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Redline Rhythm Balanced Throwing Knife Set - Red Cord

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19.99


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Range Rhythm Precision Throwing Knife Set - Red Cord

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The Range Rhythm Precision Throwing Knife Set brings three matched 9-inch throwing knives with the same calm balance every time. Full-tang stainless steel, spear point blades, and ring pommels keep flight consistent, while the red cord-wrapped handles stay easy to spot in Texas grass and backyard ranges. This isn’t a switchblade or OTF knife—it’s a purpose-built throwing knife set for tightening your grouping, sharpening your feel, and giving your collection a dependable practice trio you’ll actually use.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

PP8693RD

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

This combination does not exist.

Overall Length (inches) 9
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Set Count 3
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath

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Range Rhythm Precision Throwing Knife Set – What It Really Is

The Range Rhythm Precision Throwing Knife Set is a matched trio of 9-inch, full-tang stainless steel throwing knives built for one thing: clean, repeatable throws. This isn’t an automatic knife, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it sure isn’t a switchblade. It’s a dedicated throwing knife set, meant to leave your hand, hit your target, and teach you something every time it lands.

Each knife carries a spear point profile, slim and symmetrical, with a matte black finish framing bold red panels and a red cord-wrapped handle. A ring pommel at the end of each handle keeps the balance honest and the grip options flexible, whether you’re throwing from the blade or the handle. Three knives, one rhythm: throw, walk, reset, repeat.

Balanced Throwing Knife Design, Not an Automatic Knife

Where an automatic knife or switchblade is all about fast deployment from your pocket, a throwing knife is about what happens after it leaves your hand. These 9-inch knives are fixed, full-tang pieces—no springs, no buttons, no OTF tracks, just a straight, balanced build tuned for flight. That distinction matters to Texas buyers who know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a simple, honest thrower.

The spear point geometry gives you symmetry down the centerline, which helps keep rotation even in the air. Both edges are visually balanced, but the set is tuned for throwing, not edge-heavy cutting. The matte black finish with red blade panels isn’t just for looks—it helps the knife stand out against wood and dirt, so you can track your hits and misses at a glance.

Full-Tang Stainless Steel Built for Repetition

Each knife is cut from stainless steel, running full-tang from tip to ring pommel. For a throwing knife set, that matters more than fancy deployment. The longer you throw, the more impacts you rack up—into wood, into frames, occasionally into the ground or each other. A solid, one-piece construction shrugs off that abuse in a way an automatic or OTF mechanism never could.

Stainless steel also keeps maintenance simple for Texas conditions. From Hill Country humidity to Gulf Coast air, a quick wipe-down after practice is usually all it takes. This set is designed to spend more time in your hand and on the target than on a workbench.

Red Cord Wrap and Ring Pommel for Real-World Use

The red cord-wrapped handle does two things that matter to throwers. First, it gives you a bit of bite when your hands are sweaty, dirty, or it’s just hot enough in Texas that everything feels slick. Second, that bright red is easy to spot when you’re working a backyard range and one knife lands a little wide.

The ring pommel adds another layer of control. It anchors the weight at the back end and lets you fine-tune grip, whether you choke up or hang a finger through the ring for familiarity. You won’t get that from a typical folding automatic knife or an OTF knife, because they’re not meant to leave your hand in the first place.

Throwing Knives vs Automatic Knives, OTF Knives, and Switchblades

Texas collectors like to keep their categories straight, and this set makes the line clear. An automatic knife uses a spring to snap the blade out from a folded position, usually with a side-opening action. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front along a track, with its own internal mechanics. A switchblade is the older, common term folks use for many automatic knives, especially in casual talk.

This Range Rhythm set is none of those. It’s a fixed-blade throwing knife set with no moving parts. You don’t carry it like an automatic or OTF knife, you don’t flick it open, and you’re not buying it to sit clipped inside your pocket. You carry the trio in the included nylon sheath, walk up to your line, and use them for practice, sport, and skill-building. That clear separation is exactly what Texas buyers who care about mechanism and law are looking for.

Why Dedicated Throwers Belong in a Texas Collection

A serious Texas knife drawer shouldn’t be all automatics and OTF knives. A balanced throwing knife set fills a different role—part training tool, part stress relief, part proof that you know knives beyond just buttons and springs. These knives invite repetition. You’re not babying a mechanism; you’re working on distance, spin, and consistency.

Over time, a set like this becomes a record of your progress. The dings in the ring pommels, the marks in the finish, the way the cord wrap settles to your grip—those tell a story most switchblades and OTF showpieces never will.

Texas Context: Throwing Knife Use and Carry

Texas is friendlier than most states when it comes to knives, and that includes throwing knife sets. While an automatic knife, OTF knife, or classic switchblade tends to bring up questions about pocket carry and public use, a throwing knife set like this Range Rhythm trio lives a different kind of life. It’s made for private ranges, backyard targets, and controlled environments where you can focus on your throw, not your holster.

The included nylon sheath keeps all three knives together between sessions. For most Texas buyers, that means hanging it in the garage, tucking it into a range bag, or keeping it with other gear you don’t mind scuffing up. You’re not drawing these in a hurry; you’re walking up, unrolling your skill at your own pace.

Backyard and Range Reality for Texas Owners

Plenty of Texans set up a simple wood target out back and work throws in the evening. That’s where this throwing knife set makes more sense than any automatic or OTF knife. Three matching pieces let you build a steady rhythm: throw all three, walk down, read the pattern, and adjust. The red-and-black finish makes it easy to spot where each knife struck, even in low sunset light.

If you already own a stable of switchblades, side-opening automatics, and maybe a favorite OTF knife, this set rounds out your skill set instead of duplicating it. You’re not buying another variation of the same pocket piece—you’re buying a purpose-built practice tool.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Knife Sets

Is this throwing knife set anything like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. This Range Rhythm set is as simple as it gets: three fixed, full-tang throwing knives with no springs, no sliders, and no buttons. An automatic knife or switchblade is designed to open quickly from a folded position; an OTF knife rides a track and fires straight out the front. These throwing knives are built to be thrown, not flicked—different job, different build, and usually different legal and carry considerations.

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

Texas law is generally knife-friendly, and fixed-blade throwing knives like these are widely owned for sport and practice. Where an automatic knife, OTF knife, or traditional switchblade might raise questions about concealed carry or specific locations, a throwing knife set is typically used on private property or controlled ranges. As always, Texas buyers should check current state and local rules, but for most folks, owning and practicing with a throwing knife set at home is straightforward.

Why would a Texas collector add a throwing knife set to a collection of automatics and OTF knives?

Because it proves you care about what a knife does, not just how it opens. An automatic knife or OTF knife shows off mechanical precision and speed. A throwing knife set like this Range Rhythm trio shows off control, repetition, and a different kind of discipline. The stainless steel build, spear point balance, and bright red cord wraps make it a visually sharp addition to a collection, but more importantly, it’s a piece you’ll actually take outside and use.

A Texas-Minded Set for Collectors Who Know Their Knives

The Range Rhythm Precision Throwing Knife Set isn’t trying to be an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. It stands on its own as a balanced, matched trio of throwing knives meant for Texas buyers who can tell the difference and care about it. Three 9-inch stainless steel throwers, red cord wraps, ring pommels, and a nylon sheath—simple, honest tools that reward practice.

If your drawer already holds the side-opening automatics you trust and the OTF knife you like to show your buddies, this set gives you something different: a way to step outside, put steel on wood, and let the sound of a good solid thunk remind you why you started collecting knives in the first place.