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Pinpoint Fiber-Optic Bore Light - Midnight Black

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5.99


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Straight-Shooter Fiber-Optic Bore Light - Midnight Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4660/image_1920?unique=c4d6591

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Out on a Hill Country lease or a Panhandle range, guesses cost shots. This compact fiber‑optic bore light throws a tight LED beam down the barrel so you can see carbon, copper, or grit before it costs you a group. AAA-powered with a pocket clip, it rides easy in a range bag or truck console. Snap on the fiber‑optic tip, look once, and know if that rifle’s ready. Clean, confirm, and get back on target.

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When Texas Dust Meets Your Barrel

Anyone who’s shot a morning in the Panhandle wind or an afternoon on a Hill Country lease knows what dust does to a rifle. It rides the truck in, rides the tailgate, and settles in places you can’t see. The Straight-Shooter Fiber-Optic Bore Light - Midnight Black exists for that moment when you’re not sure if the barrel is clean enough to trust the next shot.

It’s a slim, pen-style LED with a curved fiber‑optic tip that pushes light deep into the bore, past the point where a phone light or shop lamp can reach. Powered by a single AAA battery, it fits in the same pocket as a paint marker or chamber flag and lives where Texas rifles actually get cleaned—on benches, tailgates, and shooting mats laid over mesquite roots.

Why This Bore Light Belongs in a Texas Range Bag

On a busy public range outside Houston or a private berm cut into blackland clay, you don’t have time to wrestle with cables and plug‑in lights. You need to clear the chamber, lock the action open, slip a light in, and know if that fouling is just powder or stubborn copper streaking its way down the lands.

This compact bore light throws a bright, focused LED beam through its fiber‑optic tip, bending light cleanly into the bore without hot spots or dead zones. The tip geometry lets you hover just off the breech and still chase light all the way to the crown. No dangling bulbs, no flimsy wires, no odd adapters that don’t fit your rifles or shotguns.

The midnight black body disappears in a range bag next to solvents and patches, but the work it does is loud and clear. Point, click, inspect, and move on. That’s how Texans actually run guns between strings.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Still Need Honest Light on Steel

If you’re the kind of buyer searching for an OTF knife Texas shops would be proud to stock, you already care about clean, reliable mechanisms. The same mindset applies to bores. Carbon in a firing pin channel or copper baked into rifling doesn’t care how good your gear looks; it only cares how long you ignore it.

Texas OTF knife owners who carry in trucks, boots, or pockets around ranch work know dust and grit will find every moving part. That same grit follows rifles into cabs and side‑by‑sides. A compact bore light becomes part of the same daily kit: clear the action, light the bore, and make sure your rifle’s as ready as your blade.

When you go to buy OTF knife Texas side by side with your range gear, a tool like this bore light earns its place. It’s built with the same no‑nonsense mindset—simple mechanism, dependable output, and a body slim enough to disappear until you need it.

Texas Law Doesn’t Care if You Can See Your Bore—You Should

Texas knife and gun laws have loosened over the years. Switchblades and OTFs are legal to own and carry for most adults, and there’s no law about how you inspect a barrel. But anyone who spends time on ranges near Dallas, San Antonio, or out past Midland knows that safe, clear inspection matters more than whatever’s written into statute.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry, with location-based restrictions similar to firearms. That’s why you see more Texans asking about the best Texas OTF knife for daily carry. The same buyer who checks knife laws will respect a barrel enough to light it up before a hunt or match.

This bore light fits that safety-first mindset. It lets you keep your hands clear of the bore, your face behind the action, and your eyes on what matters—fouling, corrosion, or obstructions that don’t show up until you send focused light down the pipe.

How Texas Shooters Actually Use This Bore Light

Lease Camp Night Checks After a Dusty Day

Picture a folding table under a cheap LED lantern at a South Texas lease. There’s a .308 on its side, a coffee can catching dirty patches, and a cooler doubling as a seat. You’ve run solvent, jag, brush, and patch until they come out mostly clean. You don’t guess. You snap on the fiber‑optic sleeve, click the tailcap, and peer through the bore from the breech.

The LED punches through the fiber tip, revealing faint streaks of copper you’d have missed by feel alone. You give it ten more strokes with the brush, a few more patches, then check again. Now the steel looks uniform, no shadowed rings, no rough spots halfway down. That’s the difference between hoping a cold-bore shot lands and knowing you’ve done your part.

Quick Checks on a Hot Summer Firing Line

Out at a Central Texas range in August, sweat and sunscreen drip onto everything. Rifles heat fast. Between strings, you want to see if the group opening up is your hold, the mirage, or a fouled throat. Instead of breaking down your whole setup, you clear the rifle, lock the bolt back, and bring this small light over from the bench.

The pen-style body and pocket clip let it ride on your shirt or in your dope book cover. One hand on the light, one steadying the rifle, and you’re looking—really looking—at what heat and rounds have done inside the barrel. In five seconds, you know whether to keep shooting or cool and clean.

Built for the Places Texans Actually Store Gear

Range gear in this state lives hard. It bakes in truck consoles off I-35, rides dusty behind pickup seats in West Texas, and soaks up humidity in coastal garages. A bore light that needs special cases or careful handling won’t last a season.

This one is meant to be forgotten until you need it. The midnight black finish shrugs off scuffs and oil. The pocket clip keeps it from wandering in a deep range bag. A single AAA battery means replacements are in every gas station from Lubbock to Laredo. No proprietary chargers, no mystery cells that die mid-season.

Even if you came here searching for the best OTF knife Texas dealers would respect, you’ll recognize the same values in this tool: simple, durable, easy to keep running in small towns and big cities alike.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Gear

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. For most adults, OTF knives and other automatics are legal to own and carry across the state, with specific restricted locations similar to firearms—schools, certain government buildings, and secured areas. There are also age considerations for larger blades. Always check the latest Texas statutes or talk to a local dealer if you’re unsure.

Will this bore light work on the rifles and shotguns I use across Texas?

It’s built for common centerfire and rimfire rifles, as well as most shotguns you’ll see at skeet fields in Houston, deer camps in the Hill Country, or hog hunts down south. The fiber‑optic tip and attachments let you angle light into everything from a .22 plinker to a .30 caliber deer rifle, and still give useful illumination in 12‑gauge bores.

Do I really need a dedicated bore light if I already carry a flashlight?

A regular flashlight broad-beams light and falls flat past the first few inches of a barrel. This bore light bends and focuses light down the length of the bore, so you can see fouling and wear halfway to the muzzle. If you shoot often—on ranches, leases, or public ranges—you’ll see more in five seconds with this than in five minutes of trying to angle a handheld beam.

The First Time You Really Trust What You See

Picture a cold morning on a Hill Country ridge, the kind where cedar holds last night’s dew and every breath fogs your scope. You’ve cleaned the rifle in camp by lantern light. Before you chamber the first round, you clear the action, slip this bore light into place, and send that tight LED beam down the barrel.

No guessing at shadows. No wondering if one more patch was needed. Just clean steel, bright from chamber to crown, and the quiet certainty that when you settle in behind the rifle, the only variable left is you. That’s how Texans run their gear—blades, bores, and everything in between.

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