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Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Double Carbine Case - OD Green

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47.84


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Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case - OD Green

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For buyers who live at the range, this isn’t a generic gun bag. The Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case hauls two 36-inch rifles behind a padded divider, locks them down with hook-and-loop straps, and keeps mags, pistols, and tools sorted in dedicated pockets. PALS webbing lets you bolt on more kit as your loadout evolves. Backpack straps, wrap handles, and lockable double zippers make transport secure and hands-free from truck to firing line.

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CVDC2946G36

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Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case - OD Green

Some rifle cases are just padded sleeves. The Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case is a mobile range station built for shooters who actually run their carbines, not just store them. Two 36-inch rifles, mags, pistols, optics, cleaning gear – it all rides in one OD green soft case that carries like a backpack and organizes like a well-thought-out range bench.

Built for Real Range Days, Not Closet Storage

This double carbine case is designed around the reality of how you move with rifles. The main compartment takes two carbines up to 36 inches, separated by a padded divider so barrels, optics, and receivers never grind against each other in transit. Hook-and-loop retention straps lock each rifle into the spine of the case, so even if you’re climbing stairs or hopping in and out of a truck, your zero isn’t getting beaten to death by loose carry.

The secondary full-length compartment handles everything else: handguns, spare uppers, soft goods, or a compact spotting setup. Instead of dumping gear into one giant pocket, you get structure – a dedicated bay that keeps support gear flat and protected rather than bulging awkwardly against your rifles.

Organized Loadout: Why This Case Punches Above Generic Gun Bags

Walk any public line and you’ll see the difference instantly. Most soft rifle cases are an afterthought – one zipper, one pocket, a lot of wasted space. This Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry case is built to treat your gear like a system, not a pile.

Front Pouches Dialed for Carbines

The three front gear pouches are sized with carbine realities in mind. Triple mag pockets keep your primary ammo exactly where you expect it – right up front, under flap lids with quick-release buckles and adjustable webbing. Stuffing mags loose into a giant sack is how you end up fumbling your reloads before the buzzer. Here, each pocket is its own lane: mags, tools, batteries, or a small blowout kit, each with a defined home.

PALS Webbing: Your Case, Your Configuration

The PALS/MOLLE-style webbing across the front and side turns this from a fixed design into a modular platform. Add more mag shingles, a med pouch, a dump pouch, or an admin panel – whatever your discipline demands. The webbing is spaced to modern standards, so your existing pouches and modular accessories index cleanly instead of sagging or twisting.

Carry System That Respects the Weight You’re Actually Hauling

Two carbines, full mags, and support gear get heavy fast. This case doesn’t pretend otherwise. Reinforced wrap-around carry handles at the center of gravity let you grab and go when you’re just making a quick move from truck to bench. When the haul gets longer, backpack straps come into play, shifting the weight across your shoulders.

The backpack carry is more than an afterthought: adjustable shoulder straps and a sternum strap keep the case from walking off your back or grinding into one side. That matters when you’re navigating parking lots, ranges, or rough ground with both hands freed up for ammo cans and targets.

Protection and Security for Rifles That Actually Matter to You

A double carbine case lives or dies by two things: padding and closure. The internal padded divider shields rifle from rifle — so your backup carbine isn’t chewing on your primary’s optics. The outer shell uses durable tactical nylon with a matte finish that shrugs off range grit, truck beds, and concrete benches.

Lockable double zippers on the main compartment give you a basic security layer and travel-friendly peace of mind. Thread in small locks and you’ve got a clear signal that your rifles are intentionally secured, not half-zipped in a generic soft case. Double zippers also mean you control access points: open just enough to stage one rifle, or run the full length when you need everything out at once.

Why This Double Carbine Case Belongs in a Serious Shooter’s Kit

The Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case is for the shooter who runs drills with two rifles, not just owns them. Whether you’re carrying a 16-inch AR and a PCC, a suppressed setup and a slick carbine, or matching rifles for you and a training partner, this case is tuned to that use case:

  • Two 36-inch rifle capacity with dedicated padded divider
  • Hook-and-loop retention straps to stabilize each carbine
  • Full-length secondary compartment for pistols, uppers, or soft gear
  • Three external gear pouches sized for mags and tools
  • PALS/MOLLE webbing for modular expansion
  • Lockable double zippers for the main compartment
  • Reinforced wrap handles plus backpack straps with sternum strap
  • OD green tactical nylon that looks field-ready and wears hard

If your idea of a range day is one rifle and a cardboard box of loose gear, this is overkill. If your idea of a range day is structured runs, timed drills, and a loadout that supports that, this is the right level of serious.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (true autos that open with a button, switch, or similar mechanism in the handle) are regulated primarily by the Federal Switchblade Act. That act limits interstate commerce but does not outright ban ownership. Legality is decided at the state – and sometimes local – level. Some states allow automatic knives for most adults, others restrict blade length, assisted opening, or carry method, and a handful still heavily limit or ban autos entirely. Before you buy or carry an automatic knife, check your specific state and local laws, including any distinctions between possession at home, vehicle transport, and concealed/open carry.

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

“Automatic knife” is the broad mechanical category: a knife where the blade is deployed by a button, switch, or similar control that releases stored spring energy. A “switchblade” is the traditional legal and cultural term used in many statutes for these same automatic mechanisms. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle, either as a single-action (auto out, manual in) or double-action (auto out and auto retract) design. Side-opening automatics swing the blade out from the side like a conventional folder, but the action is powered by a spring once you hit the release. All OTFs are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTFs.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you evaluate an automatic knife, you’re really judging three things: the consistency of the action, the steel and heat treat, and how the lockup feels when it’s fully deployed. A good auto snaps to attention the same way every time without feeling gritty or under-sprung, and it should lock up with minimal blade play. Steel choice and heat treat determine whether that edge holds up through real cutting, not just envelope duty. Details like pivot construction, spring channel machining, and button geometry separate a serious automatic from a flashy novelty piece. Buy the knife where those details have obviously been thought through.

Gear That Matches Your Mindset

If you’re the kind of buyer who cares enough to learn the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a generic switchblade, you already understand why a purpose-built double carbine case matters. The Ranger Loadout Twin-Carry Tactical Carbine Case is the rifle equivalent of a well-engineered automatic knife: tuned mechanism, smart layout, and no wasted motion. It’s built for shooters who treat their setup like a system and expect every piece of kit to earn its place.

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