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GripMaster Cord-Wrap Enhanced-Hold Metal Knuckles - Black

Price:

7.99


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Cord-Locked Control Impact Knuckles - Black Metal

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1888/image_1920?unique=55434da

4 sold in last 24 hours

A late run down I‑35, hands still damp from the heat, and these metal knuckles don’t shift an inch. The cord-wrapped frame plants deep in your palm, spreading that 5.5 oz of weight so every edge lands solid. Compact enough for a console kit or range bag, dark enough to stay quiet when it needs to. Built for lawful self-defense setups and training where grip can’t be a maybe.

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PW817BKC

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Cord-Locked Control When Things Get Close

There are times on a Texas back lot, in a dim bay behind a shop, or walking out of a late game when distance disappears faster than you’d like. In those tight spaces, big gear stays in the truck. What you have in your hand is what you can count on. These metal knuckles were built for that moment — compact, cord‑locked, and settled deep into your palm before anyone else realizes you’re ready.

The frame runs just 4.6 inches long and 2.75 across, small enough to sit clean in a glove box, gym bag, or locked box in the truck without catching attention. At 5.5 ounces, it isn’t hollow novelty weight; it fills the hand with a grounded, centered feel. The metal base gives the structure. The cord wrapping gives you the control.

Grip That Holds Through Heat, Sweat, and Stress

On a August night in Houston, anything metal can turn slick. Same story working traffic control outside a rodeo in San Antonio, or moving between bars in Deep Ellum when the humidity hangs heavy. Bare metal knuckles can slide when your hands are wet. This cord‑wrapped build fixes that problem the simple way: friction and texture everywhere you touch it.

The black cord threads around every finger hole and the lower palm bar, creating a cushioned, non‑slip surface. When you clench, the wrap compresses just enough to seat into your grip, then bites back with texture. Even with sweat, rain, or oil from a shift in the shop, those four rings stay anchored. The angular outer edges of the metal still carry the strike, but your hand rides on cord — less bite into your own palm, more stability where it matters.

This isn’t decorative paracord tossed on for looks. It’s full‑coverage wrapping done for retention. If you’ve ever had a smooth metal tool jump in your hand at impact, you’ll feel the difference the first time you close your fist around these.

Texas Buyers, Brass Knuckles, and the Law

Anyone looking at metal knuckles in this state has the same question first: is this even legal here? For years, knuckles sat in the same bucket as switchblades in Texas — banned more on paper than in practice, but banned all the same. That changed on September 1, 2019, when the law shifted and made knuckles legal to possess and carry for adults in Texas.

Under current Texas law, knuckles are no longer listed as prohibited weapons. That means you can buy, own, and carry metal knuckles like these, so long as you’re not a prohibited person and you’re not bringing them into places that have their own rules — courthouses, certain schools, and secure government buildings. City ordinances and private properties can still set their own restrictions, so a bar in Austin or a venue in Dallas can decide they don’t want them inside.

These knuckles are designed with that new legal landscape in mind: simple metal construction, no hidden blades, no gimmicks that cross into other weapon categories. Just a straightforward self‑defense impact tool that fits into a modern Texas carry setup. As always, it’s on you to stay current with local regulations and use them lawfully, but the state statute isn’t stacked against you anymore.

How Cord-Wrapped Metal Knuckles Fit Real Texas Carry

A lot of Texans build layered defense. Maybe a handgun where it’s lawful and sensible, maybe a knife, maybe pepper spray. Knuckles like these fill the close‑in gap — when space is tight, reaction time is short, and you don’t have the distance or justification to reach for something more.

In a truck console off a farm road outside Lubbock, they sit quiet under registration papers, cord wrap keeping them from rattling on plastic. In a work bag riding the DART line, they tuck into an inner pocket between gloves and a small flashlight. At home in a nightstand in a San Antonio apartment, they take almost no space, but give your empty hand a serious upgrade if someone shouldn’t be at your door.

The compact 12 mm thickness is enough to create a solid bridge between your fingers and the metal edge, but not so bulky that it prints through cloth bags or light jackets. The black finish on both metal and cord keeps reflections down. Nothing flashy, nothing bright. Just a low‑profile impact tool that doesn’t call attention to itself until you need it.

Training and Controlled Use Across the State

Plenty of Texans who buy metal knuckles never expect to throw a real punch with them. They’re adding them to a self‑defense collection, building out a shop display, or using them for controlled training in gyms that actually teach how to move with an impact tool instead of just talking about it.

