Skip to Content
Signal Lifeline Survival Paracord - Cardinal Red Camo

Price:

4.02


CIA Lockaid Tool
CIA Lockaid Tool
41.22 41.22
50' x 13/64" 14 strand Paracord - Pull Strength 1100 LBS - Black
50' x 13/64" 14 strand Paracord - Pull Strength 1100 LBS - Black
4.50 4.50

Cardinal Signal Survivor Paracord Coil - Red Camo

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/9189/image_1920?unique=1b76e1e

12 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles buyers run real gear, not gimmicks, and this Cardinal Signal Survivor Paracord Coil fits right in. You’re looking at 100 feet of true 550 paracord, 7-strand core, in a high-visibility cardinal red camo that won’t disappear in Texas brush or on a night haul. Rated to 550 lbs with a 220 lb working load, it’s ready for ranch rigs, range bags, or a go-kit that actually earns its keep in Texas conditions.

4.02 4.02 USD 4.02

PC154RBWM55

Not Available For Sale

10 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

Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers Run Real Gear

Texas brass knuckles buyers know their law, their tools, and their limits. Since 2019, brass knuckles have been fully legal in Texas, and that same no-nonsense mindset carries over to everything else in your kit. If it rides in your truck, pack, or range bag, it earns the space. This 100' Cardinal Signal Survivor Paracord Coil in red camo is built for that Texas standard: strong, visible, and honest about what it can hold.

How This Paracord Fits a Texas Brass Knuckles Kit

Collectors who care about Texas brass knuckles usually care about the rest of their gear too. When brass knuckles became legal in Texas, it didn’t just open up a new market—it sharpened the whole conversation around Texas-ready equipment. Strength ratings suddenly mattered. Materials mattered. Real-world carry and use in Texas weather mattered. This 550 paracord answers that with a straightforward spec sheet: 7-strand construction, 5/32" thickness, 100-foot length, 220 lb working load, and a 550 lb breaking strength.

In other words, it does exactly what you need cord to do in Texas—secure, haul, lash, rig, and back you up when something heavier than it should be starts to shift.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture, Texas-Grade Cordage

When people search for Texas brass knuckles, they’re not looking for costume pieces. They’re looking for tools with weight, presence, and purpose. The same mentality applies to this paracord. The Survivor Series branding isn’t decoration; it reflects a build that can hold up to Texas use—hot trucks, dusty barns, weekend field work, range days, and storm-season prep.

The cardinal red camo pattern does two things for a Texas buyer. First, it gives you fast visual pickup in mesquite, red dirt, or caliche. Drop it, you’ll still see it. Second, it keeps a tactical thread with the black tracers running the length of the cord, so it doesn’t look like craft-store cord—it looks like it belongs next to your Texas brass knuckles, blades, and other field tools.

Material and Build: What Texas Collectors Care About

Texas buyers don’t take manufacturer numbers on faith. You want construction details that justify the claim. This 100' x 5/32" 7-strand paracord is built on the standard that made 550 cord the benchmark:

  • 7-Strand Core: Multiple internal strands you can strip for finer cordage when you’re fixing gear, improvising tie-downs, or doing detailed work.
  • 5/32" Thickness: That familiar paracord diameter—thick enough to grip, thin enough to knot tight and clean.
  • 220 lb Working Load: Honest working number; you can rely on it for tie-downs, gear security, and camp or ranch tasks without babying it.
  • 550 lb Breaking Strength: True 550 rating, not “about 550.” When it says 550, it means it.
  • Smooth Woven Nylon Sheath: Resistant to abrasion, knots reliably, runs clean through gloved fingers, and doesn’t fuzz out after one hard weekend.

For a Texas collector who already knows brass knuckles are legal here, these details are the same kind of proof you look for in steel type, finish, and machining. This cord earns its place the same way—by the numbers and by feel.

Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Carry, Texas Cord

Once Texas brass knuckles law changed in 2019, carry culture shifted. What you keep on you and in your vehicle started to look more like a complete Texas kit: legal defensive tools, blades, lights, and cordage that can actually do work. This Survivor Series paracord coil slots into that setup without any drama.

Carry Context for Texas Kits

Texas doesn’t regulate paracord. You can keep this 550 cord anywhere—toss it in the console, hang it in the garage, stash it in a go-bag behind your Texas brass knuckles and other legal gear. It’s the quiet piece you forget until you need to cinch something down, pull something up, or lash something together before it shifts in the bed of the truck.

The cardinal red camo pattern also plays well at night or in low light. When you’re working around a trailer, blind, or camp after dark, you want cord you can see in your headlamp so you don’t walk through it. That’s the practical side of this colorway—high-visibility without looking like safety tape.

Why Texas Buyers Choose High-Visibility Red

Texans who buy Texas brass knuckles are already thinking in practical terms: control, grip, and presence. High-visibility cord follows that same logic. Cardinal red camo is easy to track across a cluttered tailgate, in a dark barn, or in a packed range bag. When a windstorm knocks something loose, you don’t want to hunt for your line. You want to see it right away and get to work.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been legal in Texas since September 1, 2019, when changes to Texas Penal Code 46.01 and related sections removed them from the prohibited weapons list. For a Texas buyer, that means owning, collecting, and buying brass knuckles in Texas is lawful under current state law. That’s settled here, and this site speaks to that Texas legal reality directly.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, a Texas resident can lawfully possess and carry brass knuckles, subject to the same general rules that apply to other weapons and self-defense tools. Public vs. private settings, posted locations, and common-sense behavior still matter, but as far as state statute goes, brass knuckles are no longer treated as contraband. Texans who carry build out full kits—brass knuckles, blades, lights, and supporting gear like this 550 paracord—within that legal framework.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles to buy in Texas are the ones that match how you actually live and carry: solid build, proven materials, and a finish that stands up to Texas heat and humidity. Texas brass knuckles buyers look for machining quality, weight, grip, and honest descriptions—not gas station mystery metal. The same logic applies to everything in the kit: real 550 paracord instead of bargain-bin cord, real steel instead of pot metal, and sellers who know Texas law, not California disclaimers.

Why This 550 Paracord Belongs in a Texas Collection

A serious Texas brass knuckles collection rarely stops at one item. It grows into a Texas-ready layout—defensive tools, field tools, and the support gear that ties it all together. This Cardinal Signal Survivor Paracord Coil belongs in that mix for three reasons: it’s honest about its strength, it’s visibly easy to find when you need it, and it’s built with the same no-nonsense attitude that defines Texas brass knuckles culture.

For a Texas buyer, there’s no mystery here. You know brass knuckles are legal in Texas. You know 550 paracord is a baseline survival and utility tool. Put them together and you’ve got a kit that reflects what it means to be a Texas collector: informed, lawful, and equipped with gear that doesn’t flinch when it’s time to work. That’s the standard this red camo Survivor Series 550 cord meets, and that’s why it earns a place next to your Texas brass knuckles.

No Specifications