Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Auto Tanto Knife - G10 Green
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This Ranger Signal automatic tanto knife is built for people who work with their hands. A 3.75" matte steel blade snaps out with a button press and locks solid; a positive safety keeps it there until you say otherwise. The green G10 handle gives you real grip, wet or dry, while partial serrations chew through rope, webbing, and packaging all day. Slim in pocket, substantial in hand—this safety-locked auto tanto earns its space in any serious EDC rotation.
Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Auto Tanto Knife - G10 Green
The Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Auto Tanto Knife - G10 Green is built for people who actually use their knives. Press the button and the blade is there, locked, ready to work. No drama, no gimmicks—just a matte steel American tanto with partial serrations, a real safety lock, and green G10 scales that don’t care if you’re on a warehouse floor or a muddy trail.
If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife that doesn’t feel cheap or flimsy the second you clip it in, this one delivers. Slim in pocket, substantial in hand, and tuned for everyday carry, this is a work-first tactical auto, not a toy.
Automatic Tanto Knife Built for Real Use
This isn’t some dainty showpiece. The Ranger Signal is a modern automatic tanto knife with the geometry and hardware to back up the look. At 8.75" overall with a 3.75" blade and 5" closed length, it sits right in the sweet spot for a full-size EDC auto—long enough to do real work, short enough to disappear along a pocket seam.
- Blade length: 3.75" American tanto
- Overall length: 8.75"
- Closed length: 5"
- Deployment: button-activated automatic
- Locking: safety lock plus solid engagement
The American tanto profile gives you a stout tip and a defined secondary point for controlled cuts, scraping, and puncture work. The straight primary edge teams up with the partial serrations near the handle to cover clean slicing and aggressive bite through rope, webbing, zip ties, and layered cardboard. One blade, two cutting personalities.
Material and Build: Why This Automatic Knife Feels Right
The first thing that separates a throwaway automatic from a keeper is material. The Ranger Signal runs a matte-finished steel blade and textured G10 handle scales, a combination that’s earned its place in modern tactical EDC for a reason.
Steel Blade with Matte Finish
The blade is clean steel with a matte finish—no flashy coatings, no fake drama. Matte steel does three things well: it cuts, it hides wear better than a mirror finish, and it doesn’t throw light like a mirror when you’re working outside. For an EDC automatic, that’s the right call.
The grind lines along the American tanto edge are crisp enough that you can feel them under the thumb. The uncoated silver finish shows you exactly what you’re working with—steel that takes an edge and can be maintained with normal stones or field sharpeners.
G10 Green Handle That Actually Grabs Back
Handle material matters more than most people admit. The Ranger Signal uses green G10 scales over a solid frame, locked down with Torx fasteners. G10 is the standard for hard-use knives because it’s rigid, light, and doesn’t swell, warp, or get slick when wet.
- Textured G10 scales for real traction
- Matte green finish that doesn’t scream for attention
- Straight, slim profile for predictable indexing
- Lanyard hole at the end for tethering or personalization
In hand, the handle feels longer than it looks in photos—in a good way. You get a full, four-finger grip with room to shift your hand back for power cuts or choke up toward the button for precise work.
Safety-Locked Automatic: Controlled Power
Automatic knives live or die on two things: deployment and control. The Ranger Signal gets both right. The button fires the blade out with a clean, confident snap—no lazy half-throws, no rattle. Once open, the lockup is solid, and the safety is there for people who actually keep an auto clipped in all day.
Dedicated Safety Lock
Near the button you’ll find a sliding safety lock. It’s simple: safety on, the knife stays put; safety off, press the button and the blade comes out. That matters if you’re climbing in and out of vehicles, working in tight spaces, or just don’t want to think about your pocket clip catching on gear.
The safety also makes this a more confident pocket carry for people new to autos. You get the speed of an automatic with the deliberate control of a safety-equipped EDC knife.
Modern Tactical EDC, Not Shelf Candy
The visual story is straightforward: silver matte steel blade, black hardware, and that working-man green G10. No logos screaming for attention, no wild graphics, nothing you need to explain. It’s a tactical EDC automatic knife that looks like it belongs in a pocket that sees real work.
The pocket clip (mounted on the reverse) lets the knife ride low and tight along the seam of jeans or work pants. Clip it, forget it, and when you need it, the button is right where your thumb expects it to be.
- Partial serrations for rope and strap work
- American tanto tip for piercing and scraping
- Slim frame for easy pocket carry
- Lanyard hole for retention in wet or gloved conditions
From breaking down pallets to cutting cordage at camp, this knife reads like it was designed by someone who’s actually done those jobs.
Legal Landscape: Buying an Automatic Knife Like an Adult
Automatic knives are legal products in many states, with restrictions that vary by location. If you’re here, you already know the difference between an EDC automatic and the cartoon version some people carry around in their heads. This Ranger Signal automatic tanto is sold into markets where autos are lawful to own and carry under state and local law.
In states like Texas, Florida, Georgia, and many others, automatic knives are broadly legal for adults to buy and own. Some states regulate blade length, carry method, or require specific conditions for carry. A few—such as parts of California, New York, and New Jersey—still treat autos more tightly, especially for public carry or for blades over certain lengths.
The bottom line: you’re an adult shopping for a legal automatic knife. You know your state. Check your local and state laws before carry, but buying an automatic knife like this in a state that allows it is as straightforward as buying any other edged tool.
Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale
Are brass knuckles legal to buy?
In the United States, brass knuckles sit under a patchwork of state laws. Some states allow brass knuckles to be bought, owned, and carried by adults; others restrict carry but not ownership; a handful ban them outright. States like Texas and Arizona, for example, have loosened laws in recent years and allow adults to buy brass knuckles legally. States including California, New York, and Illinois have stricter rules or outright bans on possession or carry. If you’re searching for brass knuckles for sale, the smart move is simple: confirm your state and local statutes, then buy from a seller that actually understands and respects those boundaries.
What material are quality brass knuckles made from?
Serious collectors look for solid brass knuckles, steel brass knuckles, and well-machined alloys. Solid brass has the classic weight, patina, and tactile feel that made the piece iconic. Steel models bring slimmer profiles with serious rigidity. You’ll also see aluminum and other alloys in the market, often chosen for lighter carry or specific finishes. Whether you’re hunting down brass knuckles for sale as a display piece, a legal self-defense tool in your state, or a historical curiosity, the density and machining of the material tell you right away whether you’re holding junk or something worth owning.
What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?
Forget the novelty junk. When you buy brass knuckles, pay attention to three things: material, machining, and intent. Material means real brass or steel with honest weight, not hollow pot metal. Machining means clean finger holes, no sharp casting seams, and a profile that sits naturally in the hand. Intent means you’re buying in a state where they’re legal, from a seller who treats brass knuckles as legitimate collector and self-defense tools—not costume jewelry. When you see brass knuckles for sale that hit all three marks, that’s when they earn a space in a serious collection.
Why This Automatic Knife Deserves Pocket Time
The Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Auto Tanto Knife - G10 Green isn’t trying to win a beauty contest. It’s trying to win a permanent spot in your pocket or on your kit. Matte steel blade, American tanto geometry, partial serrations, green G10, real safety lock—every part of it points in the same direction: a straightforward automatic knife that shows up when you need it and shuts up when you don’t.
If you’re ready to buy an automatic knife that actually works as hard as you do, this one belongs in the rotation.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.75 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8.75 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 5 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | American Tanto |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | G-10 |
| Button Type | Button |
| Theme | None |
| Safety | Safety Lock |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |