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Stealth Range Lockable 36-Inch Carbine Gun Case - Desert Tan

Price:

15.80


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Stealth Range Discreet Carbine Gun Case - Desert Tan

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This isn’t a guitar case cosplay, it’s a purpose-built 36-inch carbine gun case for shooters who like to move quiet. The flat, rectangular profile in desert tan doesn’t scream “rifle,” but the interior is all business. Four exterior mag pouches keep reloads immediate, while lockable metal zippers add real-world security. Padded carry handle and adjustable sling make parking-lot to firing-line carry painless. PVC construction shrugs off water and chemicals, so you can toss it in the truck, hit the range, and not baby your gear.

15.80 15.8 USD 15.80

CVCP2960T36

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Stealth Range Discreet Carbine Gun Case - Built for Real Range Days

Serious shooters know the truth: the right gun case changes how you move through the world. The Stealth Range Discreet Carbine Gun Case - Desert Tan is purpose-built for 36-inch carbines and AR-platform rifles, with a profile that keeps your gear quiet and your day simple. No tactical peacocking, no gimmicks — just a solid, lockable carbine case that does its job every single time.

Why This 36-Inch Carbine Gun Case Belongs in Your Range Kit

This case is designed around the realities of hauling a rifle: parking lots, truck beds, range benches, doorways, and stairs. The rectangular footprint is intentional. It rides flat, stacks cleanly, and doesn’t telegraph your loadout to everyone within 50 yards. The 36-inch length is the sweet spot for most carbines and short-barreled setups, giving enough room without the floppy, oversized bulk of a generic long gun bag.

Desert tan PVC keeps the look subdued and practical. It doesn’t glow under streetlights, doesn’t scream "look at me," and it handles dirt, dust, and oil without looking trashed after a few outings.

Lockable Carbine Gun Case Features That Actually Matter

Lockable Metal Zippers for Real-World Security

Plastic zippers on a gun case are a joke. This carbine case uses metal zippers with lockable pullers so you can secure both main compartments with a small padlock. No, it doesn’t turn the case into a full-blown safe — that’s not the point. What you get is practical, range-day security: kids can’t casually unzip it, prying hands in shared spaces can’t "just look inside," and you’ve got a layer of deterrence when the case is out of your direct control.

Four Quick-Access Magazine Pouches

The four exterior mag pouches are built for efficiency. Each pocket gives you fast access to loaded magazines without digging through the main compartment. On a real range day, that means cleaner drills, faster reloads, and less time unpacking and repacking between strings. The pouches keep your mags oriented and contained, so they’re not rattling around against your rifle or optics.

Carrying Comfort: Padded Handle and Adjustable Sling

Anyone who’s dragged a poorly designed gun case across a big parking lot knows where the corners get cheap. Here, you get a padded carry handle that doesn’t cut into your hand when the rifle is fully loaded with glass and a loaded mag inside. The adjustable shoulder sling lets you shift the weight off your hands entirely, freeing you up to carry ammo cans, targets, or a second case without awkward juggling.

Material and Build: PVC That Doesn’t Baby Out

The case is built from water- and chemical-resistant PVC, which is exactly what you want in a hard-use soft case. PVC doesn’t care if the truck bed was wet, if you dropped it in a puddle, or if some CLP leaked out of a bottle inside. Wipe it down, move on. That means you’re not treating this like some fragile showpiece — it’s gear, meant to be used hard and often.

Internal padding gives your carbine enough protection from the real bumps and knocks of transport. This isn’t a hard case meant for airline baggage tossers; it’s a solid range and truck companion that absorbs the usual abuse: doorframes, tailgates, concrete benches, and the occasional low wall.

Designed for Discreet Carry, Not Drama

There’s a time for MOLLE-covered, patch-laden, look-at-me tactical cases. This isn’t that. The Stealth Range Discreet Carbine Gun Case is about low profile. The flat silhouette and desert tan color keep it visually boring in the best possible way. Slide it into a truck, carry it through an apartment complex, or walk it across a busy lot — it reads as "bag," not "statement."

That discretion matters. You get to decide who knows you’re hauling a carbine, instead of the case announcing it for you.

Internal Fit: 36-Inch Carbine Sweet Spot

This gun case is dialed for 36-inch carbines and similar-length rifles. That covers a huge chunk of AR-15 builds with 16-inch barrels and adjustable stocks, pistol-caliber carbines, and many compact tactical configurations. The benefit is control: the rifle doesn’t swim inside the bag, and you’re not wrestling extra fabric and padding at both ends.

Shorter builds still ride well without feeling lost, and you’re not locked into a single platform — it’s flexible, but not sloppy.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (often called switchblades in a legal context) are regulated primarily by the Federal Switchblade Act. It restricts interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives, with exceptions for military, law enforcement, and certain uses. Actual carry and ownership, though, are governed by state and sometimes local laws. Some states allow automatic knife carry with few restrictions, some allow possession but limit carry (for example, blade length or concealed versus open carry), and a few still heavily restrict or ban them. Before you buy an automatic knife or OTF, you need to check your specific state and local regulations — what’s perfectly legal EDC in one state can be a problem across a border.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where the blade is deployed by a button, switch, or similar device and powered open by an internal spring — you’re not manually swinging the blade open; you’re triggering a mechanism. A side-opening automatic knife pivots the blade out of the handle like a traditional folder, just spring-driven.

An OTF (out-the-front) automatic is a subtype where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Many enthusiast OTFs are double-action: the same sliding control both deploys and retracts the blade using spring tension and track systems. Others are single-action: a button or switch fires the blade, but retraction is manual.

"Switchblade" is largely a legal and cultural term — in U.S. law it usually refers to automatic knives in general. Among enthusiasts, people tend to use "automatic knife" or specify "OTF" or "side-opening auto" when they care about the exact mechanism.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

When you’re looking at an automatic knife for sale, the difference between a throwaway novelty and a keeper is in the action and materials. A well-tuned automatic fires the same way every time: consistent spring tension, clean lockup, no gritty hesitation mid-stroke. Blade steel matters because autos invite hard use; better steel means better edge retention and less chipping when you actually cut with it instead of just playing with the deployment.

In a serious automatic, you’re buying repeatable mechanics: tight tolerances on the pivot or OTF track, solid lock geometry, and hardware that doesn’t loosen and rattle after a few weeks of carry. That reliability — the knife doing the exact same thing on the thousandth deployment as it did on the first — is what makes a particular automatic knife worth owning.

Who This Carbine Gun Case Is Really For

If your idea of a good range day is efficient, organized shooting — not wrestling with gear or broadcasting what you’re carrying — this carbine gun case fits your kit. It’s for the shooter who wants a discreet profile, functional mag storage, and lockable zippers without paying for theatrics. It’s the equivalent of choosing a reliable automatic knife with a clean, consistent action instead of a flashy toy: you buy it because it works, again and again.

Pack your carbine, zip it, lock it, and roll out. The Stealth Range Discreet Carbine Gun Case - Desert Tan keeps your focus on the shooting, not the transport.

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