Skip to Content
Carbon Weave Karambit-Ring Comb Knife - Carbon Fiber

Price:

3.99


Ghost Ring Disguise Comb Knife - Matte Black
Ghost Ring Disguise Comb Knife - Matte Black
3.99 3.99
Cosmic Disguise Karambit Comb Knife - Galaxy Purple
Cosmic Disguise Karambit Comb Knife - Galaxy Purple
3.99 3.99

Carbon Weave Discreet Comb Knife - Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/752/image_1920?unique=40c2d8f

15 sold in last 24 hours

Hot truck, long day, quick stop at a Panhandle gas pump. This comb knife rides in your pocket like any grooming tool, carbon weave quiet and forgettable. Slip the sheath, ring your finger, and that 3-inch hawkbill is working cord, tape, or banding before anyone knows it’s there. At 7.5 inches overall and featherlight, it carries easy in jeans or a truck organizer. Texans who like their tools unseen but ready will understand this one right away.

3.99 3.99 USD 3.99

CK2CF

Not Available For Sale

5 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

Comb knife built for the places no one looks

End of a shift outside Midland, wind pushing dust across the lot. You’re leaning on the truck, comb in your hand, straightening up before you head inside. Nobody pays attention. They shouldn’t. It looks like a plain carbon weave comb. Only you know that sheath slips clean, a karambit ring finds your finger, and a 3-inch hawkbill blade is suddenly ready to work.

This isn’t a showpiece. It’s a disguised fixed blade that rides like grooming gear and works like a quiet backup tool. In a state where people still notice what’s on your belt, a comb knife like this keeps your edge out of sight until you actually need it.

Why this hidden comb knife fits Texas carry culture

Across the state—from Dallas offices to Lubbock shop floors—folks still size you up by what’s clipped to your pocket. Most days, that’s fine. Some days, you’d rather your blades stay invisible. That’s where this comb knife earns its keep.

Sheathed, you’re holding about 4.5 inches of what looks and feels like a normal comb, teeth and all. It slides into Wrangler pockets, inside jacket pockets, or a center console bin without printing like a knife. When it’s time to cut pallet banding in a San Antonio warehouse or trim cord behind a bar in Austin, the motion is simple: pull, slip the comb sheath free, ring your finger, and cut. No flippers, no springs, no sound beyond steel doing its job.

Texas OTF knife buyers and the appeal of a disguised edge

If you already run an OTF knife as your main blade, you know the draw: instant deployment, one-handed, clean. But there are moments in Texas life where that OTF announces itself too loudly. A parent meeting at a Plano school. A late shift at a Hill Country tasting room. A courthouse square in a small town where everyone knows your last name.

This comb knife isn’t an OTF, but it answers the same need for speed and control without the visible hardware. The fixed blade is always there, nested in the carbon weave handle. The deployment is a practiced motion, not a button click. For Texans who like their primary blade to be an OTF knife and their backup to disappear in plain sight, this comb knife fills that second role with almost no learning curve.

Ringed retention when your hands are working

That karambit-style ring at the end of the handle isn’t a gimmick. Slide a finger through and the comb knife locks into the hand. On a humid Houston loading dock or a rainy night in Fort Worth, that ring keeps the 1.16 oz blade anchored when your grip is slick and time is short.

Hawkbill curve for controlled pulls

The silver 3-inch blade runs in a hooked, hawkbill profile. That shape excels at pull cuts—slicing zip ties on irrigation lines outside McAllen, taking down plastic wrap on feed pallets near Waco, or opening stubborn blister packs in a San Antonio shop. You’re not prying engine blocks with it; you’re making quick, clean cuts where control matters more than brute strength.

Texas OTF knife Texas buyers still ask: is this legal?

State law changed a few years back. Switchblades and OTF knives are legal statewide now, and there’s no blanket ban on concealed blades for most adults. But Texas law does draw a line at 5.5 inches of blade length for what it calls a “location-restricted knife.” Anything over that faces limits in certain places—schools, polling sites, bars that make most of their money on alcohol, and a few more.

