Skip to Content
Silent Entry Tactical Throwing Axe - Black

Price:

10.99


Razor Talon Tactical Karambit Knife - Black Steel
Razor Talon Tactical Karambit Knife - Black Steel
12.99 12.99
Shadow Minimalist Backup Neck Knife - Black
Shadow Minimalist Backup Neck Knife - Black
6.99 6.99

Shadow Breach Tactical Throwing Axe - Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/9334/image_1920?unique=e738656

5 sold in last 24 hours

The Shadow Breach Tactical Throwing Axe - Black is a compact full-tang throwing axe built for real use, not wall space. Its 7-inch black steel head, sawback-style spine, and paracord-wrapped handle give you secure control from the back pasture to a Texas hunting lease. Belt carry with the nylon sheath keeps it ready at camp or in the truck. It’s not a folding knife, not an automatic knife, and not a switchblade—just a straightforward tactical axe for Texans who know what they’re buying.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

FX1783

Not Available For Sale

5 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 11.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Normal Straight
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Cord
Theme Tactical
Handle Length (inches) 4.5
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Belt carry
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Shadow Breach Tactical Throwing Axe for Texas Buyers

The Shadow Breach Tactical Throwing Axe - Black is exactly what it looks like: a compact, full-tang tactical throwing axe built for work, practice, and camp life. This isn’t a folding knife, not an automatic knife, and not any kind of switchblade or OTF knife. It’s a fixed-blade axe head on a solid tang, wrapped in cord, sized right for throwing, packing, and belt carry across Texas.

At 11.5 inches overall with a 7-inch cutting edge, this tactical throwing axe gives you more reach and bite than a big knife, without the bulk of a full-size camp axe. The matte black finish, sawback-style spine cutouts, and paracord-wrapped grip all speak the same language: modern tactical utility for people who actually use their gear.

What Makes This a Tactical Throwing Axe, Not a Knife

Mechanically, this tool is a simple, honest fixed blade. There’s no spring, no button, no automatic opening, nothing that even hints at an OTF knife or switchblade. The cutting edge is set in an axe profile, not a knife blade profile, with a broad curved bit designed to bite and stick on impact. The full-tang construction runs the length of the handle, wrapped in cord for grip and a bit of shock absorption.

That straight-up design is exactly why some Texas collectors add a tactical throwing axe alongside their automatic knife and OTF knife lineup. Your switchblades handle quick close work. Your OTF knives give you that fast, linear deployment. A fixed throwing axe like this covers throwing practice, light chopping, and camp chores where a folder just doesn’t make sense.

Full-Tang Strength and Cord-Wrapped Control

Because the steel runs from the axe head through the handle, this tactical throwing axe can take the kind of impact a folding knife or automatic knife simply isn’t built for. The black cord wrap gives you a grippy, slightly forgiving surface when you’re throwing or chopping. The lanyard at the end lets you secure it or hang it at camp when it’s not riding on your belt.

Matte Black Blade and Sawback Spine

The matte black finish on the blade keeps reflections down and looks right at home next to other tactical gear. The sawback-style cutouts on the spine add visual aggression and give you extra purchase points if you’re choking up behind the head. It’s not pretending to be a survival saw; it’s a tactical detail on a throwing axe, meant to match the rest of your blacked-out kit.

Texas Carry Reality: A Tactical Axe Beside Your Knives

In Texas, buyers who already own an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade often want a dedicated field tool they can strap to a belt without worrying about mechanisms. A fixed tactical throwing axe like this one fits that role. The included nylon sheath gives you belt carry with snap closures that fully cover the edge and the head, so you’re not catching it on brush, truck seats, or range gear.

Unlike an automatic knife or switchblade that lives in your pocket, this axe rides outside the waistband, ready at camp, at the lease, or in the backyard when you’re working on your throw. It’s the kind of tool you grab when you’re heading out the door with a cooler, a rifle case, and already a couple of knives on you.

