Skip to Content
Survival Bastion Knuckle-Guard Fixed Blade Knife - Black

Price:

21.99


Blackout Field Guardian Hunting Knife - ABS Black
Blackout Field Guardian Hunting Knife - ABS Black
17.99 17.99
Razor Talon Tactical Karambit Knife - Black Steel
Razor Talon Tactical Karambit Knife - Black Steel
12.99 12.99

Backroad Breacher Fixed Survival Knife - Black Knuckle Grip

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9332/image_1920?unique=be11c9d

11 sold in last 24 hours

West of Abilene, when the pavement gives way to caliche and cattle guards, this fixed survival knife earns its space on your belt. The knuckle-guard handle locks your hand in when things turn rough. A 7.5-inch stainless blade with gut hook and serrations works through rope, hide, and brush. The hard sheath rides secure, with a fire starter and compass ready when the weather shifts fast. This is what lives in a Texas truck door, not a dresser drawer.

21.99 21.99 USD 21.99

FX13717

Not Available For Sale

7 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Built for the Backroads, Not the Display Case

Out past the last streetlight, when you're easing a half-ton over a washed-out ranch road, the knife on your belt matters more than the one in your drawer. The Backroad Breacher Fixed Survival Knife - Black Knuckle Grip was made for that stretch of dirt between the gate and the tank, where your hands are cold, the light’s gone, and you still have work to finish.

This isn’t a showpiece. It’s a full-size fixed survival knife with a brass-knuckle style handle, a 7.5-inch stainless blade, and a hard sheath carrying its own fire starter and compass. It belongs in a Texas truck console, in a feed truck door pocket, or on the hip of someone who spends more evenings under open sky than fluorescent light.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers Looking for a Serious Fixed Blade Alternative

A lot of Texans start out searching for an OTF knife Texas carry can handle every day. They want something fast in hand for rough neighborhoods in Houston, long drives across West Texas, or late-night stops on I-35. Then they see a knife like this and realize there’s another lane: a fixed survival knife that trades pocket discretion for truck-ready presence and raw leverage.

Where an OTF lives clipped inside your pocket, this survival knife rides outside—on the belt, on a pack strap, or lashed inside a ranch truck. The knuckle-guard handle gives you a locked-in grip when you’re climbing over rock or wading through flooded low-water crossings. The partial-serrated clip-point blade, with its gut hook, switches from cutting baling twine to dressing a hog without a tool change. Different tools, same mindset: one-hand confidence when the situation shifts fast.

Blade Built for Real Texas Work, Not Just Talk

The Backroad Breacher runs a 7.5-inch stainless steel blade with a satin finish, long enough to reach past thick brush and deep into a tough job. The clip point gives you control at the tip for finer work—splitting kindling, opening feed bags clean, or getting under tough hide in the back of a mule deer or a Hill Country hog.

Along the spine near the handle you get partial serrations, meant for the kind of stubborn material every Texan runs into: heavy nylon rope in a trailer, plastic stock tanks, rubber hose on a windmill line. When a straight edge starts skating, those teeth bite and pull through. Near the tip on the spine is a gut hook that makes quick work of field dressing, opening an animal without driving too deep and spoiling meat.

The full profile and spine give the blade enough meat to pry, twist, and baton through mesquite or live oak kindling. Stainless steel shrugs off sweat, mud, and that fine West Texas dust that creeps into everything, needing more use than babying.

Handle and Sheath Designed for Texas Carry Reality

The most obvious feature is that knuckle-duster style handle: four finger holes that lock your hand down behind a matte black, rubber-textured grip. When you’re working wet—on a coastal marsh, on a slick dock in Rockport, or around a busted water line in January—you don’t have to fight to hang on. The grip is simple: it stays in your hand until you decide to let go.

Texas buyers aren’t carrying this in dress slacks. It lives on a belt over jeans or work pants, rides on a chest rig, or stays sheathed in the door panel of a pickup. The hard plastic sheath is made for that kind of life. It’s rigid, easy to clean, and built with slots and cuts that make it simple to thread onto a belt or strap. It doesn’t collapse, it doesn’t soak up water after a surprise Hill Country thunderstorm, and it doesn’t care if it rides through a week of caliche dust.

On the pommel, a pointed glass-breaker gives you one more tool when a wreck goes bad on Highway 6 or a county road creek crossing. A trapped door or stuck window becomes a problem you can solve, not a headline.

Texas Knife Law, Fixed Blades, and How This Fits

Folks who search for a Texas OTF knife usually have one question first: is it legal. Since 2017, state law has opened things up. Texas removed its old switchblade ban, and later changed the code so that most knives—automatic, OTF, fixed, and otherwise—are legal to own and carry for adults in most places, as long as you respect location restrictions like schools, certain government buildings, and some events.

This Backroad Breacher is a fixed survival knife over 5.5 inches, so it fits Texas law as what the state calls a "location-restricted knife." That means an adult can carry it openly or concealed in most everyday Texas settings—your property, ranches, lease land, in your vehicle, on the road, in most workplaces that allow it. Where you need to be cautious is bringing a blade this size into places Texas specifically restricts: schools, bars that make most of their money from alcohol, some sporting events, and secure government buildings. Local policies may be stricter, and private property rules always win at the door.

This knife was built with ranches, leases, rural work, and backcountry in mind. If you're looking for something for downtown office carry in Dallas, an OTF knife or smaller folder is likely a better match. For the days that start with feed and end with headlights pointed at a gate after dark, this fixed blade is the right kind of legal and the right kind of serious.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers, Meet a Different Kind of Confidence

If you’ve been hunting for the best OTF knife in Texas for fast urban carry, you already understand the value of readiness. This knife just moves that mindset out of your pocket and onto your belt. Instead of a slim double-action mechanism, you get a solid, unmoving tang. Instead of a discreet clip, you get a full-profile sheath with its own survival kit attached.

The integrated fire starter rides in the sheath, right beside a button compass. If you’ve ever misjudged daylight on a deer lease near Sonora, or followed the wrong sendero in South Texas brush as the sun dropped hard, you know why that matters. Being able to throw sparks into dry grass or cedar shavings without digging through a pack turns a long mistake into a manageable night.

The compass isn’t meant to replace a topo map and experience, but it gives you a quick check on direction when cell service dies between small towns. Together with the glass breaker and the aggressive handle, this knife carries like a compact survival kit built around a blade that can take abuse.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options and Fixed Blades

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

For adults, yes—under state law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal to own and carry in most of Texas. The old switchblade ban is gone. What still matters are the length rules and location restrictions. Longer blades, including many OTFs and fixed survival knives like this one, are treated as location-restricted knives. You can carry them in your vehicle, on ranches, leases, and in most everyday settings that allow tools, but you need to keep them out of schools, certain government buildings, bars focused on alcohol sales, and some events. Always pair state law with local and property rules.

Is the Backroad Breacher a good fit for a Texas deer lease or hog hunt?

That’s exactly where it belongs. The 13-inch overall length gives you reach for dealing with hogs in thick brush and leverage for breaking down deer at camp. The gut hook speeds clean opening without slipping too deep. Serrations handle rope, straps, and the tangled mess around feeders and blinds. The knuckle-guard handle keeps your grip solid if things get rushed or bloody, and the fire starter and compass built into the sheath mean that even if your pack gets left in the buggy, you’re not without options when the light dies on a back fence line.

Should I choose this fixed survival knife or a smaller Texas OTF knife for everyday carry?

It comes down to where you spend your days. If most of your time is in town—office buildings, courthouses, places with security and posted policies—a compact Texas OTF knife or folder is usually the smarter daily carry. It slips into a pocket, draws less attention, and still gives you fast one-handed access. If your week looks more like fence lines, lease roads, long drives between rural job sites, or late-night runs across the Panhandle, this Backroad Breacher makes more sense. It’s easier to grab from a truck door in a hurry, tougher for heavy cutting, and better suited to the kind of problems you only find away from pavement.

First Night Out With It, Somewhere Between Town and the Tank

Picture a cold front rolling through just after sundown outside San Angelo. You’re at the back of the place, gate shut behind you, truck pointed toward a set of working pens you still haven’t fixed. The wind picks up, sky goes from gray to black, and the temperature drops harder than the forecast promised.

You step out, belt carrying the Backroad Breacher at your side. One hand finds the knuckle grip without looking. The blade pulls clean from the hard sheath. Rope cuts, tarp straps give, kindling splits. When you decide you’re not driving back in the dark without at least a small fire to see your breath by, the fire starter throws sparks into dry grass and cedar curls. You glance at the compass, get your bearings, and know exactly which way the house lights sit, far beyond the mesquite. This isn’t a knife you forget at home. It’s the one that earns its place every time you roll past the last mailbox.

Blade Length (inches) 7.5
Overall Length (inches) 13
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Plastic
Theme Tactical
Handle Length (inches) 5.5
Pommel/Butt Cap Glass breaker
Carry Method Belt sheath
Sheath/Holster Hard sheath