Blackout Sawback Field-Ready Tactical Blade - Matte Black
9 sold in last 24 hours
This tactical fixed blade isn’t decoration, it’s a tool. The matte black clip point gives you clean punctures and control, while the partial serrations and sawback spine chew through rope, webbing, and camp work without complaint. A full-tang steel blade and rubber grip lock into your hand and stay there. Belt sheath keeps it where it belongs—on you, not in a drawer. Built for buyers who expect a field knife to earn its ride.
Blackout Sawback Field-Ready Tactical Blade - Matte Black
The Blackout Sawback Field-Ready Tactical Blade is built for one thing: work. Full-tang steel, matte black clip point, partial serrations, and an aggressive sawback spine give you a fixed blade that doesn’t play at being tactical—it is. This is the kind of knife that lives on a belt, in a truck kit, or in a field bag and comes back dirty, not untouched.
Brass Knuckles For Sale Buyers Want Real Tools, Not Toys
If you’re the kind of buyer searching for brass knuckles for sale and other serious hardware, you already know the difference between showpiece and workhorse. This fixed blade lives in the same world: straightforward, durable, and built to be used. No chrome, no theatrics—just a matte black field knife with a sawback spine and partial-serrated edge that handles rope, webbing, light wood work, and camp chores without babysitting.
Where some shops drown you in disclaimers, we’d rather talk steel, edge, and grip. You’re an adult. You buy brass knuckles, knives, and gear because they serve a purpose. This tactical fixed blade earns its place next to the rest of your kit.
Brass Knuckles For Sale Mindset, Tactical Fixed Blade Execution
The same mindset that drives people to buy brass knuckles—decisive, unbothered, practical—applies here. This blade is full-tang steel with a matte black finish that cuts glare and shrugs off abuse. The clip point runs lean enough for controlled punctures and fine work, while the partial serrations near the handle tear through cord, strap, and stubborn material when a clean edge isn’t the right answer.
The sawback spine isn’t decoration. It’s there for quick notches, light sawing, and those moments when you need bite more than polish. In other words, this knife does in the field what brass knuckles do in close quarters: simple, focused work with no sentimentality attached.
Material And Build: What Matters To Serious Buyers
Collectors and working users both care about the same thing: build quality. The Blackout Sawback Field-Ready Tactical Blade runs a full-tang steel construction from tip to pommel, which means the blade and handle core are one solid piece. You’re not dealing with a flimsy stick tang hidden in cheap plastic. It takes impact, torque, and prying without crying uncle the first time you lean on it.
Matte Black Clip Point, Partial-Serrated Edge
The clip point gives you a sharp, controllable tip for detail cutting and puncture work. The matte black finish helps with corrosion resistance and keeps reflection to a minimum—important when you don’t feel like broadcasting your position with a flash of polished steel. The partial-serrated section near the handle is there for dirty cutting jobs: rope, nylon, webbing, small branches, and anything that doesn’t care about a smooth finish.
Sawback Spine And Full-Tang Confidence
The sawback along the spine earns its keep for quick notching and light sawing—stakes, notches for line, and rough shaping in camp or field setups. Paired with the full tang and a solid, rubberized grip, you get a knife you can choke up on, push, pull, and twist without wondering if the handle will give before the job does.
Legal Landscape: Same Straight Talk As Our Brass Knuckles For Sale
You’re used to it if you buy brass knuckles: the law isn’t the same everywhere, and you check your state before you hit checkout. Knives are no different. Fixed blade knives like this are generally legal to own in most states, but carry rules, blade length limits, and "tactical" profiles can trigger local restrictions.
We don’t run from that, we respect it. This tactical fixed blade is sold as a tool—field, camp, duty, or kit use. Ownership is broadly legal across the U.S., but you’re responsible for knowing how your state and city treat open carry, concealed carry, and blade length. Same adult standard we apply to our brass knuckles for sale: we offer the gear, you know your ground.
Built To Ride On A Belt, Not Sit In A Box
The handle is rubber with deep grooves, shaped to lock your hand in whether it’s wet, muddy, or gloved. The flat pommel with a lanyard hole gives you tie-off and retention options if you want to dummy-cord it to a rig or pack. The included sheath runs belt carry, which is where this kind of knife belongs. A snap closure keeps it in place until you need it, then it clears leather fast.
This is a fixed blade you keep where you can reach it. If you’re the type who keeps brass knuckles in a specific drawer, glovebox, or case because you expect to put them to work someday, this knife fits the same pattern: reachable, ready, unpretentious.
Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale
Are brass knuckles legal to buy?
In the United States, brass knuckles are legal to buy and own in some states, restricted or banned in others, and sometimes sit in a gray area where material or intent matters. States like Texas, Arizona, and a handful of others have loosened restrictions, while places like California, New York, and Illinois treat brass knuckles as prohibited weapons. Laws change, and local ordinances can be stricter than state rules. Before you buy brass knuckles, you check your state and city law; that’s how serious buyers operate.
What material are quality brass knuckles made from?
Serious brass knuckles for sale are usually cut from solid brass, steel, or aluminum alloys, not mystery pot metal. Solid brass knuckles have that heavy, dense feel collectors look for. Steel versions tend to be slimmer and tougher against deformation. Aluminum keeps weight down for pocket or kit carry. The same rule that applies to this full-tang steel fixed blade applies to knucks: if the material feels cheap and hollow, it probably is.
What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?
Buy brass knuckles like you’d buy this tactical fixed blade: focus on material, machining, and legality. Look for solid brass or quality metal, clean cuts, no sharp flashing, and finger holes sized for real hands, not toy proportions. Check your state’s stance on possession, carry, and material definitions. And buy from a shop that treats brass knuckles as real gear for adult buyers, not as a novelty joke. The same collector eye that spots a solid full-tang knife will spot a good set of knucks.
Why This Tactical Fixed Blade Belongs In A Serious Kit
If you’re hunting brass knuckles for sale, you already understand the value of compact, decisive tools. The Blackout Sawback Field-Ready Tactical Blade lives in that same lane: full-tang steel, matte black finish, clip point control, serrations and sawback for rough work, and a sheath that keeps it on your belt where it belongs. No lecture, no apology—just a fixed blade that does its job. Add it to your kit for the same reason you buy brass knuckles: you prefer having the right tool on hand when things get real.
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Theme | None |
| Sheath/Holster | Sheath |