Skip to Content
Crimson Sweep Precision-Assisted Pocket Knife - Brown Wood

Price:

11.21


Ranger Lifeline Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife - Gray Camo
Ranger Lifeline Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife - Gray Camo
3.27 3.27
Nocturnal Edge Quick-Assist Pocket Knife - Matte Black Steel
Nocturnal Edge Quick-Assist Pocket Knife - Matte Black Steel
5.54 5.54

Frontier Line Precision-Assisted Pocket Knife - Brown Wood

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/2495/image_1920?unique=16f2ee1

3 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles may own the headlines, but this Frontier Line Precision-Assisted Pocket Knife - Brown Wood earns its keep in your other hand. Spring-assisted, drop point, 3CR13 stainless, and a liner lock give you fast, controlled Texas-ready function. Polished steel, warm brown wood, and blue hardware keep it firmly in gentleman territory, not mall ninja. It rides easy on the pocket clip, opens clean on the flipper, and works as steady as you do — ranch, rig, or office.

11.21 11.21 USD 11.21

PBK240WD

Not Available For Sale

9 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Texas Steel, Texas Hands: The Assisted Knife That Earns Its Pocket

In a state where Texas brass knuckles are fully legal and proudly collected, a knife like the Frontier Line Precision-Assisted Pocket Knife - Brown Wood isn’t an accessory. It’s the quiet daily tool that shares the pocket with your Texas-legal brass. Long matte drop point, warm brown wood, and spring-assisted deployment make it a working knife with gentleman manners and Texas grit.

How This Knife Fits Beside Texas Brass Knuckles

Texas brass knuckles laws changed in 2019, and that opened the door for a different kind of Texas carry culture. You’ve got brass on one side, and a solid assisted pocket knife like this on the other. Together, they define a modern Texas everyday carry: legal, deliberate, and built on steel that won’t flinch when the work turns real.

This knife doesn’t chase tacticool. It pairs a 4.45-inch matte silver drop point with polished bolsters and brown wood scales. It’s what you carry when you know where you stand on Texas law and prefer tools that speak in low voices and clean lines.

Material and Build: Collector-Grade Without the Drama

The blade is 3CR13 stainless steel, properly heat-treated for edge stability and easy field touch-ups. At 4.45 inches of plain-edge drop point, it gives you a long, controllable working edge for rope, cardboard, plastic straps, and ranch or warehouse tasks. The matte finish cuts glare and keeps it understated where a louder blade would be out of place.

The handle is where this knife steps into collector territory. Polished stainless steel bolsters with decorative holes lead into brown wood scales that show real grain, not plastic pretending to be wood. Under those scales, a steel frame and liners tie it all together. Blue-anodized hardware at the pivot and along the handle gives it a modern Texas touch — a bit of refinery without ever tipping into flashy.

The liner lock engages clean, with a solid, audible set you can feel through the frame. The spring-assisted action answers both the thumb stud and the flipper tab, so deployment is fast but controlled, not jumpy. It feels like a practiced handshake, not a surprise.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture and the Role of a Good Pocket Knife

Since Texas brass knuckles became legal in 2019, collectors have leaned into matching their brass with blades that fit the same mindset: legal, capable, and worth owning. A lot of folks here pair a favorite set of Texas brass knuckles with a daily assisted knife. The brass is the statement piece. The knife is the workhorse that sees daylight ten times a day.

This Frontier Line assisted pocket knife fits that role. At 8.4 inches overall open and 4.25 inches closed, it carries like a true pocket knife, not a belt anchor. The pocket clip rides it low enough to stay discreet, with a lanyard hole at the tail if you want a bit of Texas leather or paracord to mark it as yours.

It looks at home beside a walnut-and-brass set of knuckles on a collector’s shelf, but it also looks right in an office desk drawer or glove box. That’s the balance: Texas collector taste without sacrificing everyday usefulness.

Carry Context in Texas: How This Knife Works Day to Day

Texas brass knuckles law opened the door for more open, honest collecting. The same straightforward approach applies to knives you carry. This assisted pocket knife is designed for the kind of daily use Texans actually see: ranch gates, jobsite packaging, roadside fixes, and the hundred small tasks that don’t make it on camera.

Texas Daily Use, Not Just Display

The long drop point and curved belly give you controlled push cuts and clean slicing, from feed bags to nylon straps. The spring assist means you can get it open fast with one hand, even when the other’s holding a gate, a line, or a box. The liner lock keeps it fixed until you decide otherwise.

Closed, the 4.25-inch length disappears in a front pocket, helped by the pocket clip and slim stainless frame under the wood. The polished bolsters and brown scales mean it doesn’t raise eyebrows when you’re around town. It’s more gentleman ranch hand than mall warrior.

Texas Collector Mindset: Matching Steel and Style

Collectors who hunt down Texas brass knuckles with specific finishes, stamps, or eras apply that same eye to their blades. This knife answers that standard with details that hold up under close scrutiny: the even matte blade finish, the symmetry of the decorative bolster holes, the grain and fitment of the brown wood, and the blue-anodized pivot that signals modern machining.

It’s the kind of assisted pocket knife you pick because it feels like a complete thought: steel, wood, and color accents working together instead of fighting for attention. In a Texas collection, that restraint reads as quality.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles are legal in Texas. The law changed in 2019 when the legislature removed knuckles from the prohibited weapons list in Texas Penal Code 46.01 and its related sections. Since September 2019, Texas brass knuckles can be legally owned, bought, and sold in this state. That legal shift is why you now see a thriving Texas brass knuckles market — and why knives like this ride alongside them in modern Texas carry.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, brass knuckles are not banned like they once were, and that includes Texas brass knuckles carried by adults who are otherwise law-abiding. Public versus private carry can still intersect with specific locations (like secured areas, certain government buildings, schools, and places with posted restrictions), and those rules can vary by setting. In practice, most Texas collectors carry brass more selectively and keep a practical assisted pocket knife like this as their main daily-use tool.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles for a Texas buyer are the ones that match your use and your build standards. Solid metal construction, clean machining, and a finish that suits how you actually carry or display them all matter. Many Texans pair a favorite brass set with a quality assisted pocket knife like this one: 3CR13 stainless blade, liner lock, spring assist, and wood-and-steel handle. That way, your brass speaks for your collection, and your knife handles the daily work.

Why This Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas brass knuckles may be the headline, but your steel tells the full story. This Frontier Line Precision-Assisted Pocket Knife - Brown Wood sits at that intersection of Texas practicality and collector pride. It’s long enough to work, refined enough to carry in town, and built with materials that respect the steel-and-wood tradition Texans have trusted for generations.

If you’re the kind of buyer who already knows brass knuckles are legal in Texas and doesn’t need that explained twice, you’re the buyer this knife was built for. You want tools that match your Texas brass knuckles in seriousness, not theatrics. This knife does exactly that — quietly, cleanly, and every single day.

Blade Length (inches) 4.45
Overall Length (inches) 8.4
Closed Length (inches) 4.25
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Stainless Steel with Brown Wood
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock