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Instant Grip Tactical Push Dagger Knife - Black Rubber

Price:

4.99


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Silent Hold Compact Push Dagger Knife - Black Rubber

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/9355/image_1920?unique=2622b0e

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This compact push dagger knife rides light on a neck cord but hits above its weight when it counts. A fixed blade with a T-shaped rubber grip, it’s built for close, controlled work where a folding knife or automatic knife might be too slow. The partial-serrated stainless blade and full tang construction give Texas carriers a dependable last-ditch option that disappears under a shirt but is always right where your hand expects it.

4.99 4.99 USD 4.99

FX9918

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  • 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) 1.5
Overall Length (inches) 3.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Rubber
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 2.0
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Neck carry
Sheath/Holster Hard plastic sheath

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Silent Hold Compact Push Dagger Knife for Texas Carry

The Silent Hold Compact Push Dagger Knife - Black Rubber is a true fixed blade neck knife, built for one job: controlled, close-quarters work when you don’t have time to fumble. This isn’t an automatic knife, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it’s not a switchblade. It’s a small, full tang push dagger that sits quietly on a cord until your hand wraps around that T-shaped handle and goes to work.

At 3.5 inches overall with a 1.5 inch stainless blade, it’s compact without being a toy. The T-grip rubber handle gives you leverage in a way no folding blade or assisted opener can match, and the hard sheath plus neck cord make it a natural backup for Texas carriers who like a fixed blade they can reach without digging through pockets.

What Makes This Push Dagger Knife Different

Mechanically, this is as simple and honest as a knife gets: a fixed blade, full tang push dagger knife with no moving parts. Where an automatic knife needs a spring and button, and an OTF knife needs internal tracks and a sliding switch, this push dagger just needs your hand and intent. That simplicity is exactly why a lot of serious collectors and self-defense minded Texans like to keep one in the mix.

The stainless steel blade carries a dagger-style profile with partial serrations along the lower edge. Those serrations give you bite on straps, webbing, and tough material where a smooth edge might skate. The full tang construction runs straight through the handle, so that T-shaped rubber grip isn’t just comfortable — it’s locked to the steel from top to bottom.

T-Grip Control in Close Quarters

Unlike a traditional fixed blade hunting knife or a side-opening automatic knife, a push dagger sits between your fingers with the blade projecting from your fist. That changes how it feels in the hand and how it moves. You’re not pinching a handle; you’re making a fist around it. For a lot of users, that offers a more secure, no-slip feel under stress, especially with the textured black rubber handle on this piece.

The compact 1.5 inch blade isn’t about reach; it’s about retention and control. In tight spaces, in heavy brush, or when used as a discreet backup, a shorter fixed blade can actually be easier to keep on target than a long fighting knife or oversized tactical folder.

Neck Carry Sheath That Stays Put

The included hard plastic sheath is drilled for a black nylon cord, giving you classic neck knife carry. For Texas users, that means this push dagger knife can ride under a T-shirt or light jacket, ready to be drawn straight down and out. No pocket clips to snag, no auto mechanism to fail, no OTF blade to gum up with lint — just a fixed blade locked into a simple sheath until it’s pulled free.

Push Dagger Knife vs Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, and Switchblade

If you’ve ever been burned by a site calling everything a switchblade, this is where things get cleared up. A push dagger knife is a fixed blade. It does not open, it does not deploy, and it does not rely on any spring or button. That alone puts it in a different class from an automatic knife or OTF knife.

An automatic knife usually means a side-opening folder that snaps open with a button. An OTF knife fires the blade straight out the front of the handle, either automatically or with a manual slide. Collectors often use switchblade as a broad casual term, but under the law it’s those automatic, spring-driven actions that matter — not the shape of the handle.

This Silent Hold is none of those. It’s a small, legal-to-own fixed blade push dagger knife that complements your autos and OTFs instead of competing with them. If your automatic knife or assisted opener is your main pocket piece, this push dagger can be your quiet backup.

