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Signal Ridge Full-Tang Survival Knife - Orange Rubber

Price:

23.99


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Signal Ridge Sawback Survival Knife - Orange Rubber

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/6460/image_1920?unique=c1c457c

14 sold in last 24 hours

This survival fixed blade knife is built for the kind of Texas country where losing your tool isn’t an option. A full-tang steel blade with serrations, sawback spine, and matte black clip point handles cutting, ripping, and notching without glare. The high‑visibility orange rubber handle locks into your grip and won’t vanish in the brush, while the included sheath keeps it ready on your belt or pack. For Texans who take camp, lease, and backroad prep seriously, this is the fixed blade that earns its spot.

23.99 23.99 USD 23.99

FX770OR

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Tang Type
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

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Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Rubber
Theme None
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Sheath carry
Sheath/Holster Sheath

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Signal Ridge Sawback Survival Knife: A Texas Fixed Blade That Won’t Quit

The Signal Ridge Sawback Survival Knife - Orange Rubber is a full-tang survival fixed blade built for Texas ground: mesquite thickets, cedar breaks, coastal marsh, and West Texas rock. This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. It’s a straight-up fixed blade survival knife — no springs, no gimmicks, just steel, grip, and a sheath that rides where you put it.

For a Texas buyer who already knows the difference between a switchblade and an OTF knife, this piece fills a different slot in the drawer. When you don’t need fast deployment, you need guaranteed readiness. A fixed blade survival knife like this is open the second it leaves the sheath, with full-tang strength running from tip to lanyard.

Full-Tang Survival Knife Mechanics: Why Fixed Beats Folding Here

Mechanically, this survival knife is simple in the best way. The steel runs the full length of the handle — that’s full tang — which gives you strength you won’t get from most folders, automatics, or OTF knives. No pivot, no button, no spring to clog with sand or cedar needles. The blade is long, black-finished steel with a clip point and a serrated section, backed by an aggressive sawback spine.

Blade Design for Texas Ground

The clip point with a matte black finish keeps reflections down when you’re glassing a line or moving at dawn. The plain edge handles clean cuts, while the serrations bite into rope, webbing, and stubborn brush. The sawback along the spine will chew through small limbs, notch stakes, and help you rough in camp when you don’t feel like hauling a bigger tool.

Grip You Can Trust When It’s Wet, Cold, or Dark

The high-visibility orange rubber handle isn’t for looks, it’s for reality. Rubber gives you traction when your hands are wet with rain, sweat, or river water. The full guard and finger loop keep your hand from sliding up on the blade when you’re bearing down. Add the lanyard through the end and you can secure it to your wrist or lash it where you want it.

Texas Survival Fixed Blade vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

Texas collectors know there’s a time for an automatic knife, a time for an OTF knife, and a time for a side-opening switchblade. This survival fixed blade is for the times when you don’t need a button at all — you need a tool that’s already open, already strong, and easy to clean.

  • Automatic knife: Folds and opens by spring from the side. Good for fast, one-handed use in town or at work.
  • OTF knife: Blade rides inside the handle and shoots straight out the front. Fine control and fast action, but more moving parts.
  • Switchblade: The classic side-opening automatic that Texans ask about when they’re checking the law.
  • This knife: A fixed blade survival knife that lives in a sheath, comes out ready, and shrugs off mud, sand, and rain.

Out at the deer lease, on the lake, or running a fence line, a fixed blade like this sits where you can reach it. No fumbling for a button with cold fingers, no worrying about pocket lint in an automatic or OTF mechanism. You draw it, you work, you sheath it, and move on.

Texas Law, Carry, and This Survival Knife

Under current Texas law, this survival knife is considered a fixed blade edged tool, and it falls under the state’s "location-restricted knife" rules based largely on blade length, not on whether it’s an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. There’s no spring, no button — just a fixed blade riding in a sheath.

For everyday Texas carry, that means you treat this the way you’d treat any larger fixed blade. It’s right at home on private land, at the ranch, camping on the river, or rolled into your truck kit. Around town, you’ll want to know the current Texas knife length limits for specific restricted locations, because those can apply just as much to a simple fixed blade as to a flashier automatic or switchblade.

Most Texas buyers run a setup like this: a smaller folding or automatic knife in the pocket for city use and this survival fixed blade in the truck, pack, or on the belt for the lease, the lake, and the long stretches of county road where you’re your own backup.

Built for Texas Survival Tasks, Not Just Show

The visual story on this knife is straightforward: survival first. The sawback blade, matte finish, and high-vis handle make it a working tool, not a glass-case piece. Texas buyers who actually use their knives will notice a few details that set it apart from the usual budget fixed blade.

Full-Tang Strength in a Hard-Use Profile

With steel running all the way through the handle, you can baton wood, pry lightly, and torque the blade without babying it the way you would an automatic or OTF knife with internal mechanisms. That makes it a strong candidate for a dedicated camp knife or a backup to your primary bush tool.

High-Visibility Handle for Texas Brush and Water

If you’ve ever laid a dark-handled knife down in Johnson grass at last light, you already understand this handle. The orange rubber pops against dirt, rock, grass, and water. Whether you’re on the Guadalupe, down on the coast, or in Hill Country cedar, this one is built to be found when you set it down for a second and something distracts you.

The included sheath gives you straightforward belt carry or pack mounting. It’s not there to win a beauty contest; it’s there to keep the knife where you left it — an important distinction when you’re rattling down a lease road or hauling gear in and out of camp.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Survival Fixed Blade Knives

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

No. This is a fixed blade survival knife — a full-tang piece of steel with no folding action, no automatic spring, and no OTF mechanism. An automatic knife or switchblade opens from the side with a button or switch. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. This one simply draws from a sheath ready to work, which is exactly what many Texas collectors want for camp and ranch use.

Is it legal to carry a survival fixed blade like this in Texas?

Texas law focuses more on blade length and restricted locations than on whether it’s an automatic knife, OTF knife, switchblade, or fixed blade. A survival knife like this is generally legal for adults in most everyday situations, especially on your own property, at the lease, and in the field, but certain locations have tighter restrictions. Regulations can change, so a serious Texas buyer will always check the latest Texas knife statutes and local rules before deciding how and where to carry.

Where does this survival fixed blade fit in a Texas collection?

For a Texas collector, this knife doesn’t replace your favorite automatic knife or OTF; it rides alongside them. Your switchblade might be the conversation piece. Your OTF knife might be the slick everyday cutter. This survival fixed blade becomes the truck knife, the lease knife, the one that lives in the go bag. The high-vis handle, sawback spine, and full tang give it a clear purpose: when you need a tool you can grip hard and not worry about, this is the piece you reach for.

A Texas-Minded Survival Fixed Blade for People Who Know Their Knives

The Signal Ridge Sawback Survival Knife - Orange Rubber isn’t trying to be everything. It’s not a flashy automatic knife for pocket carry, it’s not an OTF knife built for desk flicks, and it’s not a traditional switchblade chasing nostalgia. It’s a straightforward survival fixed blade for Texans who split their time between pavement and pasture and want the right tool for each world.

If you like the feeling of knowing exactly what’s on your belt — full tang, high-vis handle, ready edge, no surprises — this knife will make sense the first time you draw it. It belongs with buyers who understand the difference between mechanisms, respect Texas law, and value a tool that’s easy to find when the light and the weather both turn against you.