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Forge-Mark Ring-Pommel Cleaver Fixed Blade Knife - Black Wood

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10.99


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Forge-Ring Hammered Fixed Blade Cleaver Knife - Polished Wood
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Forge-Mark Ring Control Cleaver Fixed Blade Knife - Black Wood

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Late light, truck tailgate down outside a Hill Country lease. This compact cleaver fixed blade knife rides your belt, not your toolbox. The hammered stainless edge stays steady through game prep, cord, and feed bags, with a ring pommel that locks your hand in when it’s slick. Black wood scales and full tang balance it; the nylon sheath keeps it tight to your side. This is the kind of small fixed blade Texans reach for first.

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FX664SB

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
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Forge-Mark Ring Control Cleaver Fixed Blade Knife in the Texas Workday

Sun’s barely over the windmills and the air still smells like dew and diesel. You’re at the back of the truck, moving from feed sacks to fencing wire, cutting twine, trimming hose, breaking down boxes for a burn pile. This compact cleaver fixed blade knife sits on your belt, light enough to forget, ready the second you need it. The hammered stainless blade looks like it’s seen a forge, not a showroom, and it cuts like it was made for mornings just like this.

At just over seven inches overall, with a 3.375-inch cleaver edge, it fits tight to the body but outworks knives twice its size. The ring pommel and forward finger cutout in the blade give you two solid grip options: locked-in when your hands are wet, choked up when you’re doing detail work. Black wood scales keep the handle warm in winter and steady in August sweat. This isn’t a kitchen cleaver pretending to be a field tool; it’s a fixed blade built for Texas chores.

Why This Compact Cleaver Fixed Blade Knife Belongs on a Texas Belt

Most days in this state, a knife sees more rope and feed than anything else. On a lease outside Sonora, in a shop outside Lubbock, or behind a food truck in San Antonio, you need a blade that bites clean and stays put in the hand. The full tang on this cleaver fixed blade runs straight through to the ring pommel, so you feel steel from index finger to little finger. There’s no flex, no rattle, just a solid working edge.

The hammered stainless finish does more than look good. It shrugs off the dust from a caliche road, the moisture from a cooler full of ice, and the grease from a brisket trim. The broad cleaver-style profile spreads pressure across the cut, so it glides through thick cardboard, zip ties, and plastic banding without twisting. For a Texas buyer who wants a fixed blade that works from pasture to parking lot, this compact cleaver makes sense the second it hits your palm.

Carry Culture and This Texas-Smart Fixed Blade

Texas knife carry has its own rhythm. A lot of folks keep a folder in the pocket and a fixed blade on the belt, especially once you get outside the loop of any big city. This cleaver fixed blade knife was built for that kind of carry. At 5.97 ounces, it rides light but not flimsy. The nylon sheath hugs the belt, sitting close enough that it doesn’t snag seat belts, tool bags, or low gates.

Step into a feed store in Weatherford, a hardware shop in Amarillo, or a butcher trailer at a county fair, and you’ll see variations of the same setup: compact fixed blade, easy reach, no drama on the draw. The ring pommel makes this one even more secure. Hopping in and out of a tractor, crawling under a trailer, or climbing into a deer blind, that ring keeps the knife rooted to your hand when you draw and re-sheath without looking.

Texas Knife Law Confidence with a Fixed Blade

Knife laws here changed years back, and a lot of buyers still ask the same question: what can I legally carry? Under Texas law, most adults can carry pretty much any kind of knife they want, including fixed blades and even what used to be called switchblades or OTF knives, as long as blade length and location rules are respected. This cleaver fixed blade knife sits well under the five-and-a-half-inch blade benchmark that used to complicate things and still gives peace of mind in more sensitive settings.

It isn’t a dagger, it isn’t double-edged, and it doesn’t look like you’re headed to a movie set. In a state where lawmen, ranch hands, line cooks, and mechanics all carry cutting tools, this knife reads like what it is: a work blade. Whether you’re around town, on the jobsite, or running between school events and errands with a truck bed full of weekend projects, this compact cleaver stays firmly in the “tool, not trouble” category.

