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Predator Edge Survivalist Combat Knife - Black Cord Wrap

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Brushline Stronghold Survival Combat Knife - Black Tanto

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9449/image_1920?unique=2868c6a

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South of Sonora, where cedar thickets close in and rock cuts run tight, a good fixed blade matters more than talk. This 14" full-tang survival combat knife brings a 9" black tanto blade with spine serrations, a green cord-wrapped handle, and a belt-ready sheath with sharpening stone. It rides quiet, chops, saws, and pries without complaint. For Texans who keep a real knife in the truck, on the ranch, or packed for deer camp, this is the tool that doesn’t blink.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

HK7130140B

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When the Road Turns to Caliche and Gut Checks

Somewhere past the last gas station outside Ozona, the pavement ends and the questions start. Out there, a fixed blade either earns its keep or rides home in the glove box unused. The Brushline Stronghold Survival Combat Knife - Black Tanto was built for that stretch of road, where mesquite, barbed wire, and bad timing don’t care how pretty your gear looked online.

This is a 14-inch full-tang survival combat knife with a 9-inch black American tanto blade and spine serrations. The handle is wrapped in green cord that bites into your palm when sweat, dust, or creek water make everything else slick. It carries on your belt in a nylon sheath with a sharpening stone tucked in, because in this state, a dull knife is dead weight.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Fixed Blade That Rides Backup

If you already run an OTF knife for Texas everyday carry, you know its lane: fast, clean cuts, legal across the state, pocket-ready. But once you leave the office park and hit a ranch gate, deer lease, or pipeline right-of-way, a lightweight folder isn’t the only answer. That’s where this survival combat knife comes in — not to replace your OTF, but to do what a Texas OTF knife can’t.

The long tanto profile gives you a strong tip for prying feed sacks off rusty nails, working into hog bone, or popping open an old padlock that’s seized to a gate. The partial serrations along the spine aren’t decoration; they’ll bite into nylon rope, light brush, or a brittle cedar limb when you’re trying to clear a shooting lane in Hill Country limestone and scrub. Your OTF knife Texas carry handles the fine work. This fixed blade handles the fights.

Built for Real Texas Ground, Not Display Cases

On a fence line outside San Angelo, you don’t worry about mirror polish or collector steel. You care if the blade takes a beating, sharpens back up, and doesn’t chip when you run into wire, knots, or bone. The stainless steel here is coated in a matte black finish that shrugs off glare and doesn’t scream for attention. It’s not trying to be pretty; it’s trying to be there when you need leverage.

At 12 ounces, this knife feels like something — enough weight to chop, baton kindling, or dig a stuck broadhead out of a mesquite trunk, but light enough that it doesn’t drag on your hip when you’re walking long senderos or climbing in and out of a blind ladder. The full-tang construction runs all the way through the handle, so when you twist hard or bear down, you’re driving steel, not hollow marketing.

From Pineywoods to Permian Brush Country

In East Texas pine, that black tanto blade will slice through wet rope, cut saplings for a quick ground seat, and split kindling when the bottom drops out of a December front. Out toward Midland, it becomes a truck knife — opening feed bags, trimming hose, scraping gasket material, and riding in the sheath behind the pickup seat, ready for the one time you really wish you’d brought something bigger than your pocket OTF.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Think About Laws. This Fixed Blade Plays Its Part.

Texas knife laws are straightforward now. As of 2017, so-called switchblade and OTF knife restrictions were lifted. Adults can legally carry an OTF knife in Texas, and this survival combat fixed blade rides in the same legal comfort zone for most day-to-day carry. The term the statute uses is “location-restricted knife,” which covers blades over 5.5 inches, whether it’s an OTF, a bowie, or a combat-style fixed blade like this one.

With a 9-inch blade, this knife is over that 5.5-inch mark, which means it’s legal to own and carry in many places, but there are specific spots where you leave it in the truck. Schools, bars that get most of their money from alcohol, secure government buildings, and some large public events fall under those restrictions. The same rules that apply to a big OTF knife Texas carry also touch this survival combat knife — the law cares about length and location, not how the blade deploys.

