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Outpost Hammer-Back Compact Tactical Hatchet - Black Powdercoat Wood

Price:

19.50


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Outpost Dual-Strike Tactical Hatchet - Black Powdercoat Wood

https://www.buybrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/7091/image_1920?unique=e57e027

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This is the tactical hatchet you pack once and stop second-guessing. A black powdercoated head with a clean-biting edge and hammer-back handles camp chores, staking, and light demolition without drama. Full-tang steel runs through a carved wood grip, reinforced with stainless for control when things are wet, cold, or rushed. At 12 inches and about 26 ounces, it rides easy on the belt in its leather sheath and hits harder than it looks.

19.50 19.5 USD 19.50

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Outpost Hammer-Back Tactical Hatchet – Built To Work, Not Pose

The Outpost Hammer-Back Tactical Hatchet is a compact field tool for people who actually cut, split, stake, and pry instead of just talking about it. A black powdercoated head, full-tang construction, and grooved wood handle give you a hatchet that bites clean, hits square, and carries light. This isn’t a wall hanger. It’s a 12-inch, roughly 26-ounce workhorse that earns space on your belt or in your pack the first time you swing it.

Why This Tactical Hatchet Belongs In Your Kit

Look at the lines and you know what it’s for. The broad tactical hatchet blade gives you enough edge to process camp wood and clear brush without needing a full axe. The hammer-back lets you drive stakes, taps, or hardware without chewing up the spine. It sits in that sweet spot where one tool covers the bulk of your camp chores without weighing you down or taking up half your pack.

The head wears a matte black powdercoat that shrugs off moisture and glare. The edge runs bright and clean against that black, so you can see exactly what you’re doing when you’re splitting kindling at dusk or working in mixed light. The profile is aggressive enough for real chopping, but compact enough to maneuver in tight spots around vehicles, posts, and gear.

Built Right: Material, Finish, And Full-Tang Strength

Construction matters more than marketing. This tactical hatchet is full tang, which means the steel runs in one solid piece from the blade through the end of the handle. No hidden joints, no mystery connections. You feel that in the swing – the energy goes into the cut, not into flex and rattle.

Black Powdercoat Head With Hammer-Back

The hatchet head is dressed in a black powdercoat finish that resists rust and doesn’t flash sunlight every time you move. The cutting edge is left bright and honed, giving you a clear visual line when you’re laying into wood or carving down stakes. On the back side, the hammer surface is squared for honest impact – driving tent stakes, tapping wedges, or persuading stubborn hardware without needing a separate hammer.

Wood Grip, Steel Reinforced

The handle is carved wood, not hollow plastic. Grooved and darkened, it locks into your hand and still looks like a tool, not a toy. Stainless steel reinforcement plates ride along the tang, adding lateral stiffness and spreading out impact forces when you’re swinging hard or striking off-center. The curve of the handle pulls the edge into the cut and seats the hammer-back naturally under your palm when you choke up closer to the head for control work.

A lanyard hole at the base gives you the option of a wrist cord or a dummy cord to your pack. Use it or don’t. The point is, the build gives you options instead of excuses.

Carry And Use: Compact Tactical Hatchet That Actually Packs

Plenty of axes call themselves "compact" and still ride like boat anchors. This one doesn’t. At about 12 inches overall and roughly 26 ounces, the Outpost Hammer-Back Tactical Hatchet sits in that ideal middle ground: enough head weight to chop and drive, but short enough to strap to a pack side, ride on the belt, or tuck in a vehicle door pocket without drama.

The included leather sheath is real, stitched, and built to be used. It covers the edge, snaps down tight, and rides flat enough that it doesn’t catch on every branch you pass. When you need the hatchet, the draw is simple – no puzzle-box retention or flimsy fabric to fight with. Unsnap, pull, go to work.

Outpost Tactical Hatchet In The Field

This tactical hatchet is built for the blunt, boring, necessary tasks that keep camp and kit squared away:

  • Chopping and splitting modest camp wood and kindling
  • Driving tent stakes and ground anchors with the hammer-back
  • Clearing limbs and brush along trails, fence lines, or camp perimeters
  • Light prying, knocking loose frozen or stuck gear, and general bang-around work
  • Riding as a go-to utility hatchet in trucks, 4x4s, and camp boxes

It isn’t pretending to be a full-size felling axe, and it doesn’t need to. It’s the hatchet you reach for first because it’s there, it’s sharp, and it takes abuse without fuss.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

In the United States, brass knuckles sit in a patchwork of state laws. Some states treat brass knuckles as legal to buy, own, and collect with few restrictions; others limit carry, and a few ban them outright. States like Texas and Arizona now allow brass knuckles for adults, while places like California, New York, and Illinois maintain strict prohibitions. Before you buy brass knuckles online or locally, you check your state and local statutes – not because brass knuckles are mythical or dangerous in themselves, but because lawmakers love to micromanage impact weapons. Where they’re legal, brass knuckles are simply another collectible or defensive tool, bought and sold every day.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Quality brass knuckles are usually made from solid brass, steel, or aluminum alloys. Solid brass knuckles carry weight, density, and a certain old-world feel that collectors appreciate. Steel "brass knuckles" – more accurately, metal knuckles – trade a bit of patina for toughness and slimmer profiles. Aluminum knuckles cut weight for easier carry and faster strike recovery. The cheap end of the market leans on pot metal and mystery castings; serious buyers stick to clearly stated materials: solid brass, stainless or carbon steel, or quality aluminum billet with clean machining and consistent finish.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, you look at three things: legality, material, and execution. First, know your state’s stance on brass knuckles and impact weapons, so you’re not guessing. Second, read the material: solid brass knuckles, steel knuckles, or well-made aluminum all have their place; vague terms and no weight spec usually signal cheap casting. Third, study the design – clean edges, consistent finger holes, and a finish that doesn’t flake under use. A serious buyer chooses brass knuckles that fit the hand, balance weight with control, and come from a shop that doesn’t talk to them like a child.

Why This Hatchet Earns A Place Next To Your Brass Knuckles

If you’re the kind of buyer who searches out brass knuckles for sale and ignores plastic pretenders, you already know how to judge tools by material, weight, and intent. The Outpost Hammer-Back Tactical Hatchet passes that same test: real steel, full tang, wood and leather where it counts, and a black powdercoat head that’s built to be scarred. It’s a straight-talking field hatchet for the same adults who buy real brass knuckles – you pick it up, you feel the balance, and you know it’s worth the space it takes.

Whether your cart holds brass knuckles for sale, blades, or impact tools, this tactical hatchet belongs in that same lineup of honest gear that does its job without apology. You want a compact chopper with a hammer-back that simply works – this is it.

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