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Six-Hole Flow Balance Butterfly Trainer - Blue

Price:

4.35


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Six-Hole Kriss Balance Balisong Trainer - Blue

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/4893/image_1920?unique=a1a0121

5 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles buyers know balance and build matter across the whole kit. This Six-Hole Kriss Balance Balisong Trainer in blue is made for clean reps and smooth flow—no edge, no hesitation. Six lightening holes per handle and a Kriss-style blunt blade keep the weight centered, the rotation predictable, and the practice honest. Steel handles, steel blade, full blue matte finish. It feels like a live balisong in the hand, minus the blood, which is how Texas collectors actually get good.

4.35 4.35 USD 4.35 5.93

BF1188BL

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Is Trainer

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Texas Brass Knuckles Buyers, Meet Your Balance Trainer

Texas brass knuckles are legal here, and the same Texas buyer who takes that law seriously usually takes their hands seriously, too. This Six-Hole Kriss Balance Balisong Trainer in blue fits right into that mindset. It’s a steel butterfly trainer built for repetition, control, and clean muscle memory—no edge, no guessing, just honest practice that matches the weight and feel of a live balisong.

At 9.25 inches overall with a four-inch Kriss-style training blade and steel handles, this piece gives you real hardware in the hand. The same way a solid set of Texas brass knuckles feels like it will outlast you, this trainer feels like it’s here for the long haul.

From Texas Brass Knuckles Law to Texas Tool Culture

When brass knuckles went fully legal in Texas in 2019, it didn’t just open the door for collectors—it sharpened the focus on quality metal in general. Texans don’t separate the law from the hardware. If you’re the sort of person who knows exactly what changed in Penal Code 46.01, you’re also the sort of person who notices whether a trainer actually balances right.

This balisong trainer plays in that same lane. The steel construction, torx pivot hardware, and full-length steel handles give it a weight profile you can trust. You’re not flipping pot metal. You’re working with a trainer that behaves like a real knife in rotation, while staying firmly in the training category.

Texas Brass Knuckles Mindset, Balisong Trainer Build

Texas brass knuckles buyers tend to judge hardware by three things: legality, material, and how it feels when you actually use it. You’ve already got the legal clarity on knuckles; this trainer brings the other two parts home.

  • Steel on steel: Blade and handles are both steel, finished in a matte blue that reads clean, not flashy.
  • Six-hole handle design: Each handle side carries six circular cutouts, cutting weight, shifting balance, and helping the rotation feel fast without getting twitchy.
  • Kriss-style training blade: Blunt, wavy profile that tracks like a real blade in motion but won’t cut skin during normal use.
  • End latch: Traditional latch at the base keeps the trainer closed when you want it stowed.

In the hand, that translates to a 4.77-ounce trainer that doesn’t fight you. It spins, rolls, and fans with a predictability that lets you work on timing, not on compensating for bad balance.

Material and Balance: What Texas Collectors Actually Feel

Texans who collect brass knuckles already know the difference between display metal and working metal. This butterfly trainer sits on the working side. Steel handles mean you feel the swing. The dual-channel construction and through-holes keep it from getting handle-heavy. That balance is what turns reps into muscle memory instead of frustration.

The full blue matte finish keeps reflections down and gives it a single, unified look. No mixed metals, no halfway design. Just one continuous blue line from handle to Kriss-style blade, which makes it easy to track orientation while you flip. For Texas collectors who run both brass knuckles and blades in their kit, this kind of visual and weight consistency matters.

Texas Carry Culture and Practice Gear

Texas brass knuckles law changed the landscape in 2019, but the culture around carry and practice has been building for a lot longer. Most serious Texas buyers understand the difference between training hardware and live hardware. This piece plants itself squarely in the training category.

Texas Practice, Public and Private

At home, on private land, this trainer does what it’s meant to do: gives you endless, edge-free reps. On your own time, you can drill openings, closings, aerials, and flow patterns until they’re second nature. The steel weight makes every repetition count.

In public, Texas buyers still use common sense. A blue, blunt trainer reads different than a live blade, but it’s still a balisong form. The same Texas mindset that treats legal brass knuckles with respect applies here—know where you are, who’s around, and whether flipping in that moment is worth the attention.

Why This Trainer Belongs Next to Your Texas Brass Knuckles

If your collection already includes Texas brass knuckles, this trainer fills a specific slot: the practice piece that lets you build skill without blood and without babying the hardware. The steel build means it can take drops. The six-hole pattern means you’re not fighting dead weight. The Kriss-style blade shape means your eye and timing adapt well to live blades later.

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 September 2019, when the Texas Legislature removed knuckles from the prohibited weapons list in Penal Code 46.01 and related sections. That’s why there is now a clear, open market for Texas brass knuckles and for the broader metal culture that comes with it. On this site, legality in Texas is a given, not a question.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can lawfully possess and carry brass knuckles in most everyday settings. The same common-sense limits apply as with other legal weapons in Texas: certain secured areas, schools, and other restricted locations can have their own rules. But as a baseline, carrying brass knuckles in Texas moved from prohibited to legal in 2019, and that legal shift is the foundation of the modern Texas brass knuckles market.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best brass knuckles for Texas buyers are the ones that treat legality, metal quality, and hand feel as non-negotiable. Texas brass knuckles should be made from real metal, not brittle imitation alloys, with clean machining and a grip profile that fits your hand. Weight matters; finish matters; edge relief and finger spacing matter. Texas collectors look for pieces that feel like they were built to be owned, not just photographed. This same standard carries over to tools like this Six-Hole Kriss Balance Balisong Trainer—steel build, honest weight, and purpose-driven design.

Texas Collector Identity and Training Steel

Being a Texas brass knuckles buyer today means you understand both the law and the metal. You know that 2019 turned brass knuckles from a quiet niche into a legitimate Texas-legal category. You also know that once legality is settled, quality is the only thing left to argue about.

This blue Six-Hole Kriss Balance Balisong Trainer fits that identity. It’s straightforward steel, built to be used, with a design that takes training seriously. No fluff, no drama—just a balanced butterfly trainer that helps you put in the reps while your Texas brass knuckles wait on the shelf, legal and ready.

For Texas buyers who like their metal honest and their law settled, this is how a trainer should feel.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 4.77
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Kriss
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Training
Is Trainer Yes