandle doesn't feel like Tucson. The zippers keep honest eyes out of your rifle setup, and keep dust from crawling into every crevice when a blue norther blows grit across the parking lot.

Built for the Same Harsh Ground Your Knives See

The same buyer who wants to know the best OTF knife in Texas for one-handed use also expects a rifle case to hold up to the same country. Heavy-duty PVC doesn't mind being dragged across a tailgate, set down in goat heads, or leaned against a barn wall that remembers a dozen paint jobs.

Reinforced stitching at the handles and stress points means this isn't a once-a-year deer season bag. It's a weekly range case, a loaner for your buddy who's always "just getting into ARs," a steady companion for anyone running drills under a Hill Country sun.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Gear

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old ban on switchblades was removed years ago. What still matters is blade length and location. Long blades can be restricted in certain places—schools, courthouses, some posted businesses—so it's worth checking local rules and staying aware of where you're walking with any large knife or rifle case.

Will this double rifle case handle Texas truck and lease abuse?

It was built for it. Two carbines up to roughly 35 inches ride inside a padded main compartment with a thick center divider and four hook-and-loop straps to keep each rifle from shifting. Heavy-duty PVC, compression straps, and wrapped carry handles all earn their keep when the case lives in the back of a half-ton, not just the corner of a climate-controlled closet in Austin.

How do I decide between a smaller single case and this double?

Ask how you actually shoot in this state. If you're just running one rifle at an indoor lane in Houston, a slim single may work. But if your weekends look like a carbine plus a backup, a dedicated hog gun alongside a lighter 5.56, or you share rifles with a son or buddy on the same lease, a double like this keeps gear together. One grab from the mudroom, one case out of the truck, and your whole setup hits the bench at once.

First Use: A Familiar Texas Morning

Picture the first run with this case. It's early, air cool enough near Waco that you breathe steam when you talk. You swing the tailgate down, slide the tan case toward you, feel the give of padding instead of hard plastic against the metal. Zippers pull smooth, no snag, even with cold fingers. Two carbines lie where you left them after cleaning the night before—strapped, separated, optics untouched.

You shrug into the backpack straps for the walk out. Targets under one arm, staple gun in a pocket, OTF knife clipped where you always keep it. The ground is uneven, a mix of dirt, rock, and patches of winter grass. Nothing shifts on your back. By the time you reach the bench, the case has done its job: rifles protected, magazines sorted, everything carried in one quiet, tan bundle. That's how good gear fits Texas—no drama, just ready.

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