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Heritage Ridge Field-Pro Hunting Knife - Brown Pakkawood

Price:

9.75


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Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife - Brown Pakkawood

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This isn’t a wall queen. The Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife is a fixed blade that earns its ride on your belt. A 3.75-inch satin stainless clip point runs full tang through contoured brown pakkawood with real finger grooves and a mosaic pin that locks your hand in place. At 8 inches overall and 9 oz, it’s built for field dressing, camp chores, and daily ranch work, then slides back into its double-stitched leather belt sheath without a fuss.

9.75 9.75 USD 9.75

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

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Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife - Brown Pakkawood

The Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife is exactly what it looks like: a full-tang fixed blade built for real work in real country. No gimmicks, no tactical cosplay. Just an 8-inch hunting knife with a 3.75-inch satin stainless clip point, brown pakkawood scales with finger grooves, and a leather belt sheath that rides where it should—on your hip, not in a drawer.

If you were looking for another oversized, mall-ninja toy, you can move along. This one is for the hunter, camper, or working hand who actually uses a knife hard and often.

Built Like a Knife That Plans to Stay: Materials & Construction

Start with the steel: a stainless blade with a satin finish, ground into a classic clip point. That profile exists for a reason—it pierces cleanly, slices predictably, and gives you fine control for field dressing or detail work at the bench. No serrations, no dead spots along the edge, just a plain cutting surface you can sharpen the way you like.

The blade runs full tang through the handle, which is how a fixed blade should be built if you expect it to last. No hidden stick tang, no mystery construction. You can see the steel all the way around. If you baton kindling, twist through gristle, or torque in a cut, that tang is what keeps everything together.

Brown Pakkawood Handle: Old-School Look, Modern Stability

The handle is brown pakkawood, polished to a warm sheen. It looks like traditional hardwood, but it doesn’t swell and crack the first time you get caught in a downpour. Pakkawood is resin-stabilized, which means the wood fibers are locked in and far less touchy about moisture and temperature swings.

Finger grooves are carved into the scales, not slapped on as an afterthought. They do what they’re supposed to: index your hand and keep it from wandering forward on a wet grip. The mosaic pin isn’t just decoration; it’s a quiet nod to the kind of detail you usually find on knives that cost a whole lot more.

Weight, Balance, and Real-World Feel

At 8 inches overall and about 9 ounces, this hunting knife strikes a middle ground: substantial enough to feel anchored in your hand, compact enough to work cleanly inside a ribcage or over a cutting board at camp. The clip point comes to a fine but usable tip—precise enough for careful work, not so fragile you’re afraid to lean on it.

The balance point rides just forward of the first finger groove. That gives you drive in a cut without feeling blade-heavy. You’ll notice it when you’re caping, trimming, or carving—control without fighting the knife.

Field-Ready Details a Collector Still Appreciates

This is a working knife first, but the details aren’t an afterthought. The satin blade finish wipes clean, shows its work honestly, and doesn’t scream for attention. The stamped logo, complete with a deer head graphic, plants it squarely in the hunting world where it belongs.

The leather sheath is more than a token add-on. Double-stitched, belt-loop carry, snap closure. It’s made to ride all day without digging or flopping around. The brass hardware and rivets give you just enough flash to notice, and the lanyard hole at the butt opens up options if you like a wrist cord or want to hang it off a pack strap.

Traditional Hunting Knife Aesthetic

Silver blade, brown pakkawood, tan leather, brass accents—you’ve seen that combination before because it works. It looks like it belongs in a truck console, a ranch mudroom, or at the edge of a campfire, not in a glass cube under blue LED lights. This is the kind of fixed blade that feels familiar the first time you pick it up and more honest the more you use it.

Why This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Belongs on Your Belt

There are a thousand fixed blades on the market. Most of them try too hard. This one doesn’t. The Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife puts its effort into the things that matter: full-tang construction, stainless steel you don’t have to baby, a pakkawood handle shaped for real hands, and a leather belt sheath that doesn’t fall apart.

Use cases are straightforward. Field dressing whitetail or hog. Breaking down quarters at the camp table. Cutting cord, opening feed bags, trimming saplings, or handling basic camp chores. It’s compact enough you’ll actually carry it, not leave it behind because it’s a brick.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

Brass knuckles legality in the United States is state-specific. Some states allow brass knuckles for sale and possession with few restrictions, others limit how and where you can carry them, and a handful ban them outright. In states where brass knuckles are legal to buy, adult collectors can purchase them the same way they buy any other self-defense or martial collectible. Before you order brass knuckles online, you check your state and local laws—penal codes usually spell out whether metal knuckles are allowed, restricted, or prohibited.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Quality brass knuckles are typically made from solid brass, steel, or other substantial metal alloys. Solid brass knuckles carry that dense, warm-in-the-hand weight collectors look for, while steel brass knuckles lean more toward extreme durability and impact resistance. You also see aluminum knuckles and polymer knuckles in the market, but serious buyers tend to favor solid brass or heavy steel construction for their feel, balance, and long-term toughness.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, you look at three things: legality in your state, material, and build quality. In legal states, serious buyers favor solid brass or steel brass knuckles with clean machining, no sharp casting lines, and properly sized finger holes that don’t pinch. Weight matters—too light and they feel like toys, too heavy and they become impractical to carry. Finish is a factor as well; some collectors prefer raw brass that develops a patina, others want coated or polished surfaces. And you buy from a seller that treats brass knuckles as a legitimate product, not a novelty.

Buying With Confidence

If you appreciate honest tools, the Ridge Line Classic Hunting Knife belongs in your rotation. It pairs cleanly with a collection that might also include brass knuckles for sale in legal states, classic folders, and other heritage-style gear. Full-tang build, stainless clip point, pakkawood grip, and a proper leather sheath—nothing here is pretending to be something it’s not. Just a fixed blade hunting knife that shows up, does the work, and earns its place on your belt.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8
Weight (oz.) 9
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Pakkawood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4.25
Tang Type Full
Pommel/Butt Cap None
Carry Method Belt loop
Sheath/Holster Leather