Tracer Line Spring-Assisted EDC Knife - Phantom Blue
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This spring assisted pocket knife earns its keep. A 3.5-inch blue-coated tanto blade snaps open with a crisp flipper action and locks solid on a steel liner lock. The textured black handle with phantom blue tracer lines gives you real grip, not decoration, backed by a sturdy pocket clip. From jobsite to everyday carry, this Phantom Blue blade is built to ride in your pocket and go to work the second you need it.
Phantom Tracer Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Pocket Knife - Phantom Blue
The Phantom Tracer isn’t pretending to be anything. It’s a spring assisted pocket knife built to open fast, lock solid, and disappear back into your pocket until it’s needed again. Blue-coated tanto blade, black textured handle, phantom blue tracer lines – it looks quick because it is.
Brass Knuckles For Sale Buyers Also Grab Serious EDC Knives
If you’re the type searching for brass knuckles for sale, you already know the value of compact, no-nonsense gear. This knife sits in the same world: legal in most states, purpose-built, and designed to be carried, not coddled. The Phantom Tracer gives you quick-deploy cutting power in the same pocket that might already be holding your knuckles, lighter, or keys.
Instead of wall-hanger flash, you get a 3.5-inch tanto blade with spring assist and a flipper tab that actually works under stress. No thumb-stud fumbling, no dainty gentleman folder vibes. Just a straight shot from pocket to locked blade.
Build Quality That Earns Its Spot Next To Your Brass Knuckles
Collectors who hunt down the best brass knuckles for sale pay attention to metal, machining, and finish. Same rules apply here. The Phantom Tracer is steel where it matters, textured where your fingers need it, and coated where abuse usually shows first.
Blue-Coated Tanto Blade Built to Work
The 3.5-inch steel tanto blade is coated in phantom blue – not just for looks, but to knock down glare and add another layer between the steel and whatever you cut through day after day. Tanto geometry gives you a reinforced tip and a strong forward edge that chews through boxes, rope, plastic, and general daily nonsense without babying it.
The grind is straightforward and the edge is plain – no gimmicky serrations pretending to do everything while doing nothing well. This is a working blade, not a brochure prop.
Textured Handle With Phantom Blue Tracer Lines
The handle is black, aggressively textured, and cut with angular patterns that match the tactical profile of the blade. Blue tracer-style inlays run the length of the scale, tying it into the blade and pivot ring so the whole piece reads like one design, not a parts-bin mashup.
Steel liners give it backbone. The liner lock engages cleanly with a positive bite, and there’s thumb jimping on the spine where your hand naturally chokes up. It feels like a tool, not a toy.
Spring Assisted Action That Actually Snaps Open
If you’ve carried enough cheap knives, you know the difference between a lazy spring and a dialed-in one. Here, the flipper tab and assist mechanism are tuned to do exactly one thing: get that tanto blade open with authority. No wrist gymnastics, no wondering if it’ll make it all the way out.
The pivot shows off a blue accent ring that isn’t just decoration – it signals where the action is. You press the tab, the assist takes over, the blade snaps, and the liner lock drops into place. It’s the kind of predictable mechanical behavior you expect from any serious EDC alongside your brass knuckles or other pocket hardware.
Everyday Carry Ready: Pocket Clip, Size, and Feel
Closed, the Phantom Tracer sits at around 4.5 inches, with an overall open length of roughly 8 inches. That’s right in the sweet spot for an EDC folding knife – big enough to actually do work, small enough to carry without feeling like you’ve got a brick riding on your pocket seam.
The pocket clip is set for straightforward tip-down carry, giving you consistent draw and deployment. The weight feels balanced: the blade doesn’t drag the pivot, and the handle doesn’t feel hollow. It carries like it was meant to live in a pocket, not a glass case.
Legal Gear for Adults Who Know What They’re Buying
People searching for brass knuckles for sale legal states understand the legal map changes line by line. This knife is in a different lane: a spring assisted pocket knife with a flipper tab and liner lock, generally treated as a standard folding knife in many states. You’re still responsible for knowing your local knife laws – blade length, carry rules, and how your state classifies assisted openers – but this isn’t some gray-area novelty.
That’s why serious buyers pair legal brass knuckles and a work-ready assisted knife like this: both are compact, both are purpose-built, and both slot cleanly into the lives of adults who actually read the statutes instead of guessing.
Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale
Are brass knuckles legal to buy?
In the United States, brass knuckles are legal to buy in some states, tightly restricted or banned in others, and sometimes allowed as collectibles but restricted for carry. States like Texas and Arizona have loosened up, while others still treat them as prohibited weapons. The only answer that matters: check your specific state and local law before you pull the trigger on any brass knuckles for sale. When you buy from a serious shop, you’re expected to be the adult in the room and know your own jurisdiction.
What material are quality brass knuckles made from?
Quality knuckles are usually cut from solid brass, steel, or high-grade alloys. Solid brass knuckles carry weight, patina, and a feel collectors chase. Steel brass knuckles – often stainless or carbon steel – trade some of that warm heft for raw durability and resistance to deformation. You’ll also see aluminum or other lightweight metals in modern pieces, especially when buyers want pocketable size without brick-like weight. As with knives, serious collectors look past paint and engraving and go straight to metal choice and machining.
What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?
Start with legality in your state, then look at material, weight, and machining. Solid brass or steel brass knuckles with clean edges, consistent thickness, and no lazy casting marks are worth owning. The finish should be even – whether that’s polished, coated, or patina-prone raw brass. Fit in the hand matters: finger holes that aren’t razor-thin, a profile that sits into your palm without hot spots, and a design that looks like someone actually thought about use, not just Instagram photos. The same instincts that make you pick up a solid spring assisted pocket knife instead of gas-station junk apply here.
Why This Knife Belongs In the Same Kit as Your Brass Knuckles
If you’re already digging through collections of the best brass knuckles for sale, you know the difference between gear made to be used and gear made to be posted. The Phantom Tracer sits firmly in the first camp. Blue-coated steel tanto blade, spring assisted quick deploy, textured handle with phantom blue tracer lines – all of it adds up to a pocket knife that earns space next to your knuckles, not just borrows their attitude.
Buy it because you want a reliable assisted opener that looks as sharp as it cuts. Buy it because your pockets deserve better than disposable junk. Either way, this Phantom Blue workhorse is ready to ride.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.5 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Blade Color | Blue |
| Blade Finish | Coated |
| Blade Style | Tanto |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Textured |
| Handle Material | Unknown |
| Theme | Phantom Blue |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Flipper tab |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |