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Red Dragon Flight-Balanced Throwing Knife Set - Matte Red Steel

Price:

6.99


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Crimson Dragon Arc Throwing Knife Set - Matte Red Steel

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This throwing knife set is built for clean Texas flight and repeatable feel. Three 6.5-inch, full-tang throwing knives ride in matte red stainless steel with a white dragon curling down the handle. Each spear-point thrower weighs in at 2 ounces for consistent rotation and straight sticking. The nylon belt sheath keeps the set together from backyard target to lease gate. For the Texas buyer who knows a throwing knife isn’t a switchblade or OTF knife, this dragon set hits the mark.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

TK016365RD

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  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Set Count
  • Sheath/Holster

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Overall Length (inches) 6.5
Weight (oz.) 2
Blade Color Red
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme Dragon Print
Set Count 3
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath

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Crimson Dragon Arc Throwing Knife Set - What It Really Is

This is a true throwing knife set, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade trying to play dress-up. Each piece in the Crimson Dragon Arc Throwing Knife Set is a fixed, full-tang thrower built around balance and rotation, not deployment tricks. At 6.5 inches overall and 2 ounces apiece, these stainless steel throwing knives are tuned for the kind of repeatable flight Texas throwers actually care about.

The matte red steel carries a white dragon motif from blade to handle, so the theme isn’t an afterthought. You get three matching throwers, each with a spear-point profile and central cutouts that help keep the weight consistent across the set. They ride together in a nylon belt sheath, ready for a backyard target, a thrower’s league night, or a collector’s display alongside your favorite automatic knife, OTF knife, and yes, your legal Texas switchblade.

Throwing Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

A throwing knife lives in a different world than an automatic knife or a switchblade. There’s no button, no spring, no track. These are fixed throwing knives: full-tang steel, one solid piece from spear point to tail. Where an automatic knife or OTF knife spends its engineering on deployment speed, a throwing knife invests in weight distribution, symmetry, and a clean release from your fingers.

A side-opening switchblade snaps from the handle on command; an OTF knife rides a rail and fires straight out the front. Both are about quick access in the hand. This throwing knife set skips all that and focuses on what happens in the air. The spear-point geometry on these red dragon blades gives you a centered tip and a symmetrical profile, so nose-down impact is predictable. The cutouts along the blade lighten the body without throwing the balance off, which matters more to a serious thrower than any automatic opening system ever will.

Flight Balance and Feel in the Hand

At 6.5 inches and 2 ounces, these throwing knives land in that sweet spot where a new thrower can learn rotation, and a seasoned Texas hand can dial in distance. The full-tang stainless steel construction means every knife in the set feels the same, throw after throw. No scales, no liners, nothing to shift or loosen. Just steel, cutouts, and that dragon art staring downrange.

Why Fixed Throwers Belong Beside Your Automatics

Collectors who already own an automatic knife or an OTF knife know this: mechanism variety is half the fun. This throwing knife set fills a different niche in the case. It’s not about opening speed; it’s about air time. When you line these matte red throwers up next to a Texas-legal switchblade and your favorite out-the-front, you’re not duplicating function—you’re rounding out the story of what a knife can do.

Texas Carry and Use: Where These Throwing Knives Fit

Texas has loosened up on blades over the years, but context still matters. An automatic knife or switchblade can now be carried more freely in Texas, and OTF knives ride in plenty of pockets from Amarillo to Brownsville. Throwing knives like this red dragon set live a slightly different life. They’re best at the range, on private land, at the lease, or on your own property where a target can stay up and the neighbors know what you’re doing.

The included nylon sheath with belt loop lets you carry the full throwing knife set as you cross the pasture or head to the range. It’s not a pocket-carry piece like an OTF knife or a slim automatic; it’s a light belt companion for practice, fun, and skill-building. For Texans who enjoy blades as tools and sport, throwing knives are a natural extension of that culture—no hidden springs, no surprise mechanisms, just honest steel flying straight.

Texas Law Notes for Knife Collectors

Texas buyers know to keep an eye on blade length and location. While automatic knives and switchblades have seen legal relief in the state, you still want to be mindful about bringing any knife—throwing or otherwise—into schools, courthouses, and other restricted places. On your land or at a proper range, this throwing knife set is right at home. When you travel, keep it stowed in your gear rather than riding it like an everyday carry automatic knife.

Design Details: The Red Dragon That Catches Light

The first thing you notice is the color. Matte red steel isn’t shy, and against it the white dragon print looks like it’s mid-flight itself. That artwork runs down the handle and tang, so when these throwing knives spin, you get a flash of red and white tracing the arc. For a Texas collector who likes a little show in the throw, this matters.

The spear-point tip, cutouts, and smooth edges along the handle work together to keep the throwing knife comfortable on release. No scale transitions, no sharp corners to catch your fingers. Each knife in the set repeats the same profile exactly, so once you’ve learned one, you’ve learned all three. That’s the kind of consistency a serious thrower expects—and the same instinct that makes a collector compare lockup and deployment between one automatic knife and the next.

Stainless Steel That Takes the Beating

Throwing knives get punished more than most blades. They slam into wood, clip the edge of targets, and occasionally hit dirt or rock. Stainless steel keeps this throwing knife set honest under that abuse. The matte finish hides scuffs better than polish, and the red coating gives the dragon design a stage. Over time, the wear tells a story, just like the honest scratches on a well-used Texas OTF knife or a side-opening automatic that’s seen some real pocket time.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Knife Sets

Is a throwing knife like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. A throwing knife is a fixed blade built for rotation and sticking, not for rapid opening. An automatic knife and a switchblade use a spring to snap the blade out from the side of the handle. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a track. This crimson throwing knife set has no moving parts—it’s one-piece steel meant to leave your hand and bite a target. If it flies, it’s not functioning like an automatic or OTF at all.

Are throwing knives like this red dragon set legal to own and use in Texas?

In general, Texas allows ownership and carry of a wide range of blades, including automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives, with some location-based limits. A throwing knife set like this falls under fixed blades, so the same rules of common sense apply: you’re fine on private property, at appropriate ranges, and in lawful settings, but you should avoid bringing any knife—thrower, switchblade, or otherwise—into restricted places. When in doubt, Texas buyers check the latest state and local ordinances before carrying.

What makes this throwing knife set worth it for a Texas collector?

Three things: matched balance, bold theme, and contrast in your collection. You get three identical, flight-balanced throwing knives, not a mixed bag of sizes. The matte red steel and dragon print give the set a visual story that stands out in a case full of black and stonewash automatics and OTF knives. And as a Texas collector, adding a dedicated throwing knife set beside your switchblades and everyday carry automatics shows you understand that not every blade has to open fast—some are meant to fly.

Closing: For the Texan Who Knows Their Blades

The Crimson Dragon Arc Throwing Knife Set isn’t trying to be an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. It’s something else—a trio of balanced throwers built for Texans who enjoy the feel of steel in motion. You get honest stainless construction, a red dragon theme that actually holds together, and a set that carries cleanly to the places you practice. For the collector who can tell a deployment mechanism by sound and a throwing knife by feel, this is one more chapter in a Texas-sized knife story that keeps getting better, one throw at a time.