Texas Carry Reality for a Push Dagger Knife

Texas knife law has relaxed a lot over the years, especially compared to states that still treat anything spring-loaded like a crime scene. Automatic knives, OTF knives, and even traditional switchblades have seen friendlier treatment in Texas statute, with focus shifting more toward location and intent than simple mechanics.

A push dagger knife like this one is a fixed blade. In Texas, that usually means you’re looking at where you carry it, not whether it opens automatically. Neck carry under a shirt keeps the profile low, which many Texans appreciate whether they’re running into town late at night or walking the lease line before sunrise. Still, a serious Texas collector or carrier will double-check current Texas law and local restrictions, because counties and certain premises can have their own posted rules, regardless of whether you’re carrying an automatic knife, OTF knife, switchblade, or this compact fixed blade.

If you already own a few autos and you’re used to thinking in terms of blade length and restricted places, you’ll find this push dagger falls into the same mental checklist — you just don’t have to worry about anyone accusing it of being a switchblade, because there’s nothing to switch.

Why This Push Dagger Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Collectors in Texas tend to have at least one of everything: a favorite automatic knife, an OTF knife that impresses friends, a classic side-opening switchblade or two, plus a handful of workhorse folders and fixed blades. The hole in a lot of drawers is a proper neck-worn push dagger knife — especially one that’s simple, durable, and inexpensive enough to be a true working backup, not a safe queen.

The Silent Hold brings a few things to the table that justify its place:

  • Different role: It’s not trying to replace your main automatic knife; it’s a close-in, instinctive fixed blade that works when your hands are already full or muddy.
  • Neck carry niche: Slides into a purpose that pocket autos and OTF knives just don’t fill — deep concealment with straight-line access.
  • Full tang confidence: No pivot, no lock, no spring. Just steel through rubber, ready to go.
  • Textured rubber feel: In sweaty Texas heat, that grip matters more than another gimmick deployment.

From a collector’s standpoint, it also rounds out your understanding of defensive knife design. You feel the difference between managing a thumb-stud folder, hitting the button on a switchblade, thumbing the slider on an OTF knife, and simply punching forward with a push dagger. That variety isn’t just for show — it builds a more complete, hands-on education.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Push Dagger Knife

Is a push dagger knife like this the same as an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No, and that distinction matters. This Silent Hold is a fixed blade push dagger knife. There is no button, no spring, no sliding track, and nothing that "deploys." An automatic knife opens by spring when you hit a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out or back into the handle with a slide or switch. Switchblade is usually the legal word for those automatic actions. With this push dagger, the blade is already out — you just draw it from the sheath. For Texas buyers who care about definitions, this is about as far from a switchblade as a knife can be while still being tactical.

Is carrying a push dagger knife legal in Texas?

Texas law is far friendlier to knives now than it used to be, including automatic knives and OTF-style switchblades. This push dagger knife is a fixed blade, and in Texas the bigger considerations today are blade length categories, restricted locations, and how you carry, not whether it’s automatic. Neck carry under clothing keeps things discreet, but you still need to respect places where knives of any type — fixed blade, automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade — are prohibited. Laws can change, so a responsible Texas carrier checks current state code and any local rules before making this a daily neck knife.

Where does this push dagger fit in a serious Texas knife collection?

Think of this push dagger knife as your backup and your educator. If your drawer already holds a handful of automatic knives, maybe an OTF knife with a slick action, and a vintage switchblade you’re proud of, this Silent Hold adds the fixed-blade neck knife perspective. It gives you a different kind of control, a different carry position, and a different feel in the hand. For many Texas collectors, that variety — understanding how each mechanism and format behaves — is what turns a pile of blades into a real collection.

In the end, the Silent Hold Compact Push Dagger Knife - Black Rubber is for the Texan who already knows the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade — and wants a compact fixed blade that fills a gap those mechanisms can’t. It rides quiet, draws fast, and does its work without fanfare. That’s the kind of piece that earns its keep in a Texas collection, not because it shouts, but because it’s there when you reach for it.