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Skull Spine Micro Neck Knife - Silver

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4.05


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Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife - Silver

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/6462/image_1920?unique=d78ec39

12 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles buyers know tools should ride light and hit clean. The Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife - Silver does exactly that. A 4.25" fixed blade with a skeletonized skull-spine handle and ring retention, it hangs on a simple ball chain until you need it. Silver finish, black sheath, tight lockup, and quick draw make it a smart, low-profile backup for Texas EDC and collector kits that favor skull-themed steel.

4.05 4.05 USD 4.05

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Texas Steel, Texas Control: The Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife

In a state where Texas brass knuckles and serious steel both have a place in the collection, this Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife - Silver fills a quiet role: small fixed blade, fast in the hand, no drama. It hangs on your neck, disappears under a shirt, and shows its attitude in the skull spine cutout only when you want it to.

How This Micro Neck Knife Fits a Texas Brass Knuckles Collection

Texas brass knuckles buyers tend to like compact control. Same mindset applies here. This is a 4.25" overall micro neck knife with a fixed blade, skeletonized handle, and skull cut into the spine. The ring at the end locks your grip, the jimping and cutouts keep it light and secure. Where a set of Texas brass knuckles fills the fist, this knife tags in as a precise edge that rides just as discreetly.

Collectors who already stack brass knuckles in their Texas lineup understand the appeal: small footprint, fast access, unmistakable attitude. The skull motif ties straight into that same aggressive, tactical culture, without turning the piece into a toy. It looks good on a pegboard next to your brass, and it works even better in the hand.

Material and Build Quality for Texas Conditions

This micro neck knife is all business: a satin silver fixed blade with a straight, utility-ready edge and a fine point. The handle is skeletonized metal in matching silver, cut down to the essentials to keep weight off your neck while you move through Texas heat and humidity. No bulky scales to trap sweat, no nonsense coatings to baby. Wipe it down, keep it sharp, keep it close.

The molded black sheath is tuned for neck carry. Friction fit holds the knife until you decide otherwise. Multiple slots and holes give you options: keep it on the ball chain, lace it to a vest, or tie it into a bag strap. The contrast of silver blade and handle against the black sheath gives clean visual separation so you can confirm orientation at a glance before you draw.

Texas Brass Knuckles Mindset, Neck Knife Execution

Texas brass knuckles law opened the door for a certain kind of buyer: the one who studies the statute once, understands it, and moves on to quality and function. This neck knife speaks to the same headspace. It doesn't try to be a movie prop. It isn't oversized. It's a tight, efficient edge that lives where your hand can find it with zero thought.

The ringed handle and skull spine are more than decoration. The ring gives retention if your hands are wet, gloved, or sweating in the South Texas sun. The skull cutout breaks up the spine visually and sheds weight so the ball chain doesn't dig. Jimping along the back sets your thumb when you need pressure on a cut, from opening stubborn packaging to quick utility work around a truck, gate, or gear.

Carry and Use in the Texas Context

Neck Carry That Makes Sense in Texas

Texas carry culture is about access and comfort. Neck carry earns its place when it stays out of the way until called. This micro neck knife rides flat against the chest on its silver ball chain, under a T-shirt, under a work shirt, or under a vest. At 4.25" overall, it doesn't print, doesn't swing like a pendulum, and doesn't feel like a burden during long days in the heat.

Because it's a small fixed blade with a low-profile sheath, it transitions easily from workday utility to backup role in your broader Texas EDC setup. It complements Texas brass knuckles in a kit or collection where you want both impact and edge options without hauling around oversized gear.

Quiet Backup for the Texas EDC Collector

Many Texas brass knuckles collectors are also knife people. They like a primary folder or full-size fixed blade on the belt and a backup somewhere else. This is that somewhere else. The Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife sits in the background until another tool can't quite reach or isn't quite right for the job.

It works as a backup to a truck knife, as a last-ditch edge in a plate carrier, or as a simple, always-there cutter when you step out in shorts and a T-shirt and don't feel like running a full waistband loadout. Small, silver, and ready is a good rule in Texas.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles are legal in Texas. The key change came in 2019, when the Texas Legislature amended Penal Code Chapter 46, removing "knuckles" from the prohibited weapons list. Since September 2019, Texans can legally buy, own, and carry brass knuckles in the state. That legal reality is settled here, and it shaped the whole Texas brass knuckles market, including the kind of compact companion blades many collectors pick up alongside their knucks.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, an adult who is not otherwise prohibited (for example, by other criminal restrictions) can carry brass knuckles in most everyday settings. They are no longer banned as a weapon under Penal Code 46.01 and 46.05. As with any tool, context still matters: schools, certain secured areas, and private-property rules can set their own limits. But in general Texas public life, brass knuckles are legal to own and carry, and many Texans pair them with low-profile blades like this neck knife.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles for Texas buyers share three traits: they respect the 2019 Texas brass knuckles law reality, they're built from solid material that can handle real impact, and they fit your hand and carry style. Many Texas collectors look for brass, steel, or heavy alloy construction, clean machining, and an ergonomic profile that doesn't twist on contact. After that, it becomes a question of taste: bare-metal classic knucks, Texas-flag themes, or more modern tactical designs that sit alongside compact blades like this Reaper Spine Micro Neck Knife.

Why This Piece Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas brass knuckles collectors understand one thing clearly: legal certainty plus real-world function is what earns a spot in the drawer, safe, or display wall. This micro neck knife doesn't pretend to be something it's not. It's a silver fixed blade with a skull spine, a ring for solid purchase, and a sheath that lets it vanish until it's needed.

If your identity as a Texas collector includes the 2019 shift that made brass knuckles legal, this knife fits that same moment. It speaks the same language: compact, effective, unapologetic. You know where you live, you know what's legal here, and you choose your steel accordingly. That's Texas brass knuckles culture carried forward into a neck knife that earns its inch of space on your chain.

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