Skip to Content
Urban Loadout Compact Tactical Range Bag - Urban Gray

Price:

32.99


Compact Duty Organizer Range Bag - Tactical Green
Compact Duty Organizer Range Bag - Tactical Green
32.99 32.99
Operator-Grade Expert Armor Plate Carrier Vest - Black
Operator-Grade Expert Armor Plate Carrier Vest - Black
77.99 77.99

Urban Loadout Compact Range Bag - Urban Gray

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9054/image_1920?unique=a6b3ae7

5 sold in last 24 hours

You pull up to the bays with dust still on the tires and one bag in hand. This compact range bag keeps ammo, eyes, ears, and tools squared away without swallowing the whole backseat. Lockable zippers, MOLLE webbing, and a dedicated bottle pouch mean the essentials stay organized from Hill Country gravel pits to covered concrete lanes. For Texans who like their range gear tight, simple, and ready to roll.

32.99 32.99 USD 32.99

CVSRB2985U

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

When a Small Range Bag Earns Its Spot in the Truck

The folks who shoot in this state don’t baby their gear. They drag it out of the truck bed at Hill Country pits, across mesquite roots on lease land, and down hot concrete lanes outside Houston. A compact range bag that survives that routine has to be built right, not just look tactical. This Small Range Bag in urban gray earns its keep by carrying what you actually need, nothing you don’t, and riding low and quiet in the cab.

At about a foot long with a 12 x 5 x 7 main compartment, it’s sized for Texas reality: a couple hundred rounds, eyes, ears, a small cleaning kit, and a few tools. It’s not a rolling armory. It’s the bag that stays by the door or in the truck, ready for a quick run to the indoor lanes in Dallas or an afternoon working steel outside San Antonio.

Why This Compact Range Bag Works for Texas Carry Culture

On a weekday, a full-size range rig can feel like overkill. This compact range bag lets you roll light. The top opens wide with a large, zippered lid, so when you drop it on the bench in a crowded Austin indoor range, you’re not digging blind. Two mesh pockets keep ear pro and wipes visible, while three additional pockets hold eye protection, targets, or a small logbook. An elastic band along the interior wall keeps pens, bore brushes, or small tools from rattling to the bottom.

Outside, the layout fits the way Texans actually move. Heavy-duty carry handles let you grab it one-handed as you step out of the truck. The fully adjustable padded shoulder strap with spring-loaded hooks rides comfortably from the parking lot to the far bay, even if you’re hauling an extra ammo can in the other hand. Urban gray stays low-profile in a crowded lot, blending in beside gym bags and work gear instead of broadcasting what’s inside.

Texas Range Bag Setup: Built Around Real Use, Not Hype

Open this compact range bag on a bench at a wind-swept West Texas pit and you’ll feel the thought in the layout. Four slotted exterior pockets along the side are sized for what actually lives at the range: a small flashlight for checking chambers at dusk, a folding knife, pens for scoring cardboard, and a compact multi-tool. You don’t have to empty the main compartment just to find them.

On one end, a zippered compartment is perfect for muffs or a pair of in-ear plugs, keeping them from getting crushed under ammo boxes. The other end carries a dedicated water bottle pouch that will swallow up to a 32-ounce bottle. That matters more than it sounds when you’re on a shaded but still brutal line outside San Antonio in August and you’re not leaving the bay every fifteen minutes to hit the cooler.

The exterior PALs webbing takes MOLLE pouches cleanly, so a Texas shooter who wants to add pistol mag shingles or a small blowout kit can build the bag out to match their routine. A soft loop patch area on the front lets you tag it with a name tape, unit patch, or simple morale patch so it’s easy to pick out on a crowded club table.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and Their Range Gear: Same Mindset, Same Demands

The kind of Texan who studies whether an OTF knife Texas carry is worth it is the same person who won’t tolerate sloppy range organization. They want clean deployment from their blade and the same from their gear. This compact range bag’s heavy-duty metal zippers run smooth and accept a small padlock through the loops, so the main compartment can be secured when you stop for lunch on the way back from a central Texas outdoor range.

Compact gear is a theme across Texas carry culture. A shooter might keep an OTF in the front pocket and this small range bag on the backseat. Both are chosen because they disappear until needed, then perform without fuss. The urban gray color keeps the bag from drawing attention in a truck cab parked in a crowded Houston lot, much like a muted handle keeps a knife from flashing on a beltline.

Texas Range Reality and Gear Law: How This Bag Fits In

Texas firearm and knife laws have loosened over the years, but responsible carry hasn’t. Folks who ask “are OTF knives legal in Texas” are usually the same ones who don’t leave loose rounds and stray tools rolling around the truck. This bag gives that kind of buyer a way to keep ammunition, ear pro, and support gear properly contained, with the option to lock the main compartment when common sense or policy calls for it.

At clubs around Dallas–Fort Worth or member ranges near Houston, you’ll see this size of bag at the feet of shooters on league nights. Big enough to haul pistol mags, ammo, and PPE; small enough to slide under a lane table or sit on a tailgate without dominating the space. It aligns with the Texas habit of staying squared away but not overpacked.

Setting Up for a Central Texas Match Day

Loading this compact range bag the night before a match outside Temple is simple. Main compartment: two pistol boxes, ammo, small cleaning kit. Mesh pocket: lens cloth and spare ear tips. Interior pockets: timer, small notepad, spare battery pack. Exterior slotted pockets: flashlight, knife, pens, and a chamber flag. Hearing protection rides in the zippered end compartment; a 32-ounce bottle snaps into its pouch, bungee snugged down so it doesn’t bounce off on a rutted ranch road.

From Lease Land to Covered Lanes

One weekend you’re parked at a South Texas lease, laid out on a tailgate with this bag open between rifles. The next, it’s on clean concrete under fluorescent lights in an air-conditioned indoor range in Plano. The synthetic fabric shrugs off dust and mud outside and doesn’t look out of place inside. Wipe it down, swap out the gear you don’t need, and it’s ready for weeknight pistol drills.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Range Bags and OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas removed its ban on switchblades and OTF knives in 2013. Today, an OTF knife is generally legal to own and carry in Texas, with length and location rules falling under the broader "location-restricted knife" laws. Most adults can carry a typical OTF knife in everyday settings, but places like schools, certain government buildings, and similar restricted locations still apply. Texans who care about staying on the right side of the law often pair a legal OTF with disciplined, organized range gear — including a secure, lockable range bag like this one.

Will this compact range bag hold enough gear for a full Texas range session?

For most Texas pistol and carbine trips, yes. The 12 x 5 x 7 main compartment fits ammo, eyes, ears, and basic tools. The extra pockets handle lights, pens, and hearing protection, while the water bottle pouch keeps you from baking dry on a summer line. If you’re hauling multiple rifles, this works best as your support bag alongside a separate rifle case or can.

Is this small range bag a good choice if I already carry an OTF knife in Texas?

If you already think through your daily carry, this bag fits that mindset. It’s compact, deliberate, and low-profile, just like a well-chosen Texas OTF knife. It doesn’t shout on the passenger seat, but when you pop the trunk at a Hill Country pit or step onto covered bays near Houston, everything you need is right where you put it — no digging, no drama.

First Day Out: A Texas Scene This Bag Was Built For

Picture rolling through a caliche lot outside a Central Texas range, white dust hanging behind the truck in the heat. You kill the engine, grab your earmuffs and this small urban gray range bag from the seat, and step out into the sun. Ten minutes later, it’s on a pitted wooden bench at the fifty-yard line, zippers open, ammo staged, eye and ear pro right where you reach for it. No wasted motion, no fumbling for gear. Just you, your rifles, maybe an OTF clipped in your pocket, and a compact range bag that works as hard as the land you’re shooting on.

No Specifications