Skip to Content
Signal Grid Compact EDC Backpack - Purple

Price:

25.99


Urban Shield Transit-Ready Double Carbine Case - Urban Gray
Urban Shield Transit-Ready Double Carbine Case - Urban Gray
83.99 83.99
Street Sentinel Cat-Ear Self-Defense Ring - Black Boron Carbide
Street Sentinel Cat-Ear Self-Defense Ring - Black Boron Carbide
1.99 1.99

Signal Grid Urban-Ready EDC Backpack - Purple

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7424/image_1920?unique=b7a7997

14 sold in last 24 hours

Afternoon heat’s still holding in the grocery lot when you swing this compact EDC backpack out of the truck. That bold purple shell stands out; the MOLLE and patch panel keep it squared away. A 396 cu. in. main compartment, smart front pockets, and four compression straps pull tight for a quiet, close ride. Bottom straps lock in a jacket or tripod. It’s the pack you grab without thinking—organized, compact, and ready for a Texas day that doesn’t slow down.

25.99 25.99 USD 25.99

CVEDP3056PR

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Compact Carry Built for Long Texas Days

The sun’s barely cleared the grain silos when you sling this compact EDC backpack over one shoulder. Purple pops against caliche dust and parking lot concrete alike, easy to spot in the cab of a work truck or under a classroom desk. It rides small, but the structure and straps say it’s meant for more than just hauling a laptop from one air-conditioned room to the next.

At about 396 cubic inches in the main compartment, this isn’t a hiking ruck. It’s the everyday pack that lives by the front door, goes from Houston light rail to a Hill Country trailhead, or rides shotgun on the way from jobsite to night class. The boxy profile and firm shell keep it from sagging, even when you load it with a water bottle, med kit, light jacket, and whatever else your day in this state throws at you.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Still Need a Pack That Keeps Up

If you’re the kind of person searching how to buy an OTF knife in Texas, you already care how gear carries. This compact EDC backpack speaks the same language—modular, tight to the body, and built to keep essentials where your hands expect them to be.

The front face runs MOLLE webbing across both external pockets, giving you attachment points for a small med pouch, flashlight sheath, or a horizontal sheath for that Texas OTF knife you keep close but discreet. The wide hook-and-loop patch panel on the upper pocket is ready for blood-type tags, agency IDs, ranch brand patches, or the unit logo you picked up from a buddy at Fort Cavazos.

Instead of fishing through a cavernous main compartment like a road-worn duffel, you’ve got a clean layout: one primary 396 cu. in. compartment for the bulk of your load, then two zippered front pockets to break out what matters most—keys, OTF knife, small light, notepad, spare mag, pressure bandage. The organization keeps your hand from fumbling when you’re digging around in the dark cab west of Abilene.

How This Pack Rides in Real Texas Terrain

From the paved sprawl of San Antonio’s Loop 410 to a dusty lease road outside Lubbock, carry comfort shows up quick. This compact EDC backpack stays tight thanks to four compression straps: two on the sides, two tying into bottom attachment points. Draw them down and the load hugs your back instead of bouncing like a loose cooler in a ranch truck.

Along the bottom run two sturdy adjustable straps, built for more than show. Roll up a light shell for a Panhandle cold snap, lash down a small tripod for glassing Rio Grande brush country, or cinch in a folded blanket for Friday night lights in Odessa when the wind cuts harder than expected. That extra carry without extra bulk is what makes this pack pull double duty between town and pasture.

Urban Texas Carry That Doesn’t Broadcast “Tactical”

The tactical lines are there—MOLLE, patch panel, webbing—but the bold purple shell shifts the message. Walking into a Houston office tower or a Dallas campus, it reads as personal and sharp, not like you’re headed for a live-fire range. That matters in a state where you can carry a Texas OTF knife legally, but still prefer your gear not to shout for attention.

From Campus to Lease Road Without a Gear Swap

In College Station or Lubbock, this is the pack that holds a tablet, charger, slim notebook, and that legal OTF knife in a side pouch during the week. Come Saturday, the same layout carries tourniquet, gloves, compact trauma kit, and a flashlight when you’re running fence or checking feeders. No need to re-pack your life every time the setting changes.

Where Texas OTF Knife Culture Meets Smart Organization

In a state where more folks are asking whether OTF knives are legal to carry and then going out to buy one, the next question is always where to keep it. This compact backpack answers that cleanly. The front pockets and MOLLE strips make it simple to stage a sheath or clip an OTF knife where your hand lands naturally—front, center, and accessible without advertising it.

Zippered compartments keep gear contained on bumpy roads from Uvalde to Sonora. The synthetic shell shrugs off sweat, dust, and the occasional Dr Pepper spill in a Buc-ee’s lot. Reinforced stitching at stress points means those compression straps don’t start to creep or fray after a summer of being yanked tight in triple-digit heat.

The black hardware and webbing keep contrast sharp without looking loud. Buckles snap positive, easy to work with dry hands, or the kind that just handled diesel, cedar posts, or fryer grease from a late shift. All of it plays into the same quiet promise: when you’re thinking about Texas knife laws or how you’re going to carry that new Texas OTF knife day to day, this pack won’t be the weak link.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About EDC Backpacks

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry. The old restrictions on automatic knives were removed from the Penal Code years back. What still matters is blade length and location. If your blade qualifies as a "location-restricted knife"—over 5.5 inches—you can’t carry it in certain places like schools, polling locations during voting, some government courts, and a few other restricted areas. Most everyday OTF knives fall under that length and can be carried openly or concealed across the state. Always check local ordinances and stay current on state law, but as it stands, Texans can legally carry OTF knives.

Will this compact EDC backpack handle both city and ranch carry?

It will. The 396 cu. in. main compartment is enough for daily city carry—tablet, charger, small med kit, light jacket—without feeling oversized on a Houston sidewalk or Austin bus. The MOLLE webbing, patch panel, and bottom straps let you move straight into ranch or lease use, strapping on a med pouch, running a small tool roll, or securing a jacket for early rides in a Uvalde deer blind. You’re not switching packs when you leave pavement.

Is this the right pack if I’m already running a Texas OTF knife on my belt?

If your OTF knife is already riding IWB or on a belt sheath, this backpack becomes your support hub. Front pockets stage gloves, trauma gear, spare flashlight, and batteries. MOLLE lets you clip a backup fixed blade or multi-tool. For Texans who like redundancy—one blade on the body, one in the bag—this pack gives you a clean, compact platform without hauling a full-size ruck to the office, shop, or range.

Why This Compact EDC Backpack Fits a Texas Day

Picture a late September evening north of Waco. Heat’s finally bleeding off the asphalt, high school lights cut through the haze, and you’re sliding into metal bleachers with this purple pack at your feet. Inside there’s a light pullover for the fourth quarter, a small first-aid kit, a spare battery pack, and that legal OTF knife sitting clipped in an inner pocket where you can reach it if the need arises.

Same bag rides with you on Sunday, tossed behind the seat as you hit a lease road choked with mesquite and dust. Nothing fancy. Just a compact, squared-away EDC backpack that takes the shape of your life here—commute, class, range day, pasture check—without slowing you down or shouting for attention. In a state that treats tools like part of the uniform, this is the kind of pack a Texan keeps ready by the door.

No Specifications