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Silverline Dual-Matrix Spring-Assisted Knife - Black G10

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7.19


Redline Pulse Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - G10 Gray/Red
Redline Pulse Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - G10 Gray/Red
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Dragon Surge Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Blue Blade
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Inevitable Glide Tactical EDC Knife - Black G10

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/6553/image_1920?unique=10d4112

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Texas brass knuckles may get the legal spotlight, but Texas buyers who carry every day still reach for a clean, capable blade. The Inevitable Glide Tactical EDC Knife pairs a polished 440C spear-point with black G10 over stainless steel for grip that doesn’t quit. Spring-assisted deployment, liner lock, and deep-carry clip keep it fast, secure, and out of the way until you need it. It’s the same quiet Texas confidence—legal, deliberate, built for real work.

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A131SLGCP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Handle Material
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Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Blades, Same Legal Confidence

Texas brass knuckles became legal in September 2019 when the Legislature pulled them out of Penal Code 46.01. That change didn’t just open the door for Texas brass knuckles collectors. It reset the whole tone of how Texans talk about self-defense tools and everyday carry. Around here, you’re allowed to own serious hardware, and you’re trusted to act like an adult about it.

This Inevitable Glide Tactical EDC Knife fits that same Texas mindset. Spring-assisted, clean-lined, and purpose-built, it sits right beside your Texas brass knuckles in the drawer or in the kit. Different tool, same confidence: legal, deliberate, and built for real work.

How This Texas-Ready EDC Knife Is Built

Start with the blade. You’re looking at a polished 440C stainless steel spear-point, 3.75 inches long, riding in an 8.5-inch overall frame. That 3.75-inch length sits squarely in everyday carry territory—long enough to matter, short enough to carry without drama. 440C gives you a familiar combination: edge retention that holds up to real use, corrosion resistance that stands up to Texas humidity and sweat, and a polish that wipes clean easily.

The handle runs black G10 over stainless liners. G10 is the knife world’s workhorse composite: light, grippy, and stable in heat, cold, or that long Texas August. The matte finish and faceted edges give your fingers positive indexing without turning the handle into a cheese grater. Under it, steel liners give the spring-assisted action a solid, repeatable track and lock-up.

A flipper tab and spring-assisted mechanism drive deployment. Touch the flipper, the spring takes over, and the blade snaps into a liner lock that seats with authority. No wrist theatrics, no fuss—just one smooth, inevitable motion. Jimping near the pivot and the straight, modern handle profile give you control in forward or reverse grip.

Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers Understand Tools That Stay Ready

If you’re the kind of Texan who knows the 2019 brass knuckles law by heart, you’re also the kind who notices the quiet details on a knife. The Inevitable Glide Tactical EDC Knife carries those details in plain sight: a long fuller cut into the spear-point to reduce drag and weight, a hexagonal pivot ringed with a gold accent, and a matching yellow detail at the butt. Nothing gaudy. Just enough contrast to show someone cared about more than getting it out the door.

The deep-carry clip rides spine-side, so the knife tucks low and clean in your pocket. No billboard profile, no screaming for attention. Texas carry culture rewards that kind of low profile—armed, legal, and no need to advertise it.

Texas Brass Knuckles Law and the Culture It Built

When Texas removed “knuckles” from Penal Code 46.01 in 2019, it didn’t suddenly make Texans tough. It just admitted what was already true: this state trusts adults with adult tools. That’s why Texas brass knuckles and modern EDC knives live in the same collection for a lot of buyers.

Texas Legal Confidence, No Out-of-State Hand-Wringing

On this site, you won’t see disclaimers written for California. We speak Texas. Brass knuckles are legal here. Owning a spring-assisted EDC knife like this one is legal here. The real questions are about quality and purpose: is the build sound, and does it earn its space on your belt or in your pocket.

Knife in the Pocket, Brass Knuckles in the Drawer

Most Texas brass knuckles collectors don’t carry their knuckles every day. They keep them as a statement piece, a legal defensive option, or a bit of Texas history on the shelf. The knife handles the daily workload—boxes, feed bags, cord, roadside fixes, and the hundred little chores that don’t justify hauling out anything bigger. This spring-assisted folder is built for exactly that daily, unglamorous work.

Material and Build: What a Texas Collector Actually Checks

Texas buyers don’t stop at "it looks good." They check steel, hardware, action, and carry. Here’s how this one answers all four.

  • Blade steel: 440C stainless, polished, plain edge. Easy to touch up, resistant to rust in sweat and humidity, and reliable under repeated use.
  • Geometry: Spear-point profile gives you a strong tip and a straight cutting edge. That means clean penetration when needed and efficient slicing on day-to-day tasks.
  • Handle and liners: Black G10 slabs over stainless liners. G10 gives grip and temperature stability; steel gives structure for the spring, pivot, and lock.
  • Locking system: Liner lock—simple, proven, and easy to operate one-handed. No mystery engineering, just a solid, familiar lock-up.
  • Carry setup: Deep-carry pocket clip, spine-mounted. The knife rides low and straight, ready to clear the pocket without a fight.

Texas collectors don’t have patience for sloppy deployment or soft hardware. The spring-assisted action on this blade is tuned to feel inevitable: a clean glide from closed to locked with one controlled motion. Hex hardware at the pivot and along the handle keeps everything tight and adjustable if you ever want to fine-tune tension.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles are legal in Texas. In 2019, the Legislature amended the Texas Penal Code and removed “knuckles” from the prohibited weapons list in Section 46.01 and related provisions. Since September 2019, owning, buying, and selling brass knuckles in Texas has been legal for adults. That legal shift is settled law now, and it forms the backbone of the Texas brass knuckles market—and the collector culture around it.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, you can lawfully possess brass knuckles, and you can have them on your person, but you’re still expected to use common sense. The 2019 change made brass knuckles legal to own and removed them from the old “illegal weapon” category, but it did not give anyone a free pass to misuse them. The same is true of a spring-assisted knife like this one: you can carry it, openly or concealed, but if you use any tool in a criminal or reckless way, other parts of Texas law will come down hard. Adult tools, adult standards.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles in Texas share three traits: clear Texas-legal context, honest material specs, and build quality that stands up to real handling. Solid metal, clean machining, and a seller who speaks Texas law without hedging are the baseline. Most Texas brass knuckles buyers also keep at least one solid EDC knife like this Inevitable Glide Tactical in the same kit: spring-assisted deployment, dependable steel, and a grip that holds steady when your hands are wet, dusty, or cold.

Carrying in Texas: Knuckles in the Law, Knives in the Pocket

Texas carry culture has range. Some days it’s a compact pistol on the hip. Other days it’s just a knife clipped in the pocket and a set of Texas brass knuckles in the truck console. This spring-assisted spear-point sits right in that everyday band: not a showpiece, not a safe queen, but the tool that actually gets used.

The deep-carry clip tucks it away in jeans, work pants, or slacks. The spring-assisted flipper gives you fast, one-hand access when the other hand is hauling hay, holding a gate, or balancing a box. And when you close it, it disappears again—no bulk, no rattle.

Texas Brass Knuckles Collectors, Texas-Blunt Identity

Texas brass knuckles collectors live in a state that trusts them with real tools. That trust runs straight through your collection—knuckles, blades, and whatever else you choose to own. The Inevitable Glide Tactical EDC Knife is built for that kind of buyer: a Texan who already knows brass knuckles are legal here, who doesn’t need a lecture, and who judges a piece by its steel, its action, and how it feels in hand.

If that’s you, this isn’t complicated. You keep your Texas brass knuckles where you want them. You clip this knife in your pocket. And you go on about your business.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440C Stainless Steel
Handle Material G-10
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted