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Coyote Ridge Field-Dress Hunting Knife - Rubber Brown

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Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife - Rubber Grip

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/9315/image_1920?unique=94713f5

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Texas brass knuckles may get the headlines, but Texas buyers know a solid hunting knife is what actually does the work. This Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife is a full‑tang fixed blade built for real field use, with a 4.5" satin steel blade, partial serrations, and a gut hook that makes game processing fast and clean. The coyote brown rubber grip locks into your hand when things get slick. It’s a straightforward Texas work knife — no drama, just does its job.

6.30 6.3 USD 6.30

FX13179

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Pommel/Butt Cap

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Texas Fixed Blades That Earn Their Keep

Texas brass knuckles get most of the talk since the 2019 law change, but any hunter in this state knows the work starts and ends with a dependable fixed blade. This Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife is built for that part of the job — the part that happens in the dark, in the brush, or at the tailgate with a deer on the ground.

It’s a 9.5-inch full-tang hunting knife with a 4.5-inch satin steel blade, partial serrations, and a gut hook cut into the spine. The handle is coyote brown rubber with black textured inlays, shaped to lock into your hand when it’s wet, cold, or covered in what you just put on the ground. Nothing fancy. Nothing fragile. Just a Texas-ready work knife.

Texas Hunting Knife Built for Field Work

Texas is big, dry in places, soaked in others, and generally hard on gear. A Texas hunting knife has to live in a truck door, on an ATV, or in a blind for months and still perform when it’s time to dress game. This fixed blade is designed for exactly that role.

  • Full-tang construction: One piece of steel running through the handle for strength you can lean on when you’re twisting through bone or heavy cartilage.
  • 4.5-inch drop point blade: Long enough for field dressing and camp chores, compact enough to stay controllable around hide and joints.
  • Partial serrations: The serrated section near the handle chews through tendon, rope, and tough material without dulling the main edge.
  • Gut hook spine: Designed to open an animal cleanly without cutting into organs or damaging meat.
  • Flat pommel with lanyard hole: Tie it off, hang it, or use the flat butt as a light tap surface when needed.

Everything on this knife speaks to use, not decoration. Texas buyers looking for a fixed-blade hunting knife want exactly that: something they don’t have to baby, that still cuts clean when it matters.

Material and Build Quality for Texas Conditions

Texas doesn’t treat knives gently. Between caliche dust, humidity near the coast, and cold fronts that turn a Panhandle hunt into a finger-stiffening mess, a Texas hunting knife has to keep its grip and stay workable.

The Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife is built with that kind of abuse in mind:

  • Satin steel blade: The silver satin finish helps resist corrosion and wipes clean more easily than a high-polish showpiece. This is steel meant for field dressing, camp chores, and daily utility.
  • Textured rubber handle: The coyote brown rubber scales with black grip inlays are shaped and patterned for traction. Blood, rain, or sweat, you still have control.
  • Integrated guard by handle shape: The molded handle curves forward at the front, forming a built-in guard that keeps your hand from sliding onto the edge when you’re pushing into tough cuts.
  • Balanced 9.5-inch profile: At 9.5 inches overall, this fixed blade sits in that sweet spot: large enough for serious field work, small enough to ride on a belt without catching on every mesquite branch.

This isn’t a glass-case collector’s safe queen. It’s a working Texas hunting knife that earns its spot in the truck, the ranch house, or the pack because it’s built to take a beating and keep going.

Texas Carry and Use: A Knife That Fits the Job

Texas culture respects a tool that’s used, not just owned. The way a fixed-blade hunting knife carries and handles matters as much as how sharp it comes out of the box.

Fixed Blade Reliability in the Field

A folding knife has its place, but when you’re clearing brush, cutting cord, and opening up an animal, a full-tang fixed blade like this Coyote Fieldline makes more sense. There’s no hinge, no lock to fail, no moving parts to fill with grit. It’s ready the moment it comes out of the sheath.

The drop point profile gives you a strong tip and a generous belly for slicing, skinning, and controlled cuts. Add the gut hook, and you’ve got a Texas hunting knife that can handle the entire process from field to cooler without switching tools.

From Deer Lease to Ranch Work

Most Texas knives pull double duty. This one will, too. Hunters will use it for field dressing and quartering. Ranch owners will keep it on hand for fencing, tarp work, and feed bags. The partial serrations make short work of rope, nylon straps, and heavy plastic. The straight edge handles finer cutting jobs and game processing. It’s the sort of knife that migrates from hunting season to year-round use without ceremony.

Texas Collector Value in a Working Knife

Texas collectors appreciate knives that look like they belong in this state. The coyote brown handle, simple satin blade, and straightforward profile give this fixed blade the same quiet utility you see in most real ranch tools. It’s not loud, but it’s not timid either.

Collectors who build out Texas-focused gear setups — from Texas brass knuckles to working fixed blades — will recognize the appeal here:

  • Consistent visual theme: Coyote brown and black pair naturally with common Texas camo patterns and tactical kits.
  • Function-first design: Gut hook, serrations, full tang — all hallmarks of a serious field knife, not a novelty piece.
  • Everyday usability: This isn’t a safe-only collector piece; it’s a practical addition to any Texas loadout that already includes legal defensive tools and ranch gear.

For a Texas buyer building a collection anchored in real use — tools that could ride in a truck as easily as in a display — this Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife fits neatly alongside Texas brass knuckles and other Texas-legal gear.

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 the Legislature removed them from the prohibited weapons list in the Texas Penal Code. That change opened a legal market for Texas brass knuckles as collectible and defensive tools, sold openly to Texas buyers who understand their state’s law.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, brass knuckles are no longer banned as a prohibited weapon, which means a Texas adult can legally own and carry them. As with any defensive tool, common-sense rules still apply: avoid restricted environments, understand how they fit into broader self-defense and weapons statutes, and remember that how you use them matters more than what you own. Texas expects you to act like an adult with adult tools.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

For Texas buyers, the best brass knuckles are the ones that match how you actually live and carry. Solid metal construction, clean machining, and a profile that fits your hand come first. After that, look for finish, color, and design that line up with the rest of your Texas kit — whether that’s a ranch-ready fixed blade like this Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife, or other everyday tools in your rotation. Quality plus Texas-legal confidence is the standard.

Texas Buyers, Texas Tools, Texas Brass Knuckles

Texas brass knuckles may define the legal turning point in 2019, but the day-to-day work in this state is still done with knives like this one. The Coyote Fieldline Gut Hook Hunting Knife is a straightforward fixed blade that fits Texas hands, Texas land, and Texas expectations: legal tools, built strong, used hard, and chosen by people who know exactly what they’re buying.

If you’re the kind of Texas buyer who already understands the law, trusts your own judgment, and expects your gear to pull its weight, this hunting knife belongs right beside your Texas brass knuckles and the rest of your Texas-ready kit.

Blade Length (inches) 4.5
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Rubber
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full Tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Flat