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Phantom Rotation Tactical Throwing Axe - Black Nylon

Price:

22.99


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Range-Line Throwing Tactical Axe - Black Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9347/image_1920?unique=fa7463f

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Evening’s cooling off out past the last windmill. Beer cans on a stump, a mesquite log for a backstop. This 14.5-inch tactical throwing axe comes out of the truck, matte black steel and cord-wrapped handle ready to work. Seven inches of sharpened edge with a spike on the back bite and stick clean. Nylon sheath rides on your belt or in the door pocket. Not a wall hanger. A tool you don’t mind beating up across a long Texas weekend.

22.99 22.99 USD 22.99

FX6185

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Carry Method
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Range-Line Steel That Belongs Behind a Texas Truck Seat

Out past the last yard light, the sky opens up and the mesquite starts. That’s where this 14.5-inch tactical axe makes sense. It rides quiet in its nylon sheath behind a truck seat or in the door pocket, black steel blending in with dust, maps, and spent 12-gauge hulls. When you step out to check a gate, walk a fence line, or set up a throwing line by the tank, it comes alive in the hand — straight, balanced, meant to fly.

This isn’t a camp hatchet with a fat wood handle. The profile is lean, tomahawk-style, built for throwing and quick work. Seven inches of sharpened edge up front with a spike on the back, cutouts through the head to trim weight, and a full-length handle wrapped in nylon cord for grip when your palms are dusty or wet.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Also Reach for a Trustworthy Axe

If you already carry an OTF knife in Texas, you know a blade isn’t just a showpiece. It opens feed bags, cuts baling twine, and splits old hose off a barbed-wire patch. This tactical axe fills the same role on a larger scale. Where your Texas OTF knife handles what’s at arm’s length, this throwing axe extends your reach — for fun, for practice, and for field tasks out past the barn.

The matte black blade finish shrugs off glare under a high sun. Good quality steel takes a keen edge and holds it through plywood, pallets, and seasoned mesquite rounds you drag up for a backstop. In the same way a Texas OTF knife snaps open with intent, this axe leaves your hand on a strict line, nose-heavy enough to bury but not so thick that it fights you in flight.

Texas OTF Knife Culture and the Place of a Tactical Throwing Axe

Texas buyers who ask where to buy an OTF knife Texas-side are usually the same folks who appreciate a clean, no-nonsense throwing axe. Both tools live in the same world: trucks, lease roads, tank dams, and backyard ranges laid out along a fence. This 14.5-inch tactical axe just picks up where your pocket blade stops.

The cord-wrapped handle runs a full 7.5 inches, giving you room to choke up for close work or slide back for more rotation in the throw. That same wrap that feels at home next to a paracord bracelet or rifle sling locks in your grip when you’re sweating through August or throwing in a cold blue norther. The flat metal butt cap gives a solid end point, so you know exactly where the handle ends without looking.

Built for Texas Ground: From Caliche Lots to Mesquite Breaks

Texas ground is hard, unforgiving. Caliche eats cheap blades. Mesquite and live oak laugh at soft steel. This axe’s black steel blade is cut and ground to stay in the fight. At 7 inches by 3.375 inches, the head has enough surface to bite and stick into railroad ties, stumps, and deadfall without feeling like a boat anchor.

You’ll notice the way it tracks in the air. The slim handle and cutouts in the head trim weight where it doesn’t help, keeping most of the mass up front. That balance lets you throw from different distances — three, four, even five rotations — without wrestling the arc. On the ground, the spike side punches into wood and light material clean, making it useful for breaking down scrap, knocking free nailed pallet boards, or setting up targets on a wind-swept lease road.

The nylon sheath is more than an afterthought. Riveted and snapped, it was built to ride on a belt, lash to a pack, or stow in a truck. Walking a pipeline right-of-way, you can carry it at your side without it swinging wild. Hung inside a ranch truck, it stays put over cattle guards and washboard roads.

Knife Laws, OTF Blades, and Carrying a Tactical Axe in Texas

Anyone looking up whether OTF knives are legal in Texas is already tuned in to how the law treats blades. Since 2017, state law removed the old switchblade ban, and most automatic and OTF knives are legal to own and carry, with length-based restrictions mainly tied to certain locations and age in some cities and schools. Axes and tomahawks fall under the same general knife and "location-restricted knife" framework: legal to own and carry, with common-sense limits on places like schools, courthouses, and similar restricted locations.

How This Tactical Axe Fits Texas Carry Culture

This 14.5-inch throwing axe isn’t an everyday belt piece for going into town. It’s a tool you carry on private land, at the lease, on rural property, or to a dedicated range — the same places you’d freely run drills with your Texas OTF knife and other gear. On your own acreage, it’s as natural as a branding iron in the barn.

In a truck or UTV, the nylon sheath keeps the edge covered and the spike under control. You can slide it along the floorboard, wedge it beside a ranch jack, or strap it to the rack without worrying about it chewing into seats or straps. When you step out past the last cattle guard, you unbutton the snaps and get to work.

OTF Knife Texas Owners, One More Edge in the Arsenal

If your pocket is already spoken for by a Texas OTF knife, this axe simply fills in a blank spot. Where the OTF handles fine cuts, this takes on impact. It’s the tool you hand a friend when you set up a throwing lane behind the barn or clear brush along an old fence row. The two together — OTF in pocket, axe by the truck — cover most steel work you’ll meet in a Texas week.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas and Tactical Axes

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. As of the 2017 law change, OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives are legal to own and carry across the state, with restrictions focused on certain locations and, in some cases, age limits for carrying knives over 5.5 inches. You still have to respect posted rules and prohibited places like schools, courthouses, and some government buildings. On your own property, at the lease, or in most day-to-day settings, a Texas OTF knife is lawful carry gear.

Is this 14.5-inch tactical axe practical for Texas land, or just for throwing?

It’s built first as a throwing axe, but Texas ground rarely lets a tool stay single-purpose. The spike side works for breaking light debris and prying into scrap, while the sharpened edge will handle small chopping, shaping targets, or trimming dead limbs off a fence line. It won’t replace a full-size felling axe, but it earns its spot in the truck as a compact impact tool that also throws true at the end of the day.

How should a Texas buyer decide between another OTF knife and this axe?

If you’re asking whether to buy another OTF knife Texas style or add a tactical axe, look at what you already own. If your pockets and console already hold more folders and autos than you carry, this axe adds a new dimension. It gives you range, impact, and a way to train rotation, accuracy, and control that benefits your knife work too. For many Texans, the right move is an OTF in the pocket, a solid fixed blade on the belt, and a throwing axe like this one riding in the truck.

First Throw on Texas Dirt

Supper’s done. The air cools down over a caliche drive and a stand of mesquite. You walk out with this axe in its sheath, pick a spot on a stump, and pace off your line. The handle fills your grip, cord tight under your fingers. One slow breath, a smooth step, and you let it go. The black head turns once, twice, then bites into the wood with a sound you feel in your chest. Out here, with dust under your boots and a truck silhouette behind you, it doesn’t feel like a toy. It feels like another piece of Texas steel doing exactly what it was made to do.

Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 14.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Normal Straight
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Nylon
Theme Tactical
Handle Length (inches) 7.5
Pommel/Butt Cap Flat
Carry Method Belt carry
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath