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Stealth Tanto Quick-Deploy Neck Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

9.99


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Midnight Sentinel Quick-Deploy Neck Knife - Black Cordwrap

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4675/image_1920?unique=87eb69a

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Heat’s rolling off the blacktop and your shirt sticks to your back. The backup riding under your collar stays flat and quiet. This quick‑deploy neck knife draws clean from its molded sheath, the black cord‑wrapped handle locking into your grip. Eight inches of matte black tanto steel made for cutting cord, tape, or trouble without printing through a thin tee. It’s the kind of blade Texans keep close—light, simple, and ready when hands go from work to defense in a breath.

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When Your Primary Knife Is Buried Under a Work Shirt

Summer on a Houston loading dock, shirt untucked, hands full of strapping and shrink wrap. Your main folder is clipped inside a front pocket, but with both arms loaded, it might as well be in the glovebox. What you can reach is the blade riding flat against your chest. One pull on the cord, sheath drops, and that matte black tanto is in your hand before the pallet jack stops rolling.

This quick-deploy neck knife was built for the moments a full-size blade is too far, too slow, or too obvious. All-black, no shine, no flash—just eight inches of fixed steel that disappears under a tee and shows up fast when it counts.

Why Texans Reach for a Neck Knife Instead of an OTF Knife Texas Buyers Already Own

A good OTF knife Texas carriers rely on lives in a pocket or on a belt. It opens fast, but it still has to clear fabric, dodge seatbelts, and fight with dust and grit. This neck knife answers a different problem—access without fishing around, and a fixed blade that doesn’t care about sand, sweat, or caliche dust.

The tanto tip drives through tough plastics and thick tape the way a good roofing knife chews through felt. The straight cutting edge works clean on cord, zip ties, and banding. The skeletonized tang keeps weight down, while the black cord wrap gives your fingers something solid when your hands are slick with sweat or oil. It’s the blade you reach for when the switchblade stays clipped but the job won’t wait.

Midnight Sentinel Design: Fixed, Flat, and Built for Real Use

At roughly eight inches overall, this quick-deploy neck knife splits the line between tiny backup and full-duty cutter. The blade runs a chisel-inspired tanto profile in black-coated stainless steel—matte enough not to flash under yard lights or a truck’s dome light. Spine jimping near the handle gives your thumb purchase when you choke up to strip wire, cut hose, or break down a busted cardboard pallet in the alley behind a San Antonio shop.

The tang is skeletonized to drop weight, with long cutouts that help the knife ride light on a neck cord without dragging your collar down. Over that tang runs a tight black cord wrap, braided to give texture and grip without adding bulk. No scales to swell, crack, or peel in the heat—just steel and cord, the way plenty of ranch hands and oilfield hands prefer their backup blades.

The molded synthetic sheath locks the blade in with a clean click. Turn it upside down, bounce around on a washboard lease road outside Midland, and it stays put. But a straight pull breaks it free without a fight. The included clip lets you shift from neck carry to belt, boot, or MOLLE when the day calls for something different than under-the-shirt carry.

Carrying This Instead of Another Texas OTF Knife on Belt

A Texas OTF knife in the pocket is perfect for most days—opening feed sacks in the Panhandle, cutting nylon line on a bay boat near Rockport, trimming hose in a Dallas garage. But there are days and jobs where a second, fixed blade closer to centerline simply makes more sense.

Under a light fishing shirt on the Gulf, this neck knife rides flush, out of the salt spray, and clear of life jacket straps. Under a fleece in Amarillo wind, it stays accessible even with gloves on, while a folder might vanish under layers. When you’re crawling under a trailer, wedged on your side, this blade hangs where you can still reach it, not buried under your hip.

You can run the cord high and tight for true neck carry, or thread the sheath to sit horizontally on a belt at 12 or 1 o’clock. Either way, the profile is thin enough that it doesn’t print through a tee or snag when you slide into a bucket seat or a cloth bench in an older truck.

Texas Knife Law, Fixed Blades, and Where This Neck Knife Fits

Texas used to be tight on what you could carry. That shifted. Today, adults can carry knives openly or concealed, including switchblades and OTFs, with very few blade-length limits outside certain “location-restricted” places—schools, polling locations, some government buildings, and a few others spelled out in statute. A fixed-blade neck knife like this falls under those same rules, with no special restriction just because it hangs from a cord instead of sitting in a pocket.

Know your surroundings. Walking from your truck to a deer lease cabin outside Junction, wearing this knife under a shirt is ordinary, legal, and practical. Stepping into a school gym or courthouse is a different story. Texas law favors responsible adults who know where they are and what they’re carrying. This blade is purpose-built to stay discreet and under control, not to draw attention.

Reading the Law Like a Texas Carrier

If you already searched “are OTF knives legal in Texas,” you know the answer came back in your favor. Same mindset applies here: size, intent, and location matter more than mechanism. You treat this neck knife the way you treat your everyday Texas OTF knife—respectful carry, clear understanding of restricted locations, and no drama.

Why a Fixed Neck Knife Backs Up Your OTF in Texas Heat

Folders and automatic blades have moving parts and springs. They get gunked up with dust on a West Texas lease road or clogged with fine sand on Padre. A simple fixed blade like this shrugs it off. Rinse, wipe, back on the cord. When sweat, sand, or clay gum up your main OTF knife Texas heat has been baking all afternoon, this one still comes out and cuts.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Neck Knives and Backup Blades

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. For adults, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry in Texas, both open and concealed. There’s no special ban on the mechanism. The main limits today are on certain "location-restricted" places—schools, polling locations, secure government buildings, and a few others. Blade length matters in some of those spots, but for most daily carry—truck, ranch, shop, lease—you’re in the clear as long as you’re not walking into a restricted site. This fixed-blade neck knife fits under those same rules.

Can I actually wear this neck knife all day in Texas heat?

You can. The skeletonized tang and molded sheath keep weight down, so it doesn’t drag at your collar when you’re running fence lines outside Laredo or stocking a storefront in Waco. The black cord wrap won’t glare in the sun, and it stays grippy when sweat runs down your back. Under a light tee or fishing shirt, it disappears until you need to cut rope, tape, or line.

Do I need this if I already carry a Texas OTF knife every day?

If your OTF never leaves your pocket and you’re never twisted up under equipment, seatbelted in, or layered up in winter, maybe not. But most Texans find themselves pinned under a trailer, wedged in a tractor cab, or stuck behind a steering wheel on I‑35 when they need a blade. Having a dedicated, fixed backup centered on your chest or belt means one hand and one pull gets you steel, even when your main knife is covered or out of reach.

Built for That Quiet Moment Before Things Go Sideways

Think of a night run from San Angelo to Abilene, two-lane blacktop, not much traffic, only a few gas stations open. You step out to check a loose strap, wind throwing grit across the shoulder. Under your shirt, the neck knife rides steady against your sternum. One hand frees the sheath, the other clears the strap, and in ten seconds you’re cutting and retying without dragging your primary blade through road filth.

That’s where this quick-deploy neck knife earns its keep—not as a showpiece, but as the simple, blacked-out part of your kit that’s always there, always sharp enough, and never in the way. It’s what a Texan carries when they’ve learned that one knife is good, but a quiet, fixed backup near centerline is better.

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