Skip to Content
Palm Anchor Comfort-Driven Brass Knuckles - Solid Brass

Price:

18.99


Halo Grip Squeeze-Activate Ring Stun Gun - Pink
Halo Grip Squeeze-Activate Ring Stun Gun - Pink
21.99 21.99
Atlas Grip XL Brass Knuckle - Solid Brass
Atlas Grip XL Brass Knuckle - Solid Brass
19.99 19.99

Palm Anchor Comfort-Fit Brass Knuckles - Solid Brass

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1575/image_1920?unique=332d2ac

8 sold in last 24 hours

Palm Anchor Comfort-Fit Brass Knuckles lock into your hand like they were made for it. Solid brass brings real-world weight, while the stitched leather palm wrap softens impact and keeps your grip planted. Four smooth finger holes, a curved palm bar, and 4.5 inches of compact profile make this a natural fist companion. For Texas buyers who appreciate classic brass knuckles with a thoughtful comfort upgrade, this piece feels right the second you close your hand around it.

18.99 18.99 USD 18.99

PW249L

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

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

This combination does not exist.

Weight (oz.) 6.59
Theme None
Length (inches) 4.5
Material Brass
Color Brass

You May Also Like These

Palm Anchor Comfort-Fit Brass Knuckles for Texas Hands

The Palm Anchor Comfort-Fit Brass Knuckles are built for one simple purpose: to sit in your hand like they belong there. Solid brass provides the weight and authority you expect from classic brass knuckles, while the stitched leather palm wrap takes the sting out of every hit and keeps the knucks locked into your grip. This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade – it’s a traditional impact tool, made for Texans who already know the difference.

What These Brass Knuckles Are – and What They Aren’t

Brass knuckles are a palm-loaded impact weapon: four finger holes, a solid bar across the front, and a palm brace along the back. You don’t open them, you don’t deploy them, and there’s no blade. That’s where they part ways from an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or any kind of switchblade. Those tools are about edge, lockup, and deployment. These are about weight, fit, and force transfer. Simple, honest, and exactly what they look like.

At 4.5 inches long and 6.59 ounces, this set of brass knuckles rides the line between pocketable and substantial. You feel the heft as soon as you pick it up, but it’s not a brick. The curved palm bar and smooth, slightly beveled edges keep it from chewing up your hand under pressure, which is where the leather really comes into play.

Comfort-Driven Design: Leather-Wrapped Palm Control

The story on this piece is right there in your palm. The brown leather wrap along the palm bar changes how these brass knuckles behave when your fist tightens. Instead of bare brass biting into skin, the leather cushions the contact, spreads the force, and helps your hand stay planted inside the four finger holes.

Four Finger Holes, One Confident Grip

The four round finger holes are cut to a classic profile: generous enough for most adult hands in Texas, snug enough to keep the set from shifting on contact. Smooth inner edges mean you’re not trading your knuckles’ safety for the other guy’s. For collectors who appreciate thoughtful machining, the uniformity of the cuts and the beveled exterior edges show the piece was built to be held, not just photographed.

Solid Brass Weight with Texas Attitude

Solid brass has a character you can’t fake. It warms to the hand, it carries its weight low, and it develops a patina that tells the story of how it’s been handled. Texas collectors who already own automatic knives, OTF knives, and the odd switchblade will recognize that same satisfaction here: a simple, honest tool made from a single block of metal, upgraded with a leather grip that makes practical sense.

Texas Context: Brass Knuckles vs. Automatic Knives

Texas law has loosened its grip on a lot of weapons over the years, including automatic knife carry, OTF knife ownership, and various types of switchblade. Brass knuckles fall into that same world of once-taboo, now-understood tools. Where an automatic knife or OTF knife focuses on how the blade deploys and locks, brass knuckles focus on how the force moves through your hand. For a Texan who already knows their way around a side-opening automatic or a double-action OTF, this piece fills a different niche in the kit.

In the truck, at home, or in a personal collection, brass knuckles like the Palm Anchor don’t pretend to be multitools. They sit, quietly, until you wrap your fingers through them. That’s the appeal for many Texas buyers who have their cutting chores handled by a favorite automatic knife or switchblade but want one dedicated impact option that just feels right in the hand.

Mechanics of a Non-Blade Defensive Tool

Because there’s no blade and no moving parts, the “mechanism” here is all about ergonomics. The curved palm bar follows the natural arc of your grip, and the leather wrap adds friction. That means less sliding and less hot-spotting when you clench down. Unlike an OTF knife or automatic knife where springs, tracks, and buttons matter, the important questions with brass knuckles are: Does it fit? Does it stay put? Does it punish your own hand more than the target?

Why Collectors Still Care About Fit and Finish

Serious Texas collectors don’t just look at deployment action on a switchblade or the snap on an automatic knife. They notice little things: even finger holes, clean bevels, solid material choices. On this set of brass knuckles, the satin brass finish, balanced 6.59-ounce weight, and straight stitching on the leather pad say it was built for more than just a display shelf. It’s a working-style piece that still earns a spot in a curated drawer.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Brass Knuckles

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

They’re a different animal entirely. An automatic knife, whether side-opening or OTF, is a cutting tool with a mechanical deployment system. A switchblade is just one style of automatic knife. Brass knuckles don’t deploy and they don’t cut – they amplify your fist. Texas buyers who already own an OTF knife or automatic often add brass knuckles for one reason: sometimes you want impact, not edge, and you want a tool that’s brutally simple and doesn’t rely on springs or buttons.

Are brass knuckles legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas has updated its weapons laws in recent years, including how it treats brass knuckles and automatic knives. As of those changes, ownership and carry of brass knuckles, along with many knives and even certain switchblade styles, are no longer treated the way they once were. That said, Texas buyers should always check the most current state statutes and any local restrictions before dropping brass knuckles in a pocket, glove box, or bag. Laws evolve, and a responsible collector keeps up with them.

Where do brass knuckles fit in a Texas collection?

For many Texas collectors, brass knuckles like the Palm Anchor sit alongside their favorite OTF knife, automatic knife, and traditional folders as the dedicated impact piece. You’ve got a side-opening automatic for quick cutting, maybe a slender switchblade for nostalgia, and then a solid brass set like this for those times when edge isn’t the answer. The leather-wrapped palm bar and compact 4.5-inch profile make it a natural choice for anyone who wants one well-made set of knucks instead of a drawer full of gimmicks.

Built for the Texas Collector Who Knows the Difference

If you’re the kind of Texan who can tell an OTF knife from a side-opener by sound alone, you already understand why a piece like this matters. The Palm Anchor Comfort-Fit Brass Knuckles don’t try to be a switchblade, an automatic knife, or any other blade-driven tool. They’re exactly what they look like: solid brass, leather-wrapped, purpose-built for a confident fist. One look, one grip, and you know you’re holding the right tool for the job – and that’s the kind of quiet certainty serious Texas collectors live for.