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Hunt Down Legacy M1 Garand Replica Bayonet - Black Steel

Price:

31.99


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Hunt Down Combat Replica Bayonet Knife - Black Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9348/image_1920?unique=4551ef4

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Hot afternoon on a Hill Country lease, rifle cased in the truck and this Hunt Down combat replica bayonet riding your belt. Fourteen inches overall, with a 9.5-inch spear-point blade and push-button lock that snaps clean from its hard sheath. Textured synthetic handle stays planted when it’s wet, muddy, or gloved. It’s a WWII M1 Garand style bayonet built for today’s ranch work, range days, and anyone who respects a fighting blade that still puts in honest utility.

31.99 31.99 USD 31.99

FX6768

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
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  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
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  • Handle Length (inches)
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Hunt Down Steel for Texas Ground

Out past the last gate, where the caliche road turns to ruts and mesquite, a long rifle and a long blade still make sense. This Hunt Down combat replica bayonet isn’t a wall-hanger. It rides on your belt or in your truck, a full-length fighting knife patterned after the old M1 Garand bayonets that saw hard use long before any of us were born.

Fourteen inches overall, with a 9.5-inch spear-point blade and central fuller, it feels like a rifle-borne blade even when it’s in your hand. The black matte finish doesn’t flash in bright Panhandle sun or under a barn light. That yellow HUNT DOWN skull mark is the only loud thing about it, sitting on a blade built for work and trouble.

Why a Texas Buyer Reaches for a Bayonet Knife

Most days, a small folder handles feed bags and tape. But there are times in West Texas brush or on a South Texas lease when you want reach, leverage, and a knife that’s closer to a short sword. That’s where this Garand-style bayonet knife earns its keep.

The spear-point profile drives straight through tough material: boar hide on a cleanup cut, thick nylon rope on a trailer, or layered canvas and leather in the back of a side-by-side. The long blade gives you room to choke up near the guard for finer work, or slide back on the handle when you need power in a downward cut, working through a stubborn cedar limb or heavy plastic barrel.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers and the Appeal of a Full-Size Bayonet

Plenty of Texans search for an OTF knife when they want speed and presence in pocket carry. But some jobs call for more steel than most OTFs can offer. This Hunt Down bayonet knife answers that gap for the same buyer who respects a fast-deploying Texas OTF knife, but knows a rifle-length fixed blade has its own place in the truck.

Where an OTF knife Texas ranch hand might keep clipped in his jeans for quick, one-handed cuts, this bayonet lives on the belt or behind the pickup seat. When hogs are down in the creek bottom and you’re finishing the work by headlamp, a 9.5-inch plain edge gives control and reach an automatic just can’t match. The push-button lock that releases it from the hard plastic sheath gives you a clean, no-fumble draw even with cold or gloved fingers.

Range Days, Reenactments, and Ranch Work

Texas ranges see everything from AR pistols to old M1s. This replica bayonet pairs well with that crowd. On a military rifle day at a private range outside San Antonio, it looks right hanging from your gear, yet it still cuts targets, cardboard, and field-expedient stakes when you’re setting steel.

For reenactors and history-minded shooters around Houston, Dallas, or Abilene, the Garand-style ringed guard and curved pommel echo the WWII pattern, while the modern synthetic handle and black coating stand up to mud, sweat, and repeated hard scabbard draws.

Build That Holds Up From Pineywoods to Big Bend

Texas covers more ground types than most states combined. A bayonet that’s just a costume piece won’t last long in that mix. This Hunt Down bayonet knife runs a full-length steel blade with a matte black coating to shrug off humidity near the Gulf and dust out west. The central fuller lightens the blade without making it flimsy, so it still feels ready for prying, batoning, or clearing brush around a blind.

The 4.5-inch handle uses textured synthetic scales that don’t swell, crack, or turn slick when you move from a cold Panhandle morning to a warm truck cab. That texture is mild enough not to chew your hand over a long day, but grippy enough that sweat and blood don’t make it twist free. The straight guard keeps your fingers off the edge when you’re driving the point into dense material or working in close quarters around bone.

