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Heritage Edge Flip-Balanced Butterfly Knife - Red Wood

Price:

9.06


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Heritage Rhythm Flip-Ready Butterfly Knife - Red Wood

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/3454/image_1920?unique=d7a3b0d

10 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles buyers know quality steel when they see it, and this Heritage Rhythm flip-ready butterfly knife earns its place beside any Texas-legal collection. A textured clip-point blade rides on tuned pivots into polished red wood handles that feel broken-in from day one. The balance is honest, the latch is dependable, and the profile is pure heritage. It’s the kind of balisong a Texas collector carries, flips, and sets out on the table without saying a word.

9.06 9.06 USD 9.06

BF219SW

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
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Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers Recognize Real Steel When They See It

Texas brass knuckles have been legal since September 2019. That change in Texas law opened the door for a different kind of buyer — the one who knows the Penal Code, knows what’s legal to own in this state, and expects every piece on the table to earn its spot. This Heritage Rhythm Flip-Ready Butterfly Knife - Red Wood fits that world cleanly: a classic balisong with the same quiet confidence Texans bring to brass knuckles, blades, and every other legal tool they collect.

Where some sites still tiptoe around what’s allowed, this one doesn’t. In Texas, brass knuckles and butterfly knives sit in the open for collectors who understand the law and respect good workmanship. This knife is built for that buyer.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture, Balisong Precision

Texas brass knuckles collectors tend to own more than one kind of steel. Once you’ve settled the legality question — and in Texas, that’s settled — the conversation moves to balance, build, and how a piece feels in the hand. This butterfly knife was tuned for that moment.

The hammered-texture steel spine and polished cutting edge give the blade a purposeful look: not flashy, not timid, just honest steel shaped into a clip-point profile. At 3.625 inches of blade inside an 8.625-inch overall frame, it hits that practical sweet spot Texas collectors like: long enough to matter, compact enough to carry.

From Display Case to Daily Flip

Polished red wood scales run the length of each handle, broken up by clean circular cutouts that trim the weight and bring the balance toward the pivots. For a Texas buyer used to weighing brass knuckles in the palm, this same instinct kicks in here: the balance point is where it ought to be, and the 4.23-ounce weight feels grounded without being slow.

Torx-style pivot hardware and dual tang pins keep the opening arc consistent. Whether it lives in a glass case in Houston or on a ranch shelf west of San Angelo, this knife opens with the same rhythm every time.

Built for Texas Conditions, Not a Display-Only Piece

Texas brass knuckles collectors buy for more than show. Steel and wood have to survive heat, sweat, dust, and the reality of day-to-day carry. This balisong’s steel blade and stainless hardware are made for exactly that. The textured finish on the blade spine helps hide the small marks that come from real use, while the polished edge stays the visual focal point.

The red wood handles do more than look good. Polished, yes, but with enough grain left visible to remind you it’s not plastic. Wood warms up in the hand, especially in cooler Hill Country mornings or overworked A/C air in a Dallas shop. Over time, that wood will pick up a subtle patina that serious collectors appreciate — proof that the piece wasn’t left untouched in a box.

Latch, Pivots, and Texas Carry Reality

The bottom latch locks the knife closed in a pocket or bag, and snaps open into a familiar butterfly silhouette. It’s straightforward hardware, the kind Texas buyers favor: no gimmicks, no overcomplication, just a reliable catch that does its job. Combined with the dual tang pins, the handles track straight and meet cleanly, even after repeated flipping sessions.

For a collector who already stores Texas brass knuckles in a case or safe, this butterfly knife fits right alongside — compact, easy to stage, and fast to put in hand when you want to feel steel move.

Texas Law, Texas Steel, Texas Collector Standards

When Texas removed brass knuckles from the prohibited list in 2019, it signaled something clear: the state trusts its citizens with more responsibility, not less. Texas Penal Code changes around that time reshaped the market, and this site takes that seriously. We speak directly to Texas brass knuckles buyers who know the law and don’t need a lecture written for another state.

This butterfly knife lives in that same legal, collector-minded lane. There’s no confusion here: you’re buying a steel balisong with a red wood handle, balanced pivots, and classic hardware. You already understand Texas brass knuckles law and carry expectations. We respect that, and we build the product mix — brass knuckles, knives, and related gear — for that informed buyer.

Texas Carry Context: Private, Public, and Common Sense

Texans who collect brass knuckles and blades tend to share one trait: they read the law once, get it right, and live by it. Whether you keep this butterfly knife on private land, on a workbench in a shop, or in a collection next to your Texas-legal brass knuckles, you’re operating from that same mindset — legal, informed, and deliberate.

The knife’s modest closed length of 5.125 inches makes it easy to pocket or bag when you choose to carry. The key is the same as with any Texas-legal tool: know where you are, know the context, and carry with purpose.

For the Texas Brass Knuckles Collector Who Respects Heritage

Texas brass knuckles buyers tend to notice the quiet details first: pivot smoothness, finish consistency, how the steel lines up with the handle. This Heritage Rhythm Flip-Ready Butterfly Knife - Red Wood delivers on all three. The classic balisong outline, paired with hammered-texture steel and polished red wood, feels like something that could have sat in your grandfather’s drawer — just tuned a little tighter for modern flipping.

Set it beside your Texas brass knuckles on the counter. The red wood stands out without stepping on anything else in the lineup. The blade catches light, not attention. It’s the kind of piece another collector will pick up, flip once or twice, and nod at without a word. In Texas, that’s the only review that matters.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been fully legal to own in Texas since September 2019, when they were removed from the prohibited weapons list in the Texas Penal Code. That change turned brass knuckles from a gray-area topic into a legitimate, open market for Texas collectors. This site is built around that reality and treats brass knuckles as a lawful, Texas-legal product for informed buyers.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, you can legally possess and carry brass knuckles, but you’re still expected to use common sense and understand where you are and what you’re doing. Public settings, private property rules, and specific locations can carry their own expectations and restrictions. Serious collectors treat Texas brass knuckles the same way they treat a blade like this butterfly knife — legal to own, legal to carry in Texas, and always handled with respect for place and context.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles for a Texas buyer are the ones that match three standards: clearly legal under current Texas law, built from real materials (steel, brass, or quality alloys), and sold by someone who speaks your language about Texas brass knuckles and related gear. If you’re the kind of buyer who reads steel specs on a butterfly knife and notices pivot hardware, you’re the kind who will appreciate weight, finish, and machining on brass knuckles the same way. Look for clean casting, honest weight, and a seller who doesn’t dodge the Texas legal conversation.

Texas brass knuckles collectors know where they stand with the law and with their gear. This butterfly knife was built for that same crowd — Texans who prefer real steel, clear legality, and products that don’t need a hard sell to earn a spot in the collection.

Blade Length (inches) 3.625
Overall Length (inches) 8.625
Closed Length (inches) 5.125
Weight (oz.) 4.23
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Textured
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Theme None
Latch Type Latch
Is Trainer No