Using This Knife Within Texas Law

On private ranch land, in deer camp, on a work site that doesn’t prohibit larger blades, this full-tang tanto is right at home. Slip it on your belt over your jeans, ride out, and work. But walking into your kid’s school event, a courthouse, or a bar in Fort Worth’s West 7th, you leave both your large OTF knife and this survival combat blade locked in the center console. Knowing the difference is how Texans stay both armed and on the right side of the law.

Why a Survival Combat Knife Backs Up Your Texas OTF Knife

A Texas OTF knife shines when you’re cutting twine, opening packages, or trimming hose under the hood in a Buc-ee’s parking lot. But if you’ve ever dressed a hog under a red lamp near Hondo or tried to clear a line of greenbrier off a lease road with a small folder, you know its limits. That’s when 14 inches of full-tang steel wrapped in cord starts to make sense.

The green cord-wrapped handle does two jobs. First, it gives you grip when your hand is slick with sweat, blood, or oil. Second, if you really have to, you can strip some of that cord for emergency lashings — a quick shelter rig along the Llano, a busted strap patched on a feeder, or a makeshift wrap on a cracked tool handle. The lanyard loop at the pommel lets you tie off to your wrist when working around steep creek banks or from the bed of a truck, so a slip doesn’t send your blade clattering into brush or dark water.

Texas Tasks This Knife Handles Without Complaint

Think about quartering a hog in the South Texas heat, when time matters and bone dulls a weak blade. Picture batoning mesquite for a small, hot fire in West Texas wind where you can’t waste matches or patience. Consider cutting nylon strap on a busted deer blind, or sawing through stubborn light brush to clear your view down a Sendero. These are not kind jobs. This survival combat knife was built for that kind.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas and Fixed Blade Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas knife laws, OTF and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry for adults. The key factor is blade length, not the deployment style. Any blade over 5.5 inches — whether it’s an OTF knife, bowie, or a survival combat fixed blade like this — is treated as a location-restricted knife. You can legally carry it in most everyday settings, but you must leave it out of certain places such as schools, 51% bars, some government buildings, and specific large public events. Your pocket-sized Texas OTF knife usually falls under that 5.5-inch line; this 9-inch fixed blade does not, so you plan accordingly.

Is this survival combat knife practical for Texas ranch and lease use?

On a working place between Gonzales and Uvalde, this knife makes more sense than a drawer full of small folders. The 9-inch tanto blade cuts feed bags, trims small limbs off senderos, and handles field dressing duty on hogs and deer. The spine serrations give you a rough saw when you hit stubborn brush or nylon strap, and the full-tang build lets you pry without babying it. Paired with your everyday OTF knife Texas pocket carry, it becomes your heavy tool — the one you reach for when a smaller blade feels uncertain.

How do I decide between carrying only an OTF knife and adding this fixed blade?

If most of your day is spent in town, in an office, or around locations where length restrictions matter, a compact Texas OTF knife as your only blade makes sense. But if your week regularly takes you down caliche lease roads, into thick river bottoms, or onto construction sites, adding this survival combat fixed blade expands what you can handle. The OTF covers precise cuts and fast one-handed work. This knife covers chopping, prying, heavy cutting, and rough jobs that punish a lighter mechanism. Texans who move between city limits and open country often carry both — a clean OTF in the pocket, and a full-tang workhorse on the belt or in the truck.

First Use Somewhere Between the Gate and the Tank

Picture a late-season evening outside Brady. The sun’s dropping behind live oaks, the wind’s got teeth, and the feeder jammed an hour before dark. You step out of the truck, unclip the nylon sheath, and feel the weight of that black tanto blade in your hand. One clean pull through a stubborn strap, a few fast chops through brush, and the job’s back on track. Your pocket OTF stays ready for the fine work. This survival combat fixed blade handles the rest. That’s how Texans carry — the right tool for the land they live on.

Blade Length (inches) 9
Overall Length (inches) 14
Weight (oz.) 12
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Cord wrap
Theme Tactical
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Lanyard loop
Carry Method Belt carry
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath