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Shadow Spine Hybrid-Edge Tactical Fixed Blade Knife - Matte Black

Price:

9.95


Stealth Ridge Full-Tang Tactical Fixed Blade Knife - Matte Black
Stealth Ridge Full-Tang Tactical Fixed Blade Knife - Matte Black
9.95 9.95
Shadow Spear Quick-Balance Butterfly Knife - Matte Black Steel
Shadow Spear Quick-Balance Butterfly Knife - Matte Black Steel
6.95 6.95

Desert Grip Spine-Serrated Tactical Fixed Blade Knife - Tan Rubber

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/3492/image_1920?unique=c913d7f

12 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a drawer queen. For a Texas buyer who knows their tools, this tactical fixed blade brings a matte black hybrid-edge clip point, aggressive spine serrations, and a full-tang steel core wrapped in a tan rubber grip that locks into the hand. The non-reflective blade and included sheath make it a natural fit for truck kits, camp loads, and ranch work where you want a knife that cuts, saws, and pries without complaint.

9.95 9.95 USD 9.95

FX674HG

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  • Blade Color
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  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
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  • Theme
  • Tang Type
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Sheath/Holster

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Texas Fixed Blades Built for Real Work, Not Glass Cases

Texas buyers don’t baby their knives. A fixed blade that rides in a Texas truck, pack, or ranch bag has to cut, pry, saw, and keep going. This spine‑serrated tactical fixed blade was built with that in mind – matte black hybrid edge, full‑tang steel, and a tan rubber grip that stays honest in sweat, dust, or rain. It’s a straight‑talk field knife for a state that doesn’t make excuses.

Why This Tactical Fixed Blade Earns Its Place in a Texas Kit

Start with the blade. You’re looking at a matte black clip point with a hybrid edge: clean cutting surface up front for controlled work and partial serrations near the handle for chewing through rope, strap, or webbing when time is tight. Up top, the serrated spine gives you a built‑in saw. That three‑lane edge profile – plain, serrated, and spine teeth – turns one knife into a small task system.

Underneath the finish is full‑tang steel. That means the steel runs from tip to pommel in a single piece. In Texas terms, you can lean on it. Baton kindling, work through stubborn brush, or twist it in stubborn material without worrying about some hidden joint letting go. The flat pommel adds one more quiet advantage – light striking or controlled pressure when you need to persuade a stubborn object, not just cut it.

Tactical Fixed Blade Details Texas Buyers Actually Care About

Handle and grip matter more in Texas heat than in a catalog photo. This knife wraps the tang in a tan rubber handle with real texture, not cosmetic grooves. That rubberized surface bites into the hand when palms go slick, while the full guard and straight crossguard keep your fingers off the edge when you’re driving down on a tough cut.

The matte black blade isn’t a fashion choice – it’s non‑reflective. Whether you’re running night work on a lease road, checking fence lines at dawn, or handling business around headlights, you’re not flashing signal mirrors every time the knife comes out. The black‑and‑tan color pairing matches the rest of a Texas tactical loadout: plate carriers, range bags, and field packs that live dusty, not pristine.

An included sheath keeps this fixed blade where it belongs – on your belt, pack strap, or rig. No loose knife rolling around in the truck. No edge chewing through a pocket because it was tossed in bare. Texas carry is about control, and a proper sheath is part of that control.

Texas Carry Culture and a Tactical Fixed Blade

Texas has opened the door on what you can legally carry, from handguns to blades, and buyers here act like adults about it. A tactical fixed blade like this fits the culture: clear purpose, honest use, no pretense. It’s the kind of knife you see on a ranch foreman’s belt, in a volunteer firefighter’s go‑bag, or strapped to the outside of a hunting pack headed into the Hill Country.

Field Use in Texas Conditions

Texas isn’t gentle on gear. You’ve got Gulf humidity on one side, Panhandle wind on the other, and enough mesquite, cedar, and caliche in between to humble most tools. A full‑tang steel fixed blade with a rubberized grip and hybrid edge suits that mix. The spine serrations saw through light limb and plastic, the main edge handles meat, cord, and camp work, and the matte finish shrugs off glare and attention.

From a bug‑out bag in Houston to a range bag in San Antonio or a ranch truck outside Lubbock, this is the kind of fixed blade that gets thrown in once and then simply used. No coddling, no ceremony – just reach, cut, and move on.

Quiet Confidence over Flash

Texas buyers who know knives don’t chase gimmicks. They look for design choices that make sense when hands are cold, wet, or gloved. This spine‑serrated tactical fixed blade keeps the profile straightforward: proven clip point, real serrations where they count, a guard that protects, and a grip that doesn’t quit. It’s the knife you keep reaching for because it just works every single time.

Material and Build: What Makes This Knife Collector‑Worthy in Texas

Collectors in Texas don’t separate display from use the way other states might. A piece earns respect when it pairs functional design with a clear purpose. This tactical fixed blade checks that box through three specific build decisions.

First, the full‑tang construction. That’s the hallmark of a serious fixed blade. No hidden joints, no mystery metal. When you look at the edge and spine, you’re looking at the same steel that runs under the handle and into the pommel.

Second, the hybrid edge with a serrated spine. Many knives pick one lane: smooth or serrated. This piece gives you a working progression. Fine control up front for carving, food prep, and detail work. Partial serrations near the guard for aggressive cutting through fibrous material. And spine teeth when you need a saw without going back to the truck.

Third, the rubberized tan handle. Texas collectors know grip materials age differently in heat and sweat. Rubber, properly done, holds fast when micarta or smooth polymers get slick. The color choice isn’t just aesthetic – tan hides dust, scratches, and everyday wear better than bright synthetics, giving the knife that well‑used, not abused, look over time.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Since September 1, 2019, brass knuckles are legal to own and carry in Texas. The legislature removed them from the prohibited weapons list in Penal Code 46.01 and 46.05, which opened up a fully legal market for Texas brass knuckles and Texas knuckle collectors. On this site, Texas brass knuckles are treated as a normal, lawful part of the Texas self‑defense and collector landscape.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, a person 18 or older who is not otherwise prohibited can carry brass knuckles in most public places. Private property owners, schools, secure government buildings, and certain posted locations can still set their own restrictions. In practice, Texas brass knuckles ride in trucks, bags, and pockets the same way knives and other legal defensive tools do – with the understanding that private rules can be stricter than state law.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles for a Texas buyer are solid metal, well‑finished, and sized correctly to your hand. Texas collectors look for clean machining, no weak points around the finger holes, and finishes that hold up to sweat and heat. Weight matters: heavy enough to feel present, light enough to carry. Whether you’re building out a Texas brass knuckles display or pairing them with a tactical fixed blade in a go‑bag, choose quality over flash – the same standard you’d apply to this full‑tang, spine‑serrated field knife.

Texas Buyers, Texas Tools, Texas Standards

In Texas, the line between user and collector is thin. The same person who knows the details of the Texas brass knuckles law from 2019 also knows why a full‑tang hybrid‑edge tactical fixed blade with a rubber grip belongs in the truck, pack, or ranch shop. This knife was built for that buyer – someone who expects their gear to be as serious and straightforward as they are. If it’s riding with you in Texas, it earns its keep the hard way: by working every time you draw it.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Material Rubber
Theme Tactical
Tang Type Full Tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Flat
Sheath/Holster Sheath