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Classic Officer’s Commando Dagger Knife - Wood & Brass

Price:

12.99


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Frontier Commando Fixed Dagger Knife - Steel Wood

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This commando dagger knife is a full-tang fixed blade built in classic steel and wood, not plastic and gimmicks. The 7-inch double-edged dagger profile handles piercing and controlled cuts, while the brass guard and smooth timbered handle feel right at home on a Texas belt. A hand-stitched leather sheath keeps it ready for camp, display, or range days. For the collector who knows a fixed dagger from a switchblade or OTF, this piece brings old-school field style to a modern Texas collection.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

FX203363

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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
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

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Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 11.5
Weight (oz.) 6.53
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Smooth
Handle Material Wood
Theme Old-World
Handle Length (inches) 4.5
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather Sheath

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What This Commando Fixed Dagger Knife Really Is

The Frontier Commando Fixed Dagger Knife is exactly what it looks like: a classic full-tang commando dagger built from steel and wood, carried in leather. No springs, no buttons, no sliding tracks. This is a traditional fixed blade dagger knife, the kind Texas collectors reach for when they want old-world feel and straightforward performance without confusing it with an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade.

At 11.5 inches overall with a 7-inch double-edged dagger blade, it’s proportioned like the classic field and commando knives that saw hard use long before modern folders took over pockets. The polished steel, brass guard, and smooth timbered handle give it a vintage presence that stands out in a Texas collection full of modern tactical designs.

Fixed Dagger Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

This commando dagger is a fixed blade from tip to pommel. The steel runs full-tang under the wood scales, which means there’s no folding joint, no internal spring, and no automatic opening mechanism. What you see is what you get: a rigid dagger knife that’s always deployed the moment it leaves the sheath.

How a Fixed Dagger Differs in Use

Where an automatic knife or switchblade relies on a button-driven spring and an OTF knife rides in and out of the handle on a track, this dagger lives outside the handle all the time. That matters for Texas buyers who want a dependable field or display piece: there’s nothing to gum up, no mechanism to fail, and no confusion about how it opens. You draw it from the leather sheath, and it’s ready.

Why Collectors Still Care About Full-Tang Steel

Full-tang construction is the quiet backbone of this design. The same bar of steel you see at the blade’s edge runs through the wood grip and out to the lanyard hole at the pommel. Serious Texas knife collectors know this is what separates a true field-capable fixed blade from a decorative wall hanger. It balances strength, weight (about 6.5 ounces), and control in a way assisted or automatic folders can’t quite match.

Design Details: Commando Dagger with Old-World Texas Character

The blade is a classic double-edged dagger style: central spine, mirror-bright polished steel, and a plain edge on both sides. It’s built to pierce cleanly and track straight, but the long, even edges also lend themselves to controlled slicing and fine work along the tip. This isn’t a fantasy shape; it’s a proven commando profile with a field-ready attitude.

Wood, Brass, and Leather Done the Right Way

The warm wood handle scales are smooth and contoured, with visible grain that plays against the brass crossguard. Five metal rivets secure the scales to the full tang, keeping everything tight and honest. Down at the butt, the exposed steel pommel carries a lanyard hole, a small but useful detail for Texas buyers who like to rig a thong for security on horseback, ATV, or out at the lease.

The leather sheath finishes the package like it should: deep brown, white contrast stitching, belt loop, and a retention strap with snap closure. It’s built to ride on a belt at the ranch, hang on a display board in the shop, or sit in a safe next to your automatic knives and OTFs as a different chapter in your collection’s story.

Texas Carry Reality: Fixed Dagger in a State that Loves Its Steel

Texas law is friendlier to blades than it used to be, and that opens the door for a piece like this. Unlike an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade that can raise eyebrows just because of how it deploys, a fixed dagger knife is mechanically simple. For most adult Texans, this falls into the category of a large fixed blade carried for collection, camp, or display, not everyday pocket use.

Where an automatic or OTF shines in quick one-handed deployment from a pocket, this commando dagger rides best on a belt or in a kit. It’s the blade you strap on for hog camp, reenactments, or range days rather than the one you use to open feed bags. Texas collectors understand that rhythm: an automatic knife for daily chores, an OTF for modern edge appeal, and a fixed dagger like this for when you want history in your hand.

Collector Value for Texas Knife Buyers

In a Texas collection heavy on modern switchblades and OTF knives, a classic commando dagger knife like this brings balance. The steel-and-wood build speaks to a different era of blade culture, one where leather sheaths and brass guards were standard kit. It’s the kind of knife that sits well next to vintage military pieces, frontier-style hunters, and old carbon steel bowies.

At this size and weight, it shows well in a display case, on a desk stand, or hung in a study. The symmetry of the dagger profile, the polished blade, and the brass guard give it a presence that a closed automatic knife or OTF can’t match at rest. For a Texas buyer who already owns plenty of modern folders, this fixed dagger quietly says: you know where all this started.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Commando Dagger Knives

Is this like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. This is a fixed commando dagger knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. There’s no button, no spring, and no sliding track. Automatic and switchblade knives open from the side with a spring-assisted mechanism, while an OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front of the handle. This dagger is already open, riding in its leather sheath until you draw it. That simplicity is exactly why many Texas collectors trust fixed daggers alongside their more complex autos.

Is a double-edged dagger knife like this legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas law has become more permissive about blade length and types in recent years, and adults can generally own and carry large knives, including daggers. That said, regulations can exist for specific locations (schools, courts, certain public facilities) and for minors. If you’re planning to carry this commando dagger outside your property or ranch, it’s worth checking current Texas statutes and any local restrictions to be sure you’re squared away.

Where does this fixed dagger fit in a serious Texas collection?

This dagger earns its place as a classic field and commando representative in a modern Texas lineup. If you already own an automatic knife or two for everyday carry, and maybe an OTF knife or switchblade for that mechanical thrill, this is the piece that anchors the historical side of your collection. Full-tang steel, wood, brass, and leather tell a different story—one that connects military heritage, frontier aesthetics, and the kind of knives Texans have trusted long before pocket clips and assisted openers came along.

In the end, the Frontier Commando Fixed Dagger Knife is for the Texas buyer who can tell, at a glance, the difference between a fixed dagger, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade—and wants all four chapters on the shelf. Steel, wood, and leather, done the old way, remind you why you started collecting in the first place.