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ForestGuard Stonewash Precision Fixed Blade Dagger - Black Nylon

Price:

19.99


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Timberline Ring-Control Fixed Blade Dagger - Black Stonewash

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3715/image_1920?unique=0a617df

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This fixed blade dagger is built for close control, not kitchen duty. A 3.75-inch stonewashed steel blade runs full tang into a black nylon handle with a ring pommel that locks your grip when it matters. In Texas brush, on duty, or in the truck console, it rides tight in its hard sheath and draws clean. For collectors who know the difference between a folder and a fixed blade, this is the compact edge that earns its spot.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

HWT298BK

Not Available For Sale

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Stone Washed
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Material Nylon Fiber
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4.5
Sheath/Holster Hard Sheath

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What This Fixed Blade Dagger Actually Is

The Timberline Ring-Control isn’t pretending to be a pocket toy or a fancy switchblade. It’s a compact fixed blade dagger built around control: 3.75 inches of stonewashed steel running full tang through a black nylon handle, ending in a ring pommel that keeps the knife anchored when your grip gets tested. No springs, no OTF mechanism, no automatic button—just a solid, ready edge that doesn’t fold, doesn’t hesitate, and doesn’t need explaining to a serious Texas knife buyer.

In a world where every other site wants to call anything sharp a switchblade or an automatic knife, this one stands firm. It’s a fixed blade dagger, plain and simple. That clarity is what Texas collectors appreciate—you know exactly what role this knife plays alongside your OTF knives, your side-opening autos, and any true switchblades you keep legal and close.

Fixed Blade Dagger vs Automatic Knife vs OTF Knife

Mechanically, this knife is the opposite of an automatic knife or an OTF knife. An automatic or switchblade uses a spring and a button or lever to snap a folding blade open from a closed position. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle along rails. Both are about rapid deployment from a pocket-sized package.

This fixed blade dagger is different by design. The blade is already out, full tang, and ready. No hinge to fail, no track to foul, no button to find under stress. With its ring pommel and narrow profile, it fills the same role a lot of Texans try to force on smaller autos: close-in control, confident indexing, and reliable puncture and slice. You carry your OTF knife or automatic knife when you want one-handed opening from the pocket; you carry this fixed blade dagger when you want a tool that’s either in your hand or locked in its sheath, no in-between.

Texas Carry Reality for a Fixed Blade Dagger

Texas knife law has grown friendlier over the years, but it still rewards people who know what they’re carrying. This is a fixed blade dagger, not a switchblade or an automatic knife, and that matters when you’re talking blade length and where you can take it. With its 3.75-inch blade, it sits under the common 5.5-inch threshold that affects where certain knives can be carried in Texas, giving you more flexibility than a big field or combat blade.

On the ranch, in a work truck, or stowed in a go-bag, this compact fixed blade rides easy in its hard sheath and doesn’t ask for much. It’s not the flashy OTF knife you show your buddies; it’s the quiet tool that comes out when a box needs opening, cord needs cutting, or you want something more secure in hand than a folder on a slick day. For a Texas buyer who already owns an automatic knife or two, this dagger fills the fixed-blade slot without taking up half your belt.

Mechanics and Control: How This Fixed Blade Dagger Works

Full Tang Strength with Ring-Pommel Security

The full tang construction means the steel runs from tip through the handle to the ring pommel—no hidden joints, no mystery metal. The textured black nylon fiber handle is bolted to that tang, giving you a stable platform that won’t twist under torque. The ring pommel is more than just a modern tactical nod; it lets you index the knife by feel and lock your hand in, gloved or bare.

Where an automatic knife or OTF knife can sometimes feel a little delicate around the pivot or track, this fixed blade dagger is as uncomplicated as it looks. Slide it from the sheath, set your finger through the ring or anchor your pinky against it, and the knife becomes an extension of your hand. That’s the kind of mechanical honesty Texas collectors respect.

Blade Geometry Built for Penetration and Precision

The double-edged spear-point dagger profile, with a central fuller, is meant for clean punctures and controlled cuts. The stonewashed finish on the black blade does two jobs: it breaks up reflections in the field and helps disguise the small scars that come from real use. Compared to a typical switchblade clip point or a single-edged OTF blade, this fixed blade dagger is more symmetrical and purpose-driven—a true point-forward design for when you need the tip to go exactly where you aim it.

Why This Fixed Blade Dagger Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas collectors tend to build systems, not junk drawers. You’ve got your everyday assisted openers, a couple of automatic knives you favor, maybe a higher-end OTF knife you baby a bit, and at least one old-school switchblade that only comes out for the right crowd. A compact, ring-pommel fixed blade dagger like this slides into that ecosystem as the no-nonsense utility and control piece.

At 8.25 inches overall, it’s big enough to work but small enough to stash. The hard sheath means you can lash it to a pack strap, belt, or MOLLE panel without worrying about soft fabric collapsing or giving way. And because it’s a fixed blade dagger—not an OTF or switchblade—it’s simpler to maintain, easier to trust, and doesn’t ask for the same mechanical babying an automatic knife sometimes needs.

For the Texas buyer who’s tired of sites mislabeling every fixed blade as some kind of tactical switchblade, this knife’s value starts with honesty. It tells you what it is the first time: a compact, ring-control fixed blade dagger designed to ride quiet and work hard.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Fixed Blade Daggers

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

No, and that distinction matters. An automatic knife or switchblade is a folder that uses a spring and release to snap the blade open. An OTF knife keeps the blade inside the handle and drives it straight out the front along a track. This knife is a fixed blade dagger—full tang, blade always exposed, secured in a sheath. There’s no button, no assisted opening, and no OTF mechanism. If you’ve been frustrated by stores calling every tactical profile a switchblade, this one will feel like a breath of fresh air: it’s clearly and correctly a fixed blade.

Are fixed blade daggers like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law focuses more on blade length and restricted locations than on whether a knife is a fixed blade, automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade. This fixed blade dagger sits at about 3.75 inches of blade, which puts it under common 5.5-inch thresholds that affect where you can carry. You still need to stay aware of Texas location-based restrictions—certain places won’t allow larger blades at all. This isn’t legal advice, but it is a reminder: know your blade length, know where you’re headed, and you’ll be ahead of most buyers who only ask whether something is a switchblade.

Where does this fixed blade dagger fit in a serious Texas collection?

Think of this as your close-control field and backup piece. Your OTF knife rides in the pocket for quick everyday cutting; your automatic knife or switchblade scratches the mechanical itch and comes out when you want that snap. This fixed blade dagger fills the role that folders can’t: ready from the sheath, full tang, secure ring grip, and stonewashed steel that doesn’t mind getting dirty. It belongs on a vest strap, in a truck console, or in a ranch bag—where you want a knife that doesn’t need to open before it can get to work.

In the end, this knife speaks to a certain kind of Texas buyer—the one who already knows the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a switchblade, and still chooses a fixed blade dagger when the job calls for simple, durable, and honest steel. If that sounds like you, this Timberline Ring-Control won’t be your loudest knife, but it might be the one you reach for most.