From the Back Forty to the Lease

Texans use tools in real dirt. This tactical throwing axe makes sense at a Hill Country campsite, a Panhandle lease, or a backyard target setup in the suburbs. When you want to keep your automatic knife for finer work and your OTF knife for fast access, this fixed throwing axe takes all the impacts and misses that would beat up a folder.

How This Axe Fits Beside Automatic Knives, OTF Knives, and Switchblades

Texas collectors tend to group gear by mechanism. Automatic knives deploy with a spring when you hit a button or lever. OTF knives send the blade straight out of the handle along a track. Switchblade is the older umbrella term most folks toss around for side-opening automatics. A throwing axe like this doesn’t live in that family at all—and that’s its strength.

Because there’s no deployment mechanism, there’s nothing to tune, no springs to wear, and no sliders to gum up with dust. It’s one solid piece of steel wrapped in cord. That simplicity is why a lot of collectors who care about their switchblades and OTF knives choose a fixed tactical axe for the hard knocks. You can throw it, drop it, and bang it around camp without feeling like you’re abusing a delicate mechanism.

Texas Context and Legal Perspective for a Tactical Throwing Axe

Texas law treats knives and bladed tools by blade length and category, but a compact throwing axe sits in a simpler lane than an automatic knife or switchblade. The primary concerns for most Texas buyers are reasonable transport, responsible use, and where it’s appropriate to bring a tool like this. Around a private range, hunting property, or your own land, a tactical throwing axe used for sport or utility is far less controversial than flipping open a switchblade in town.

Many Texans who ask about “switchblade legal Texas” end up realizing that a lot of their daily cutting needs are better handled by a straightforward fixed blade, and their throwing practice is better handled by a tool purpose-built to be thrown. This axe fills that slot neatly, while your automatic knife and OTF knife stay ready for the quick, one-hand work they were designed for.

As always, Texas buyers should stay up to date on local rules about blades in schools, certain government buildings, and other restricted areas. A tactical throwing axe is a tool, but it’s still a blade; treat it with the same respect you give your switchblades and other edged gear.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Tactical Throwing Axes

Is this considered an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. This is a fixed-blade tactical throwing axe, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. There is no button, lever, or spring-assisted deployment of any kind. The steel is exposed from the moment it’s drawn from the sheath. That clean distinction matters to Texas collectors who want their automatics and switchblades for fast pocket carry, and a separate, simpler tool for throwing and camp work.

Is it legal to carry a tactical throwing axe like this in Texas?

Texas is generally friendly to blades, but you still need to use common sense. A compact tactical throwing axe carried to a hunting lease, private land, or a range is a very different thing than walking into a school or courthouse with one. Where switchblade and automatic knife laws have shifted over time, fixed tools like this axe have mostly been judged by context and behavior. Texas buyers should check current state and local rules, carry it secured in the sheath, and reserve it for appropriate places and uses.

Why would a collector add a throwing axe when they already own knives?

Because knives and axes do different work. Your automatic knife and OTF knife give you fast one-handed cutting. Your switchblades might be the showpieces you flip open to friends. A tactical throwing axe like this earns its place as the hard-use impact tool: for throwing games, camp chores, and the kind of rough duty you’d rather not hand to a spring-driven mechanism. It rounds out a Texas collection with a dedicated striking tool that looks right alongside blacked-out tactical knives.

Built for Texans Who Know Their Edged Tools

The Shadow Breach Tactical Throwing Axe - Black isn’t trying to be clever. It’s a compact, full-tang throwing axe with a black steel head, cord-wrapped handle, and a belt sheath that makes sense in real Texas use. It stands beside, not in place of, your automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades. For the buyer who can tell those categories apart without thinking, this piece is an easy addition: a straightforward tactical axe that takes the hits so your finer knives don’t have to.

If you’re the kind of Texan who can name the difference between a side-opening automatic and an OTF without reaching for a glossary, you’ll see exactly where this throwing axe fits in your lineup the moment you pick it up.