Its hard plastic sheath locks onto the bayonet with a push-button release built into the handle hardware. That means when you step out of the truck in tall South Texas grass or climb a ladder stand in East Texas timber, the knife isn’t working itself loose. It only comes free when you press that button and mean it.

Riding on a Texas Belt or in the Truck

On a belt, the sheath rides close and flat, better suited to ranch pants or heavy jeans than office wear. It’s the kind of knife you throw on with boots and a work shirt, knowing you may end up clearing a shooting lane, breaking down a hog, or knocking together a quick camp at the end of a lease road.

Behind a truck seat or in a door pocket, it stays quiet until needed. The hard sheath keeps the edge off upholstery and tools, and the push-button draw lets you get that long blade in hand without wrestling straps or snaps.

Texas Knife Laws, Bayonets, and OTF Culture

Texans worry about legality for good reason. Laws here used to separate out switchblades and certain blade types, and folks still ask about it. These days, though, Texas knife laws are straightforward: large fixed blades, bayonets, and even an automatic or OTF knife are legal for most adults in most everyday places, with a few location-based exceptions like schools, courthouses, and certain government buildings.

That means you can keep this full-size bayonet in your truck, on your land, or on your belt during a night hog hunt or a day setting out feeders. The same buyer who checks if an OTF knife is legal can rest easier knowing that a Garand-style fixed blade like this sits solidly within current Texas law when carried in ordinary, lawful settings.

Understanding Bayonet Carry in Texas

While the law doesn’t single out bayonets anymore, common sense still rules. You won’t walk into a downtown Austin bar or a Houston office tower with a fourteen-inch military bayonet on your belt without drawing the wrong kind of attention. But headed from your driveway to a lease, a private range, or your own acreage, this knife is as acceptable as a long gun in a rear window rack.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options and Bayonets

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its old switchblade restrictions, so automatic and OTF knives are legal for most adults. The main limits now are about places, not mechanisms or blade styles. Schools, certain government buildings, and a few other locations are off-limits for any serious blade. Around your property, in your truck, or on a lease, an OTF knife and a fixed bayonet like this Hunt Down are legal tools when carried responsibly.

How does this replica bayonet compare to a Texas OTF knife for real use?

A Texas OTF knife wins on pocket carry and one-handed convenience. This Hunt Down bayonet wins on reach, leverage, and presence. On a deer lease outside Junction, the OTF handles tags, cord, and small camp chores. The bayonet handles clearing low limbs, breaking down hogs, or any job where nine and a half inches of steel matter. Most serious Texas knife owners end up with both: an OTF in the pocket, a bayonet or big fixed blade in the truck.

Is this Hunt Down bayonet practical, or just for collectors?

It scratches the itch for WWII M1 Garand history, but the materials and design are built for real use. The steel blade, synthetic handle, and hard sheath hold up in red dirt, Gulf humidity, and Hill Country rock. If you want a glass-case bayonet, look for polished parade brass. If you want a replica you can drag through South Texas cactus and still hang on the wall at night, this one fits.

First Use on Familiar Texas Ground

Picture a cool front pushing through after a brutal summer, sky wide and clean over the lease. You’re at the tailgate off a Farm-to-Market road, rifle case open, this black bayonet riding the belt. You thumb the push-button, draw the blade free, and the length of it feels right in the open air. You clear a few limbs off a shooting lane, finish a hog in the dark, or stake down a wind-whipped tarp at camp. No drama, no ceremony. Just a long, honest fighting knife that works like it belongs on Texas ground, same as you.

Blade Length (inches) 9.5
Overall Length (inches) 14
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Plastic
Theme Military
Handle Length (inches) 4.5
Pommel/Butt Cap Integrated pommel
Carry Method Belt carry
Sheath/Holster Hard plastic sheath