Skip to Content
Tactical GripMaster Cord-Wrapped Metal Knuckles - Gold

Price:

7.99


Punisher Skull Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Black Marble Acrylic
Punisher Skull Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Black Marble Acrylic
13.99 13.99
GripMaster Cord-Wrapped Control Brass Knuckles - Silver
GripMaster Cord-Wrapped Control Brass Knuckles - Silver
7.99 7.99

Lone Star GripLock Tactical Knuckles - Gold Cord-Wrapped

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1889/image_1920?unique=3b47dec

11 sold in last 24 hours

These Gold GripMaster cord-wrapped metal knuckles are built for control first, looks second. The gold frame catches the eye, but it’s the full-length cord wrap that keeps them locked in your hand when stress hits. Compact enough to ride in a Texas go-bag or glove box, they balance solid weight with a secure, no-slip grip. For the collector or defender who prefers a low-profile tool with high-confidence hold, these tactical knuckles earn their spot.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

PW817GDC

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

  • Weight (oz.)
  • Theme
  • Length (inches)
  • Width (inches)
  • Thickness (inches)
  • Material
  • Color

This combination does not exist.

Weight (oz.) 5.5
Theme Tactical
Length (inches) 4.6
Width (inches) 2.75
Thickness (inches) 0.472
Material Metal
Color Gold

You May Also Like These

GripMaster Cord-Wrapped Metal Knuckles Built for Control, Not Show

The GripMaster cord-wrapped metal knuckles in gold look bold, but they’re built first as a tactical self-defense tool. Four finger holes, solid metal frame, and a full cord wrap across the palm bar and ring edges turn a classic set of brass knuckles into a more controlled, more confident impact tool. Where an automatic knife or OTF knife gives you an edge, these knuckles give you instant, silent force in the hand.

What These Tactical Knuckles Do That a Knife Can’t

A lot of Texas buyers already own a good automatic knife or maybe even an OTF knife they trust. This piece lives in a different lane. There’s no blade, no deployment, no switchblade mechanism to think through under pressure. You slide your fingers in, close your fist, and the tool is ready. That simplicity is why some collectors keep brass knuckles in the same kit as their favorite side-opening automatic or OTF — different tools for different problems.

With these GripMaster tactical knuckles, the gold metal frame delivers the mass. The 5.5 oz weight and 12 mm thickness give you a sturdy feel that doesn’t wander in the hand. The cord wrap tightens the connection between skin and steel, cutting down on slip and hot spots when you bear down. For buyers who’ve carried knives for years, this is that non-bladed backup that doesn’t need to open, lock, or fold.

Cord-Wrapped Grip: Why the Details Matter to Texas Collectors

Enhanced Hold for Real-World Stress

The cord wrap on these metal knuckles isn’t just for looks. The material adds bite and friction across the contact points: around the finger holes and along the palm bar. Bare metal brass knuckles can get slick with sweat, rain, or glove material. This cord-wrapped design digs in a little, so when adrenaline spikes, you’re not fighting the tool while you’re trying to control the situation.

In a state where folks work outside, drive long distances, and keep gear in trucks, that kind of texture matters. A Texas buyer who understands the difference between a switchblade, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife also understands hand fit and retention. These tactical knuckles lean into that same mindset: secure in the hand, predictable under pressure.

Gold Finish with Tactical Intent

The gold finish on this GripMaster frame says you’re not afraid of a little style, but the overall silhouette stays all business. Angular striking edges above each finger, an open center to keep the weight balanced, and tight, dark cord around the grip give it a modern tactical look instead of a novelty feel. For a Texas collector who already has a row of autos and a couple of switchblades, this offers a different kind of statement piece that still belongs in a serious defense kit.

Texas Context: Knuckles, Knives, and the Law

Texas used to treat brass knuckles as a prohibited weapon. That changed in 2019, when the state removed knuckles from the banned list. As of now, tools like these metal knuckles are generally legal to possess under Texas law, but it’s still on you to know where you’re carrying them and how they’re used. Certain locations and situations can have their own rules, and using any self-defense tool, whether an automatic knife, OTF knife, switchblade, or knuckles, can bring legal scrutiny if things go bad.

This isn’t legal advice. Laws can change, cities can layer on their own restrictions, and how a prosecutor looks at an impact tool versus an automatic knife can vary. A smart Texas collector checks current statutes, knows the difference between lawful carry and reckless display, and keeps all their gear — from switchblades to tactical knuckles — in the right lane.

How These Metal Knuckles Fit a Texas Carry Lifestyle

Because there’s no blade, there’s no deployment speed to worry about. These GripMaster metal knuckles live well in a console, backpack, range bag, or at-home kit as a backup to your chosen knife. A Texan who carries an automatic knife for daily utility and keeps an OTF knife or switchblade for faster deployment might choose these knuckles as a close-quarters option that can’t fold, can’t fail to lock, and doesn’t need two hands to reset.

At 2.75" by 4.6" and weighing 5.5 oz, they sit in that sweet spot between pocketable and substantial. You feel them when you pick them up, but they’re not so heavy they slow you down. For collectors, that mix of compact size and solid heft feels right at home next to compact autos and slim EDC blades.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Tactical Metal Knuckles

How do these compare to an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

They don’t replace a knife; they complement it. An automatic knife or OTF knife gives you cutting, slicing, and piercing. A switchblade is just one style of automatic, usually side-opening, that flips the blade out with a button. These metal knuckles skip the blade entirely and focus purely on impact and control. No spring, no slider, no hinge — just a solid, cord-wrapped frame that’s ready the second your fingers are through the holes. Many Texas collectors like having both: a fast-opening blade and a non-bladed defensive option.

Are brass knuckles like this legal to carry in Texas?

As of the recent changes to Texas law, knuckles are no longer on the list of prohibited weapons, which opened the door for pieces like these cord-wrapped metal knuckles. That said, legality doesn’t mean free-for-all. Certain places — schools, courthouses, some events — have their own bans, and any use of force will be judged on the circumstances. The same common sense you apply to carrying an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade in Texas applies here: check current law, respect posted rules, and understand that how you carry and how you use a tool matters as much as what it is.

Is this more of a collector piece or a working self-defense tool?

It does both. The gold finish and cord wrap give it shelf appeal for a Texas collector who already has rows of autos and OTF knives lined up, but the dimensions and construction lean toward real-world use. The 12 mm thickness, 5.5 oz weight, and full wrap for retention make it a practical impact tool, not a toy. If your collection tells a story about how Texans actually defend themselves — from pocket automatic knives to glove-box backups — these GripMaster metal knuckles fit right in.

Why These GripMaster Knuckles Earn a Place in a Texas Collection

A serious Texas knife collector doesn’t just chase blades. They build a rounded kit: the right automatic knife for daily tasks, an OTF knife or switchblade for fast deployment, and a few well-chosen non-bladed tools that handle problems a knife shouldn’t. These gold, cord-wrapped metal knuckles hit that last category cleanly. They’re simple, reliable, and built around grip and control, not gimmicks.

For the Texan who knows their terminology and respects the difference between a switchblade, an OTF, and a standard automatic, adding a purpose-built set of tactical knuckles like these isn’t a step sideways — it’s rounding out the story. One look, one feel, and you know exactly what they’re for.