This comb knife sits well under that mark. With a blade around 3 inches, it stays on the legal side of the everyday carry conversation for most Texans. It’s still a concealed blade, though, and the law always expects common sense. You wouldn’t walk into a courthouse in Kerrville or a secure area at DFW waving a folder; you don’t flash this either. It’s meant to stay quiet, do ordinary cutting work, and ride home without drama.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF knives and switchblades, are legal for adults to own and carry in most places. The key limit is blade length over 5.5 inches in certain restricted locations—schools, some government buildings, and establishments focused on alcohol sales. Most quality OTFs and this comb knife both land under that length, making them workable options for everyday Texans who stay aware of where they’re headed.

Concealed carry common sense from Amarillo to Brownsville

Just because you can doesn’t mean you should push it. In a Panhandle high school parking lot or a downtown Houston office tower, a low-profile tool is more welcome than a visible tactical rig. This comb knife respects that. It lives in your pocket, glove box, or grooming kit, looking like an ordinary comb until a job needs doing. Use it like a tool, and it’ll be treated like one.

How this comb knife actually rides and works in Texas

Pick it up and the first thing you notice is the weight—or lack of it. At 1.16 ounces, the carbon weave handle and sheath feel closer to a light plastic comb than a knife. It doesn’t drag on athletic shorts in a San Marcos gym, or print heavy in the pocket of dress pants heading into a downtown Austin elevator.

Overall length stretches to about 7.5 inches when the comb sheath is off. That gives enough reach for safe cuts on feed sacks in an East Texas barn or rope at a Hill Country campsite, without turning into a blade you have to baby in tight spaces. The carbon fiber pattern handle has just enough texture to hold steady when your hands are dusty, sweaty, or cold.

Disguised utility in everyday Texas settings

In a College Station student apartment, it sits on the bathroom counter as a comb until you’re breaking down boxes from a late-night delivery. In a Corpus Christi tackle box, it blends in with pliers and line cutters, but that hooked edge makes quick work of tough packaging and light cord. In a truck cab outside Odessa, it lives in the visor, ignored until plastic, nylon, or tape needs to go away fast.

Questions Texas buyers ask about OTF knife Texas tools and hidden blades

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed its ban on switchblades, including OTF knives, so adults can carry them in most situations. The main rule to remember is blade length: once you cross 5.5 inches, you’re dealing with a location-restricted knife and a list of places you can’t bring it. Stay under that mark—as this comb knife does—and pair it with a sensible OTF knife, and you’re within the law for normal daily life.

Where does this comb knife make the most sense in Texas?

Anywhere you’d rather attention stay off your gear. A barback on Sixth Street needing to open boxes without flashing steel. A nurse in San Antonio keeping a discreet cutter in a backpack. A ranch hand who already has a big fixed blade on the ATV but wants something low-profile in town. It’s not there to replace a full-size working knife; it’s there for the in-between places where a comb draws less curiosity than a clip on your pocket.

How does it compare to carrying a small OTF as a backup?

A compact OTF knife gives you one-handed deployment and a clear “this is a knife” profile. This comb knife trades the button for disguise. The action is slightly slower—pull, slip, ring in—but the tradeoff is that it reads as grooming gear until the moment you need it. If your main concern is speed, you’ll favor the OTF. If your concern is staying off people’s radar in sensitive spots across Texas, this comb knife starts to make more sense.

Why this disguised comb knife earns pocket time in Texas

Picture a late Sunday stop at a Buc-ee’s off I-35. You top off the tank, grab a drink, sort out some trash in the bed. A strap needs cutting, tape needs clearing. You reach for what looks like a comb, slip the sheath, and that curved silver edge does its work. No one stares. No one asks. The blade goes back under carbon weave, back into your pocket, and the moment is over.

That’s where this comb knife lives—quiet, useful, and almost invisible. For Texans who already trust an OTF knife as their main edge but want a second tool that keeps a lower profile, this carbon weave comb knife is the kind of thing you carry for a week, then realize you don’t leave home without.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Silver
Handle Finish Carbon fiber
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb