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Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

Price:

7.31


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Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Assisted Knife - Matte Black Steel

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/1434/image_1920?unique=b91bfa2

13 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles may get the headlines, but Texas buyers who know steel will clock this Midnight Stiletto immediately. A 5.25-inch matte black 1065 German spear-point rides a spring-assisted flipper and liner lock for decisive, one-hand deployment. Textured black steel scales, gold accent bands, pocket clip, and lanyard hole keep it controlled, carried, and ready. It’s a slim, modern stiletto built for Texans who prefer quiet reach over loud talk—and recognize real material value when they hold it.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
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  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Steel, Texas Law

Texas brass knuckles changed the law conversation in 2019, but the same Texas mindset runs through every serious blade and every serious buyer: know the statute, know your steel, and buy from people who respect both. This Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Assisted Knife in matte black steel sits squarely in that lane—a modern tactical stiletto built for Texans who already understand their rights and want hardware that matches their standards.

Where Texas brass knuckles brought fist-loads into the legal daylight, knives like this live in the same ecosystem of informed, no-nonsense Texas buyers. You already know what’s legal. Now you’re looking for what’s worth owning.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture and the Rise of Serious Steel

Once Texas brass knuckles were pulled out of the prohibited list in 2019, the collector landscape in this state shifted. Texans stopped whispering about impact pieces and started curating them right alongside purpose-built knives, duty gear, and classic folders. The common thread: legally confident ownership backed by real material quality.

This Midnight Stiletto speaks that same language. Slim, 11.25 inches open, with a 5.25-inch spear-point blade in matte black 1065 German surgical steel, it doesn’t posture. It just brings reach, balance, and control. If you’re the kind of buyer who knows exactly when Texas brass knuckles became legal and can quote Penal Code changes from memory, you’ll appreciate a knife that’s as straightforward as you are.

Legal Clarity in Texas: Knives, Knucks, and What Actually Matters

Texas took brass knuckles off the prohibited weapons list in September 2019, moving them into the same realm as most knives in this state: lawful to own, lawful to collect, and lawful to buy from a seller who actually understands Texas law instead of writing for California. That change pulled a whole category of metal back into legitimate circulation and reinforced a simple truth: in Texas, the informed citizen isn’t the problem.

Texas Carry Context: Brass Knuckles and Blades Together

Where Texas brass knuckles are now legally owned and traded as part of a growing collector scene, blades like this assisted stiletto fit naturally beside them. Spring-assisted flipper, liner lock, slim stiletto profile—this is modern Texas carry culture: capable, compact, and controlled. You’re not asking whether it’s allowed. You’re deciding where it rides—pocket, belt, pack, or display rail.

Texas Mindset: Law-Knowing, Not Law-Fearing

Collectors who chased down the exact Texas brass knuckles law in 2019 didn’t stop at impact tools. They read the knife statutes, they watched the revisions, and they built collections accordingly. This stiletto is for that buyer—the one who already did the reading and now judges on steel, lockup, deployment, and overall purpose, not on rumor.

Material and Build: 1065 German Steel for Texas Reality

Texas is hard on gear. Heat, dust, sweat, sudden weather shifts—none of that is gentle. That’s why the details on this piece matter more than catalog fluff. The blade rides in 1065 German surgical steel, brought to a matte black finish that cuts glare and keeps things discreet. It’s a narrow spear-point grind that takes a fine edge and keeps a confident point, purpose-built for precise penetration and controlled slicing.

The handle is textured black steel—not plastic, not mystery pot metal. That steel handle gives you a reassuring 4.59 ounces in hand: enough weight to track the blade, not so much that it drags in the pocket. The gold accent bands along the handle aren’t decoration for decoration’s sake; they give visual rhythm to a long, straight form and mark out reference points when you index your grip under low light.

Rapid-Deploy Assisted Stiletto for Texas Carry and Control

In a state where Texas brass knuckles now sit openly in collections, a knife like this stands out for how quickly it gets from pocket to work. The flipper tab and spring-assisted mechanism mean your thumb doesn’t have to fight a nail nick or stiff backspring—one decisive press, and the blade snaps into lockup on the liner.

Closed, you’re looking at 6 inches of slim, pocketable steel. The pocket clip positions it where you want it; the lanyard hole gives you options if you run it on a vest, range bag, or duty setup. Once it’s open, 11.25 inches tip to tail gives you the reach you expect from a stiletto silhouette, with modern mechanics behind it.

This is not a novelty shape. It’s a modern stiletto tuned for real use: opening boxes, cutting cord, working on the ranch, backing up a duty rig, or sharing display space with a row of Texas brass knuckles that finally stepped into the legal light.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been legal to own and carry in Texas since September 2019, when they were removed from the prohibited weapons list under changes to Texas Penal Code 46.01 and related sections. Texas brass knuckles are now a legitimate part of the collector market here, bought, sold, and displayed with full legal confidence.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, you can lawfully carry brass knuckles in most everyday settings since the 2019 law change, just as you carry a folding knife like this assisted stiletto. The usual common-sense limits still apply—secure locations, schools, and certain restricted environments are their own conversations—but for the average Texas adult, carrying Texas brass knuckles or a blade like this in public is no longer the legal risk it once was.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles are the ones that respect both the law and the metal. Look for real brass or quality steel, clean machining, and a seller who actually names the 2019 law shift instead of dodging it. The same standards apply to this Midnight Stiletto: named steel (1065 German), defined mechanism (spring-assisted flipper, liner lock), and build quality that holds up to Texas carry. A serious Texas collection pairs solid knucks with a blade like this—pieces chosen for material, not marketing.

Texas Collector Identity: From Knucks to Knives

A Texas collector in 2026 doesn’t draw a hard line between Texas brass knuckles, duty folders, and modern stilettos like this one. The real division is simpler: gear that respects Texas law and Texas conditions, and gear that doesn’t. This Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Assisted Knife in matte black steel sits firmly in the first camp. It’s long, lean, purpose-built, and honest about what it is.

If you were paying attention when brass knuckles became legal in Texas in 2019, you’re the audience for this knife. You already know where the law stands. You judge a piece by its steel, its lock, its deployment, and whether it earns a place next to the rest of your Texas brass knuckles and blades. This one does.

Blade Length (inches) 5.25
Overall Length (inches) 11.25
Closed Length (inches) 6
Weight (oz.) 4.59
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 1065 German surgical steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Steel
Theme Stiletto
Safety Spring-assisted
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock