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Deployed Loadout Double Carbine Case - Tan

Price:

54.63


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Range-Ready Minimalist Rifle Case - Tan
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Field-Ready Double Loadout Carbine Case - Tan

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This isn’t a casual rifle sleeve. The Field-Ready Double Loadout Carbine Case - Tan is a purpose-built soft rifle case engineered to transport two 45" carbines plus the rest of your range kit in one organized load. Fully padded with closed-cell foam, lockable zippers, MOLLE on both sides, and three true utility pouches up front, it carries like a backpack and rides like real gear. If you plan your range day like a mission, this is the case that keeps up.

54.63 54.63 USD 54.63

CVDC2946T46

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Field-Ready Double Loadout Carbine Case - Tan: Built for Real Range Work

Serious rifles deserve better than a floppy sleeve. The Field-Ready Double Loadout Carbine Case - Tan is a purpose-built soft rifle case designed to move two carbines and a full day’s worth of shooting gear without drama, rattles, or compromise. This isn’t boutique luggage — it’s the functional, tactical equivalent of a well-sorted kit bag: everything has a place, and everything stays put.

Why This Case, Not Another "Tactical" Rifle Bag

Most soft cases are either overbuilt decoration or underbuilt compromise. This double carbine case sits in the sweet spot for shooters who actually haul rifles to the range, classes, or field: heavy duty PVC shell, closed-cell foam padding on all sides, and a layout that’s clearly designed by someone who’s actually packed a rifle, not just drawn one.

The main compartment is fully padded with thick closed-cell foam — the kind that absorbs impact without collapsing — so two carbines up to 45" ride protected, not just wrapped in fabric. Diagonal pockets at the stock and muzzle ends index each rifle, while dual hook-and-loop retention straps per gun keep things locked down. That means when you open the case at the truck or the bench, both carbines are exactly where you left them.

Double Carbine Case Mechanics: How the Layout Actually Works

The mechanics of this soft rifle case are about control: controlling movement, weight, and access.

Main Compartment: Two Carbines, Zero Guesswork

The main rifle bay is fully padded on all sides, not just the faces. Closed-cell foam resists compression over time, which matters when you’re carrying optics, lights, or IR lasers that don’t tolerate impact. Each carbine drops into opposing diagonal pockets that cradle stock and muzzle, then locks in with two hook-and-loop straps. The positioning keeps rifles from binding against each other and minimizes hard contact on glass or turrets when the case is laid flat or stood on end.

Heavy duty zippers with metal pulls trace the perimeter, and they’re lockable with a small padlock. That doesn’t magically make it a safe, but it does give you basic security during transport and a buffer against casual hands at home or in a shared vehicle.

Secondary Compartment: The Organized Gear Shelf

The secondary compartment is where this case separates itself from the pile of generic gun bags. Two zippered compartments and two padded hook-and-loop pockets create a structured space for the gear that usually ends up floating loose: pistols, optics, spare red dots, cleaning gear, log books, tools, even a handheld chrono. Padded sections isolate sensitive items; zippered zones handle the dirty and oily stuff.

Instead of a single cavernous pocket that turns into a cord-and-magazine tangle, you get deliberate organization — the difference between showing up at the line ready to shoot and losing ten minutes digging for ear pro and a lens pen.

Exterior Loadout: Three Pouches, MOLLE, and Compression Straps

On the outside, this double carbine case shows its intent: three front utility pouches, MOLLE webbing on both sides of the secondary compartment, and compression straps to cinch the entire load tight.

Front Utility Pouches: Real Working Storage

Each of the three front pockets is sized for actual range gear: hearing and eye protection, magazines, loaders, gloves, a small trauma kit, or boxes of ammo. Flaps close with hook-and-loop plus quick-connect buckles, so you get both speed and security. Adjustable bungee cords on each pouch let you tailor retention and tension to the size of what you’re carrying, tightening down over smaller items or giving room for bulkier gear.

MOLLE Webbing and Compression Control

Horizontal MOLLE rows run along both exterior sides of the secondary compartment, turning this soft rifle case into a modular platform. If you want an IFAK, admin pouch, or extra mag shingles on the outside, you’re not taping or tying anything — it mounts properly to the webbing grid. Two top and two bottom compression straps with quick-connect buckles wrap the case and let you pull the entire load tight, preventing internal shift when you’re carrying it backpack-style or tossing it into a truck bed.

A 3.5" x 2" hook-and-loop ID panel sits on the center pouch flap. That’s your real estate for name tapes, unit IDs, blood type, or the kind of moral patch that makes it easy to pick out your case on a crowded range line.

Carry System: From Trunk to Range Without Fighting Your Gear

This isn’t just a hand-carry rifle bag. The carry system is built for those days when you’re hauling more than just a single carbine and a half-empty mag.

Heavy duty wrap-around carry handles at the center give you a solid, balanced grab for quick moves from vehicle to bench. For longer hauls, wide padded backpack straps spread the weight across your shoulders. They’re fully adjustable, with a sternum strap and metal D-rings for additional attachment points. If you’ve ever tried to juggle a rifle case, ammo can, and target stand all at once, you’ll appreciate being able to throw the case on your back and keep your hands free.

Where This Double Carbine Case Fits in a Serious Shooter’s Loadout

This soft rifle case is ideal for:

  • Transporting two carbines to the range, class, or lease with proper padding
  • Keeping rifles, pistols, and support gear in a single grab-and-go package
  • Users running optics, lights, and attachments who need real foam protection
  • Shooters who prefer MOLLE-compatible, modular gear over fixed pockets only

The 46" overall length and 45" carbine capacity hit the practical sweet spot: long enough for most AR-pattern rifles, patrol carbines, and many precision-focused builds with standard stocks, without drifting into unwieldy drag-bag territory.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Even though this product is a double carbine case, a lot of our customers also buy automatic knives and ask the same core questions every time. If you’re building out a serious kit, rifle cases and autos usually end up in the same cart, so it’s worth answering them clearly.

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (often called autos) are regulated primarily under the Federal Switchblade Act. That law restricts interstate commerce and shipment of automatic knives, but it does not by itself ban simple possession for most civilians. The real authority is at the state and sometimes local level. Some states allow automatic knives with few or no restrictions, others limit blade length, carry method, or who may possess them (for example, law enforcement or active-duty military exemptions), and a handful still prohibit them outright. Before you buy or carry an automatic knife, check your specific state and local laws, and remember that what’s legal to own is not always legal to carry concealed or across state lines.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

“Automatic knife” is the broad mechanical category: a knife that opens by pressing a button, switch, or lever, with a spring or stored energy driving the blade to full lockup. A side-opening automatic swings the blade out from the side, like a conventional folder that’s spring-driven instead of wrist-driven. An OTF (out-the-front) automatic is a specific type of automatic where the blade deploys linearly out the front of the handle; many are double-action, meaning the same control deploys and retracts the blade. “Switchblade” is the older legal and cultural term used in many statutes for what enthusiasts now call automatic knives. In enthusiast circles, we use “automatic” and then specify side-opening or OTF to be mechanically precise.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you’re evaluating an automatic knife, don’t stop at looks. The action should fire decisively with no hesitation, lockup should be positive with minimal blade play, and the pivot and spring geometry should feel tuned rather than simply strong. Blade steel matters — not in marketing terms, but in heat treat and grind that match the steel’s capabilities. A well-executed automatic will have predictable deployment, solid ergonomics under recoil from the spring, and hardware that can handle repeated cycling without loosening. In the same way this double carbine case earns its keep through real padding, organized compartments, and a carry system that actually works, a worthwhile automatic knife proves itself every time you hit the button and the blade snaps into place the way it should.

For Buyers Who Treat Their Gear Like a System

If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how a double-action automatic tracks on deployment, you’re the same kind of buyer who won’t tolerate a sloppy rifle case. The Field-Ready Double Loadout Carbine Case - Tan is built for that mindset: serious, organized, and unapologetically practical. It’s the soft rifle case you grab when you want two carbines, supporting gear, and the confidence that everything will arrive exactly as you packed it.

Pair it with the right automatic knife for sale, build out your kit with intention, and you end up with a loadout that works as hard as you do.

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