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Micro Talon Blackout + Fixed Blade Karambit Knife - Matte Black

Price:

11.99


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Micro Talon Blackout Close-Quarters Karambit Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3822/image_1920?unique=4634d5c

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This fixed blade karambit knife is built for tight spaces and controlled work. The compact Micro Talon profile, full-tang steel, and three-finger grooves lock into your hand, while the partial serration chews through stubborn material. In Texas kit terms, it’s a small, serious edge that rides quietly in the sheath until you need quick, no-fumble access. Blacked-out, low-profile, and purpose-driven—this is for someone who understands why a fixed karambit isn’t just another pocket knife.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

MT2063BK

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Plastic
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 3

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Micro Talon Karambit Knife: A Fixed Blade That Stays Honest

This Micro Talon blackout fixed blade karambit knife doesn’t pretend to be an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. It’s exactly what it looks like: a compact, full-tang claw of steel that fits your hand like it was meant to live there. No springs, no sliders—just a short, curved blade that’s ready the moment you clear the sheath.

For Texas buyers who know their mechanisms, that honesty matters. An automatic or switchblade has its place. An OTF knife has its own story. A fixed karambit like this Micro Talon lives in another lane: simple, direct, and mechanically trustworthy when things get up close and noisy.

Fixed Blade Karambit Knife vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

The Micro Talon is a fixed blade karambit knife: the blade is exposed once it leaves the sheath and never folds, never retracts, never locks with a button. That’s the first line in its story. The curved talon profile is made for pulling cuts, tight angles, and strong control, not for flick tricks or button-press theatrics.

Now, compared to an automatic knife or a switchblade, you’re not relying on a coil spring or button release. There’s no internal mechanism to gum up. Compared to an OTF knife, there’s no track, no slider, and no concern about pocket lint slowing deployment. The Micro Talon’s deployment is you: grip, draw from the sheath, and it’s on duty.

Mechanism Clarity for the Texas Collector

Collectors in Texas don’t like fuzzy terms. This is not an OTF knife. It’s not a side-opening automatic. It’s not a switchblade. It’s a compact fixed blade karambit, carried in a sheath, with the curve doing the work instead of a spring. That distinction is what lets you build a deliberate collection: one OTF for pocket deployment, one automatic knife for quick side-opening carry, and a fixed karambit like this Micro Talon for tight, controlled use.

Design Details: Micro Talon Built for Close Control

Everything on this Micro Talon blackout karambit is tuned for control, not flash. The 2-inch talon-style blade gives you enough edge to work in close without feeling clumsy. The matte black finish on both blade and handle keeps reflections down—no glint, no show, just quiet confidence.

Full-Tang Steel and Working Edge

The blade runs full tang through the handle, which means the steel and strength carry all the way into that hooked pommel. You get a cutting edge that’s part plain and part serrated: plain edge for clean slices, serrations to bite through stubborn cord, straps, or material that doesn’t want to cooperate. For a Texas ranch kit, truck console, or range bag, that partial serration earns its keep faster than a clean show blade.

Three Grooves, One Locked-In Grip

The handle is carved into three deep finger grooves, with textured black scales to keep the knife planted. Paired with the curved hooked pommel, you get a lock-in feel that belies the small size. It’s a fixed blade you can index in the dark or under stress. That’s a different kind of assurance than you get from a slick-handled switchblade or slender OTF knife.

How a Fixed Karambit Rides in Texas

In Texas, you’ve got room for choices. Automatic knives, OTF knives, and classic switchblades are all part of the modern carry conversation. A compact fixed blade karambit like this Micro Talon answers a different need: close-quarters utility, fast access from a sheath, and no mechanical question marks.

The small footprint and sheath carry mean it disappears into a pack, duty belt, or glovebox until you ask it to work. When you do, there’s no blade to open. No button to find. Just a simple draw-stroke, and that talon blade is already in its working position. For some Texas buyers, that directness is exactly why they reach for a fixed blade over an automatic or OTF.

Texas Law, Fixed Blades, and Where This Knife Fits

Texas has grown more knife-friendly over the years, but the law still draws lines—mostly around blade length and certain restricted locations. This compact fixed blade karambit keeps the blade short and the footprint discreet, which gives it a different legal and practical profile than a big automatic knife or aggressive-looking OTF switchblade.

Because this is a fixed blade, not an automatic or OTF knife, you’re not dealing with spring-action definitions. That said, Texas buyers should always check current state and local laws before carrying any knife—fixed, automatic, switchblade, or otherwise. Treat this Micro Talon like what it is: a small, purpose-built fixed blade karambit, not a gimmick piece trying to sneak in under a different name.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Fixed Blade Karambit Knives

Is a fixed blade karambit like this Micro Talon an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. A fixed blade karambit knife is its own category. The blade doesn’t fold, doesn’t slide out the front, and doesn’t rely on a spring or button the way an automatic knife or switchblade does. An OTF knife has a blade that travels inside the handle and shoots out along a track. A side-opening automatic swings out from a pivot when you hit the release. This Micro Talon does neither—once you draw it from the sheath, the full blade is already exposed and ready, which is exactly what some Texas collectors want in a close-quarters tool.

Is it legal to carry a compact fixed blade karambit in Texas?

Texas law is generally friendly toward knives, especially with shorter blades like this 2-inch fixed blade karambit. But the details matter: length limits, age restrictions, and location-based rules can still apply, and they change. Because this isn’t an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade, you’re usually talking about blade length and where you’re carrying it, not spring mechanisms. Still, the only smart move is to read the current Texas statutes and check your local rules before you strap it on every day.

Where does this Micro Talon fit in a serious Texas collection?

Think of it as your close-quarters utility claw. You might already own a premium automatic knife for one-hand pocket duty and an OTF knife for quick, mechanical satisfaction. This Micro Talon fixed blade karambit fills the gap for tight work: cutting in cramped spaces, controlled pulling cuts, and sheath-based access that ignores pocket mechanics altogether. For a Texas collector, it’s the piece you grab when you want zero doubt about deployment and grip, and you appreciate the quiet confidence of a blackout fixed blade that simply does its job.

Why This Micro Talon Belongs in a Texas Kit

The Micro Talon blackout fixed blade karambit knife is made for Texans who know their categories and choose on purpose. It doesn’t try to be an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a flashy switchblade. It leans into what a compact fixed blade does best: solid steel, locked-in grip, fast sheath draw, and a talon edge that bites when it needs to.

If your collection already covers the usual suspects—autos, OTFs, classic side-opening switchblades—this is the small, matte-black claw that rounds out the lineup. It’s for the buyer who can tell the difference at a glance, and likes knowing they picked the right knife for the right job, the Texas way: plain-spoken, capable, and ready when seconds get loud.