Skip to Content
TrailSplit Dual-Use Camping Utensil Multi Tool - Stainless Steel

Price:

3.18


Forward-Open Rapid Access Double Pistol Mag Pouch - Tan
Forward-Open Rapid Access Double Pistol Mag Pouch - Tan
4.46 4.46
Pocket Atlas 11-Function Credit Card Multi Tool - Stainless Steel
Pocket Atlas 11-Function Credit Card Multi Tool - Stainless Steel
1.02 1.02

TrailSplit Dual-Use Camp Utensil Multi Tool - Stainless Steel

https://www.buybrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/4673/image_1920?unique=eb8e8cf

3 sold in last 24 hours

TrailSplit is the camping utensil multi tool that finally keeps up with real camp life. It separates into two solid stainless halves, so you can cut with the blade while eating with the fork or spoon—no juggling, no dropped gear in the dirt. Seven functions cover trail meals, bottles, cans, and corked bottles, all locking back together and riding in a belt-loop pouch. If you like your camp kit simple, durable, and stainless, this is the piece that earns its pocket.

3.18 3.18 USD 3.18

KC5006S

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

TrailSplit Camp Utensil Multi Tool Built For Real Trail Meals

The TrailSplit Dual-Use Camp Utensil Multi Tool - Stainless Steel is exactly what it looks like: a stainless, all-business camp utensil multi tool that doesn’t baby you and doesn’t break. It separates into two pieces so you can actually eat and cut at the same time, then clips back together and disappears into its pouch. No plastic, no gimmicks, just brushed metal and seven trail-ready functions.

Why This Camping Utensil Multi Tool Earns Space In Your Pack

Most so-called camping utensils feel like afterthoughts. The TrailSplit is a full stainless camp multi tool built around eating first and everything else second. Spoon, fork, knife, bottle opener, can opener, corkscrew, awl—seven tools, one compact body, and a separable design that makes sense when you’re sitting on a log trying not to drop dinner in the dirt.

Fold it down and it rides in a belt-loop pouch, all metal, no loose parts rattling around at the bottom of your pack. Open it up and the layout is obvious: you can see every function, every hinge, every edge. It’s the same logic as a classic pocket multi tool, just tuned for camp food and cold bottles instead of desk drawers.

Stainless Steel Construction That Takes Abuse

This isn’t a toy. The TrailSplit camping utensil multi tool is all stainless steel, silver, with a brushed finish that shrugs off scratches and cleans fast. Stainless means it won’t care if you rinse it in cold creek water, toss it in a mess kit, or forget it in the rain overnight.

All-Metal, No-Nonsense Build

The handles are smooth, rounded stainless steel—no cheap inserts to warp, crack, or peel. The brushed metal finish hides trail wear and still looks clean enough to pull out at a tailgate or campsite cookout. Each tool folds into the handle body with familiar multi tool action, giving you a tight, compact block when closed and a full spread of utensils when open.

The knife blade is a straight-edge, slight drop point—enough to cut food, open packaging, or trim small cord. The fork has three tines, the spoon is a proper bowl shape, not a toy scoop, and the openers and awl are exactly where your hand expects them to be. It’s simple, and that’s why it works.

Seven Functions That Actually Matter Outdoors

  • Spoon for trail meals, soups, and stews
  • Fork for solid food, pasta, and meat
  • Knife blade for cutting and light prep
  • Bottle opener for caps after the hike
  • Can opener for camp staples and rations
  • Corkscrew for the nights you plan ahead
  • Awl/punch for quick gear fixes

It’s a straight, useful set. No novelty functions you’ll never touch—just the core tools that make camp life easier.

Dual-Use Design: Eat And Cut Without Playing Juggle

The real trick is the separable design. The TrailSplit camping utensil multi tool splits into two halves so you’re not trying to hold a bowl in one hand and a half-open tool in the other. You can run the fork or spoon in one hand, the knife in the other, or keep the bottle opener handy while someone else eats.

When you’re done, the halves clip back together into a single, solid unit. No loose fork floating around, no spoon lost in the grass. It’s one tool when carried, two tools when you need them separated. Simple, mechanical, and obvious the first time you use it.

Camp, Trail, and Tailgate Ready

This multi tool is built for camping, but it doesn’t stop there. Toss it in your glove box for roadside meals, your daypack for festivals, your emergency kit for when the power goes out and you’re eating out of cans by lantern light. Anywhere food gets eaten without a kitchen drawer handy, the TrailSplit belongs.

The included belt-loop pouch lets you carry it on your hip or lash it to a pack strap. Folded, it’s compact enough to disappear until you need it, but all stainless steel means you’ll feel the difference between this and flimsy plastic cutlery immediately.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

In the United States, brass knuckles are handled at the state level. Some states treat brass knuckles as banned weapons, some allow brass knuckles to be owned but not carried, and others allow you to buy and own brass knuckles outright. If you’re looking for brass knuckles for sale, you check your current state and local laws first—states like Texas and Arizona opened up legal brass knuckles ownership in recent years, while places like California, New York, and Illinois still restrict or ban them. When you buy brass knuckles online, you buy only if they’re legal where you live.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious buyers look for solid brass knuckles, steel brass knuckles, or other full-metal builds—not pot metal, not hollow toys. Solid brass gives that dense, warm feel collectors like, while steel and stainless variations add strength and corrosion resistance. Aluminum knuckles and modern alloy builds cut weight but still keep structure. Whether you’re after display pieces or hard-use sets, quality brass knuckles start with real metal and clean machining, not painted cast junk.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, start with legality in your state, then look at material and machining. Solid brass or steel, consistent finish, no sharp casting seams, and finger holes that actually fit adult hands. Weight should feel intentional, not light and hollow. If you’re hunting the best brass knuckles for sale, you’re looking at metal composition, finish work, and how the set sits in your grip, the same way you’d judge any serious metal piece in your collection.

Built-Right Gear For People Who Don’t Baby Their Kit

If you run simple, durable gear and you like tools that just do the job, the TrailSplit Dual-Use Camp Utensil Multi Tool - Stainless Steel fits the kit. All stainless, separable halves, and seven straight-ahead functions mean it won’t stay pretty on a shelf—it’ll stay in your belt pouch. When you’re ready to buy brass knuckles, blades, or camp tools, you buy from a source that understands metal and use. This one earns its place the first night you’re eating out under a sky without lights.

No Specifications