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Stealth Twin-Edge Micro Backup Neck Knife - OD Green

Price:

9.99


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Brush Country Twin-Edge Neck Knife - OD Green

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7585/image_1920?unique=5f46ef0

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Hot afternoon, cedar and mesquite thick as a wall. This micro neck knife rides flat under a T-shirt, OD green sheath against your chest. Six inches overall, double-edge spear point in matte black stainless, locked into a slim nylon fiber sheath on a neck chain. One clean pull and you’ve got a tight, ribbed grip and real point control. Backup on the lease, at the yard gate, or walking a dim parking lot after closing.

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MT632DGN

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Brush Country Backup Where Space Runs Tight

It’s August heat in the brush outside Junction. Cedar, mesquite, and pear close in on the two-track, and you’re easing through a fence line that doesn’t leave room for much gear. A full-size belt knife hangs up on every strand of wire. This twin-edge micro neck knife doesn’t. It rides flat under a T-shirt, OD green sheath against your chest, there when you need a real point and edge instead of fumbling for a folder.

At six inches overall, this compact fixed blade stays out of the way until the moment turns narrow. The matte black spear-point stainless blade carries a true double edge, built for straight-line cuts and controlled thrusts when you’re working in tight brush, a cramped cab, or a crowded parking lot stairwell. No flash, no shine. Just steel that does its job and disappears again.

Why This Feels Like the Right "Texas Neck Knife" Solution

Across the state, from a Corpus refinery turnaround to a Panhandle wind farm, space on your belt is spoken for—multitool, radio, maybe an OTF in the pocket. That’s where this neck knife earns its keep. The slim OD green nylon fiber sheath locks the black spear point in with a clean, positive snap. The neck chain routes under a work shirt or fishing hoodie, keeping the knife centered and quiet while you climb ladders, slide into a truck, or sit through a long drive on I-35.

When you pull, it’s one motion: thumb press, straight draw, point forward. The ribbed OD green handle plants into your hand without hot spots, even when sweat, rain, or coastal humidity slick everything else. In a state where folks might carry an OTF knife for quick pocket work, this neck blade steps in as the fixed backup—no hinge, no spring, no second chance if the lock fails. Just a rigid spine you can trust when the situation won’t tolerate a misfire.

Texas Carry Reality: Law, Discretion, and a Double-Edge Blade

Down here, the law finally caught up with how Texans actually carry. Automatic knives, OTF, and even double-edge designs like this one moved out of the shadows when the state loosened restrictions. You’re not worried about whether a switchblade is legal anymore; you’re thinking about size, intent, and where you’re headed that day.

This micro neck knife keeps its footprint small and its profile discreet. Worn under a shirt at a roadside diner, nobody sees a thing. Step out into a dark San Antonio parking garage after closing up shop, and that same hidden blade gives you a clear, fixed option if your gut says the situation isn’t right. It’s not a showpiece or a bar story. It’s a quiet answer to the question: what’s your backup if your primary knife is buried in a pocket or hanging off a seatbelt?

Double-Edge Confidence in Texas Conditions

From the slick mud along the Brazos to caliche dust in West Texas wind, conditions here don’t do folders any favors. Grit chews through pivots and detents. A compact, double-edge fixed blade avoids all that. The black stainless steel dagger profile bites clean through feed bags, zip-ties, nylon webbing, and shrink wrap in a warehouse dock without getting in its own way. Two sharpened edges mean you aren’t twisting your wrist to find the working side when your hand is already fighting for space.

Micro Fixed Blade Built for Everyday Texas Use

This isn’t a wall-hanger or box-queen. It’s meant to live in the heat, dust, and sweat. The handle’s OD green synthetic scales are molded with ringed ribbing that locks in under bare hands or thin work gloves. A small crossguard gives you a tactile stop so your fingers know exactly where the edge starts, even when your eyes are on a balky latch, a snarled rope, or a stray length of wire in the dark.

The flat pommel carries a lanyard hole, so if you’re running it on a rig in the Eagle Ford or bouncing between gates on a low fence, you can tie in a short drop cord. That keeps the knife from skittering into knee-high grass or deep gravel when you draw in a hurry. The molded sheath, also in OD green, has rivets set so you can strip the chain and lace it to MOLLE webbing on a plate carrier, sling bag, or ranch truck visor organizer if neck carry isn’t your style that day.

From Lease Road to Late-Night Run

On a deer lease outside Uvalde, it pulls duty as a quick cutter for cord, tape, and light camp chores when your larger blade is buried in a pack. Back in town, it’s the blade you still have on you in mesh shorts and a T-shirt when you run out for ice at eleven at night. Same knife. Different days. Same simple reach to the sternum and straight draw out of the sheath.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Backup Fixed Blade Question

Plenty of Texas buyers swear by an OTF knife as their daily driver—fast one-handed deployment, easy pocket carry, and legal under state law. But even the best Texas OTF knife shares one trait with every folder: a moving part that can fail at the worst time. That’s where a micro fixed blade neck carry closes the loop.

The smart move is pairing your favorite OTF with a compact dagger like this. One ride in the pocket, one ride on the chain. If dust, pocket lint, or a hard knock ever chokes your automatic, the neck knife doesn’t care. It isn’t waiting on a spring or button. When buyers look for the best OTF knife in Texas, they’re really building a system—primary in the pocket, backup on the chest. This piece is that quiet insurance policy.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Neck Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives, switchblades, and other automatics are legal to own and carry for most adults, with the main limits now tied to blade length and restricted places like schools, certain government buildings, and similar locations. That’s why many Texans run an OTF as a primary and add a small fixed blade like this neck knife as a backup—both fit within modern Texas knife laws when carried responsibly.

Can I wear this neck knife concealed at work or in town?

In most Texas towns, adults can legally carry a concealed fixed blade, especially at this compact size, as long as you’re not stepping into a prohibited location or violating your employer’s policy. This micro neck knife is built for discretion: OD green sheath, flat profile, matte black blade, and a chain that routes under a shirt. It stays out of sight in an office, shop, or feed store until you need to quietly cut rope, plastic banding, or stubborn packaging.

Do I still need this if I already carry a pocket or OTF knife?

If Texas life keeps you in trucks, tractors, refineries, or tight urban lots, having a second blade in a different position isn’t excess—it’s smart. A pocket knife can be trapped under a seatbelt, pinned under a package, or clogged with grit. This neck knife gives you a clean, fixed option from a different angle. One draw from the chest when your waist or pocket isn’t reachable can turn a bad moment into a non-event.

A First Draw You’ll Remember Somewhere in Texas

Picture a long day breaking down panels on a dusty place outside Coleman. Sun dropping, tools scattered in the bed, last wire bundle cinched too tight. Your main knife is in the truck cab, under a hoodie. No need to climb back in. Hand goes to your chest, thumb pops the sheath, and that black double-edge blade is working through stubborn wire wrap in two motions. Wind cuts across the pasture, cattle quiet in the next field. No drama, no show. Just a small, sharp answer riding against your sternum, ready for the next time Texas days get tight and hands need steel now, not later.

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