Controlled Power: Ring Pommel and Cleaver Edge in Texas Conditions

Summer on a Panhandle farm means sweat, dust, and gloves that never quite dry. That’s when a ring pommel earns its keep. Slide a finger through the ring, and this fixed blade locks into your hand even when everything else is slick. The forward finger cutout in the blade lets you choke up for trimming fuel line on a side-by-side, cleaning up a deer quarter on a tailgate, or cutting the tough knots out of a length of rope.

The cleaver profile brings straight-line power. Cutting through heavy nylon straps on a pallet in a Dallas warehouse, slicing through thick plastic feed buckets, or breaking down boxes behind a bar in Fort Worth, the edge bites and tracks true. Stainless steel means you can wipe it on a jeans leg, run it under a tap at the wash station, and get back to work without babying it.

Hill Country Lease: Game, Camp, and a Small Fixed Blade

At a deer camp off a rocky creek, space in a pack or on a belt matters. This compact cleaver fixed blade knife pulls double duty. It handles food prep at the fire ring—chopping onions, trimming fat, slicing sausage—then turns around and helps you break down a hog or deer without feeling out of place. The ring pommel keeps your grip steady when your hands are cold, tired, or slick, and the sheath lets you drop it on a belt or lash it to a pack strap without flopping around.

Shop Bench in a Texas Garage

In a two-car garage in Katy or a metal outbuilding outside Abilene, there’s always something that needs cutting. Window film, hose, paracord, leather, foam board—this cleaver fixed blade lives on the workbench or at the edge of the pegboard, close enough to grab, tough enough that you don’t worry about nicking it on metal or dropping it on concrete. The black wood handle stands up to oil and grime yet cleans up fast.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About a Compact Cleaver Fixed Blade Knife

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. What used to be called switchblades and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry in Texas. The bigger concern now is where you carry and the overall blade length. This compact cleaver fixed blade knife falls into the same broad freedom: it’s legal for most adults in most places, but you should always check for any local restrictions and pay attention to specific locations like schools, certain government buildings, and events with dedicated security.

Is this compact cleaver fixed blade practical for everyday Texas carry?

For a lot of Texans, yes. If your day runs from jobsite to grocery store to ballfield, a small fixed blade like this tucks under a shirt and rides quiet on the belt. The short 3.375-inch edge is long enough for real work—cutting hose, slicing tape, trimming line—without feeling overbuilt. It’s a good fit for buyers who want more strength than a folder and don’t mind wearing a sheath.

How does this knife compare to a traditional hunting knife in Texas?

A classic clip-point hunting knife still has its place, especially for detailed field dressing. This compact cleaver fixed blade knife trades some of that pointed precision for straight-line cutting power and control. On a South Texas ranch or a Panhandle lease, you’ll reach for it more for camp chores, game quartering, and general utility than for caping. It’s the blade that handles the work around the hunt as much as the hunt itself.

First Cut: Putting This Compact Cleaver to Work in Texas

Picture a late fall evening on a gravel drive outside a metal shop. The sun’s dropping behind a line of mesquite, and the wind’s starting to pick up. You’ve got a stack of boxes to break down, a length of hose to shorten, and a cooler to prep for a morning run. Your hand finds the black wood handle without looking; the ring pommel seats your grip as the hammer-textured blade flashes in the last light. One clean bite through cardboard, one steady draw through rubber, one easy slice of butcher paper. No drama, no fuss—just a compact cleaver fixed blade knife that feels like it’s been on your belt for years. That’s how Texans decide what stays in the rotation.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 7.125
Weight (oz.) 5.97
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Hammered
Blade Style Cleaver
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Wood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 3.75
Tang Type Full tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Ring
Sheath/Holster Nylon