Ridgeback Sawtooth Hunting Knife - Gray Rubber
10 sold in last 24 hours
This fixed blade hunting knife was built for hard Texas use, not the display case. The 4.5-inch black drop point blade with sawback spine and partial serrations handles field dressing, camp chores, and light survival work in one tool. A gray rubber handle keeps your grip locked in when it’s wet, muddy, or cold. It’s the kind of dependable hunting knife a Texas hunter or collector keeps in the truck because it just works.
| Blade Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 9.5 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Drop Point |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Rubber |
| Theme | Tactical |
| Handle Length (inches) | 5 |
| Pommel/Butt Cap | Flat pommel |
Ridgeback Sawtooth Hunting Knife – A Working Fixed Blade for Texas Ground
The Ridgeback Sawtooth Hunting Knife - Gray Rubber is a no-nonsense fixed blade hunting knife built for real Texas country, not glass cases. This is a full-tang style field tool with a 4.5-inch black drop point blade, sawback spine, and partial serrations, designed to ride on your belt or in your pack and handle the work other knives shy away from.
It’s not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. It’s a straight-up fixed blade hunting knife with tactical leanings, the kind Texans reach for when there’s brush to clear, game to dress, and camp chores waiting. Collectors who already own their fair share of switchblades and OTFs will recognize this as the dependable fixed blade that fills a different slot in the lineup.
Fixed Blade Hunting Knife First, Tactical Survival Tool Second
Start with what this knife really is: a compact fixed blade hunting knife with a tactical survival edge. The 4.5-inch black drop point blade gives you a strong tip, broad belly, and a straight section of cutting edge that works for skinning, slicing, and general camp use. The partial serrations near the handle chew through rope, straps, and tough hide without babying the edge.
Up top, the sawback spine adds a survival-minded touch. On a Texas hunt, that means light brush clearing, notching, and rough cutting when you don’t want to drag a full saw into the field. Paired with the non-reflective matte black finish, the whole blade profile reads like a modern tactical hunting knife, ready for hog country, lease work, or back-of-the-ranch chores.
Why a Fixed Blade Over an Automatic Knife Here?
Texas collectors who know their automatic knives and OTF knives understand this tradeoff: fixed blades win on strength and simplicity. There’s no spring, no button, no slide, no lock to fail. When you’re dressing game or twisting a blade through heavy work, a solid fixed blade hunting knife like this Ridgeback Sawtooth gives you confidence that a folding joint simply can’t match.
Your switchblade or OTF knife might ride in your pocket for quick everyday cuts, but this fixed blade belongs on your belt when the work gets messy and the ground gets muddy.
Grip, Control, and Texas Conditions: The Gray Rubber Handle
Texas weather doesn’t ask your permission. It’s wet in the morning, dusty at noon, and slick with sweat by afternoon. The gray rubber handle on this hunting knife is built for that kind of swing. At 5 inches long, it gives you a full, secure grip even with gloves on, and the textured inlays and molded guard keep your hand from sliding forward when things get greasy.
The flat pommel gives you a ready striking surface for light hammering or tapping, and the overall matte, subdued look suits hunters and tactical-minded buyers who don’t want chrome reflections flashing through the mesquite. This isn’t a gentleman’s folder; it’s a working fixed blade that feels right at home bouncing around in a Texas truck or strapped to a pack.
Mechanism Simplicity vs. Spring Complexity
Unlike an automatic knife or switchblade, there’s nothing to deploy here. No button, no spring, no OTF track to clear. You draw, and the blade is already at full strength. That simplicity is exactly why many Texas hunters keep a fixed blade like this near their automatic knives and OTFs—each has a job, and this one’s job is hard use and field reliability.
Texas Use, Texas Law: Where This Fixed Blade Fits
Texas relaxed its knife laws several years back, which opened the door for legal carry of larger blades, automatic knives, and even some switchblades, depending on where you are and how you carry. This Ridgeback Sawtooth sits comfortably in the hunting and outdoor lane—made for the lease, the ranch, and the camp more than the courthouse or classroom.
Texas law looks at blade length and location, not whether it’s an OTF knife, automatic knife, or fixed blade switchblade style. With an overall length of 9.5 inches, this hunting knife is right at home in the field, on private land, or anywhere a Texas hunter is expected to have a real working blade on hand. For city carry and posted locations, a serious buyer will always check the latest Texas statutes, but in camp and country, a fixed blade like this is as natural as a rifle and a cooler.
Collector Value: A Budget-Friendly Workhorse in a Tactical Wardrobe
Collectors already running a stable of high-end automatics, OTF knives, and traditional switchblades know the value of a beater fixed blade that doesn’t ask for pampering. The Ridgeback Sawtooth Hunting Knife - Gray Rubber fills exactly that role: a tactical-leaning hunting fixed blade you won’t hesitate to press into ugly work.
The matte black steel blade, sawback spine, and partial serrations make it visually distinct in a drawer full of cleaner hunting profiles. The Defender Xtreme logo and aggressive styling give it that modern survival look, while the rubber handle keeps it firmly in the "use it, not just show it" category. This is the kind of knife you hand to a buddy at camp without worrying about scratches.
How It Complements Your Automatics and OTFs
Think of your automatic knife as your quick-draw pocket cutter, your OTF knife as your one-hand, true-out-the-front tool, and this fixed blade hunting knife as the muscle. When you’re breaking down a hog, batoning kindling, or scraping bark, this is the knife you reach for. Together, they round out a Texas collection that covers everyday carry, fast deployment, and heavy field use without overlap or confusion.
What Texas Buyers Ask About This Hunting Knife
Is this anything like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?
No. Mechanically, this is a fixed blade hunting knife—about as simple and strong as it gets. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and button to snap the blade open from the side, while an OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front on a track. This Ridgeback Sawtooth has no moving parts in the mechanism. You draw it from the sheath, and the blade is already deployed. For Texas buyers, it pairs well with an automatic or OTF as the dedicated hard-use tool.
Is a fixed blade hunting knife like this legal to carry in Texas?
Texas law generally allows larger blades, including many automatic knives and even some switchblades, but there are still restrictions by location and age. A 9.5-inch fixed blade hunting knife like this is typically fine for hunting, ranch work, and private property carry. As with any fixed blade, automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade, you should check current Texas statutes and local rules—especially for schools, government buildings, and certain city ordinances—before carrying it into town.
Where does this fit in a serious Texas collection?
This knife earns its spot as the working fixed blade alongside your collectible automatics and OTF knives. It’s the piece you grab when you don’t want to risk a high-dollar switchblade on bone, brush, or camp abuse. The sawback, serrations, and rubber grip give it a unique tactical survival look, while the straightforward fixed blade build makes it a dependable loaner, truck knife, or lease companion that still looks sharp in a Texas collector’s rotation.
For Texans Who Know Their Knives
If you can tell an automatic knife from an OTF knife at a glance and know a true switchblade by its button, this Ridgeback Sawtooth Hunting Knife - Gray Rubber will make sense the moment you pick it up. It’s the fixed blade you bring along when the skies threaten, the mud’s deep, and the work list is long. In a Texas collection that respects mechanism and purpose, this hunting knife doesn’t compete with your automatics—it completes them.