In that context — a grappling gym in El Paso that runs occasional weapons integration nights, or a private self‑defense class in a Fort Worth warehouse — the cord‑wrapped grip becomes more than comfort. It keeps the frame planted during drills, so students learn realistic control instead of fighting their own gear. The wrap reduces hot spots on the palm when you’re working repeated strikes into pads, and that means more reps before your hand gives out.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers and Why They Add Knuckles

A lot of the same people who search for the best OTF knife in Texas end up here. If you’re already running a Texas OTF knife in your pocket or on your belt, these knuckles make sense as the other half of your close‑quarters setup. Your OTF is your edge tool — opening feed bags, cutting tie‑downs, or serving as your primary defensive blade when the situation justifies it. The knuckles are what you reach for when going to an edge isn’t appropriate or there simply isn’t time to deploy one.

In a cramped stairwell in a Dallas high‑rise, on the narrow steps of an old Galveston rental, or between tight pickup rows at a small‑town dealership, range of motion is limited. An OTF knife Texas carrier might not always get a clean draw. But slipping your fingers through cord‑wrapped metal you’ve staged in a jacket pocket or bag corner is fast, direct, and less likely to escalate a situation the way a visible blade can.

For Texas OTF knife owners who care about building a lawful, layered kit, cord‑wrapped metal knuckles like these bring the impact option into play without overcomplicating your carry. Same idea as having both a blade and a blunt tool in a ranch truck — different tools for different problems, all within what state law allows.

Balancing Edge and Impact in Texas Carry Culture

Across the state, from refineries in Port Arthur to feed stores in Abilene, people who carry tools for a living understand the value of options. A Texas OTF knife covers cutting work and last‑ditch defense at range. These cord‑wrapped knuckles answer the question of what to do when distance disappears and you need a way to strike with more authority than an empty fist.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Brass Knuckles

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its old switchblade restrictions, and OTF knives fall under the broader "location‑restricted knife" category based on blade length, not deployment style. For most adults, owning and carrying an OTF knife in Texas is legal, as long as you respect restricted locations like certain schools, bars that derive most revenue from alcohol, and secure government facilities. Local rules and private property policies can still limit what you bring inside, so it pays to read the signs and know where you’re walking.

Are metal knuckles like these legal to own and carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, knuckles are no longer a prohibited weapon. Adults in Texas can legally buy, own, and carry metal knuckles such as this cord‑wrapped set. That said, you’re still responsible for how and where you carry them. Private property owners, event venues, and certain secured locations can set stricter rules. If you’re heading into a courthouse, secure government office, or any place posting clear weapon restrictions, leave them locked in the vehicle or at home.

How should I stage these alongside my Texas OTF knife?

Think in layers. Many Texans keep their OTF knife front‑pocketed for work and general cutting tasks. These knuckles ride better in a bag, truck console, or inner jacket pocket, where they’re accessible but not on display. For late‑night gas stops along I‑10 or walking across a dim parking lot in Midland, you can slip your fingers into the cord‑wrapped frame while your OTF stays clipped. If things stay calm, nobody ever knows. If they don’t, you’ve got a solid impact tool without introducing a blade.

Is this overkill if I already carry a handgun in Texas?

Most Texans who add knuckles to their kit don’t see them as competition for a handgun. They see them as a lower‑level option when lethal force isn’t appropriate or legal, but doing nothing doesn’t feel smart either. In a crowded Buc‑ee’s, on a busy sidewalk in Austin, or at a small Friday night football game, drawing a firearm can escalate a problem into something you can’t walk back. Cord‑wrapped knuckles give your empty hand more authority while staying inside a different use‑of‑force line.

Built for the Moments You Hope Don’t Come

Picture a late drive back from a shift in Odessa, fuel light on, pulling into a quiet station off the highway. You step out, grab the pump, and slide your hand into your bag or door pocket. Fingers find the familiar texture of that cord‑wrapped metal. You don’t brandish it. You don’t show it. You just settle it into your grip while you scan the lot.

If nothing happens, it slips back into its place and your night goes on. If something does, your hand is no longer empty. In a state where people take their safety and their tools seriously, these cord‑locked metal knuckles belong right alongside that Texas OTF knife, flashlight, and the rest of the gear that keeps you ready when the road gets quiet and the air feels wrong.

Weight (oz.) 5.5
Theme None
Length (inches) 4.6
Width (inches) 2.75
Thickness (inches) 0.472
Material Metal
Color Black