Skip to Content
Red Marble Ranger Hunting Fixed Blade Knife - Chrome Crimson

Price:

16.95


Darkline Everyday Assist Folding Knife - Dark Brown
Darkline Everyday Assist Folding Knife - Dark Brown
9.49 9.49
Hidden Ember Survival Fixed Blade Knife - Black ABS
Hidden Ember Survival Fixed Blade Knife - Black ABS
10.43 10.43

Marble Range Field Fixed Blade Knife - Red Chrome

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/7665/image_1920?unique=c1d9f4f

6 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a toy wall-hanger—it’s a working field knife with some attitude. The Marble Range Field Fixed Blade Knife runs a 7-inch 3Cr13 stainless blade, easy to sharpen and tough enough for camp and light hunting chores. The 5-inch chrome and red marbled handle brings a secure, glove-friendly grip and a bit of show without sacrificing control. Paired with a nylon sheath, it’s built for the range, the truck, or the pack—where a straightforward fixed blade earns its keep.

16.95 16.95 USD 16.95

HBS31

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Marble Range Field Fixed Blade Knife - Built for Real Use, Not Just the Shelf

The Marble Range Field Fixed Blade Knife - Red Chrome is exactly what it looks like: a straightforward working knife with enough visual flair to make you reach for it first. This is a 12-inch fixed blade with a 7-inch 3Cr13 stainless steel blade and a 5-inch chrome and red marbled handle, riding in a nylon sheath. No gimmicks, no spring, no button—just a solid fixed blade that does the job from the range to the campfire.

Why This Fixed Blade Belongs Next to Your Automatic Knife for Sale Shortlist

If you’re the type who’s usually hunting for the next automatic knife for sale, you already understand one thing: mechanisms can fail, fixed steel doesn’t. That’s where this Marble Range steps in. While your double-action automatic lives in your pocket, this is the knife that does the dirty work on the tailgate, at camp, or on the range. A fixed blade is the control group—the baseline every automatic, OTF, or so-called switchblade is secretly measured against.

The profile is classic: modest belly, enough straight edge to baton kindling or break down cardboard, and a point that still has the precision for field dressing small to medium game. At 12 inches overall, it’s large enough to be a primary field knife without feeling like a slow machete.

Steel, Edge, and Real-World Use: The Honest 3Cr13 Story

3Cr13 stainless steel isn’t exotic, and that’s the point. It’s roughly in the 420-series family: corrosion-resistant, easy to sharpen, and forgiving under hard use. On a knife in this class, that matters more than chasing maximum edge retention.

Why 3Cr13 Makes Sense on a Working Fixed Blade

  • Easy field maintenance: You don’t need diamonds and patience—any basic stone or pull-through sharpener will bring it right back.
  • Corrosion resistance: Stainless means it won’t rust out if it rides in a damp nylon sheath or lives in your truck.
  • Tough, not brittle: For camp and utility work, a steel that bends before it chips is the right call.

Is it a super steel? No. Is it exactly what you want in a budget-friendly fixed blade that’s going to see hard, possibly abusive use? Yes.

Handle, Balance, and Carry: Where This Knife Actually Lives

The 5-inch chrome and red marbled handle is where this knife stops being generic. The chrome guard and pommel give it that dress-knife flash, but the geometry is surprisingly practical. You get a defined guard to keep your hand from sliding forward on thrusts or heavy cuts, and enough handle length for gloved hands.

Grip and Control Details Enthusiasts Notice

  • Full 12-inch length: Enough leverage for chopping light brush or splitting kindling.
  • Guarded handle: That chrome guard isn’t decoration—it’s real safety under wet or bloody conditions.
  • Contoured handle: The red marbled slabs offer visual impact and a comfortable palm swell.

It ships with a nylon sheath—nothing fancy, but functional. Nylon is light, reasonably durable, and forgiving of moisture and grime. This is a knife you can toss in a range bag or strap to a pack without babying it.

How This Fixed Blade Complements Your Automatics and OTFs

Most collectors browsing automatic knives for sale already have a rotation of folders: side-opening autos, OTF blades, a stray switchblade or two. What many of them lack is a fixed blade they won’t hesitate to beat up. That’s the lane this Marble Range fills.

When you’re out in the woods or at the ranch, your automatic knife is often reserved for finer tasks: cord, zip ties, opening feed bags, defensive carry. The fixed blade shoulders the ugly work—batoning, prying, scraping, light chopping—without putting a spring, button, or internal track at risk. No action to tune, no rails to clean, no lock to check. Just a slab of stainless on a full-length handle.

Legal Reality Check: Fixed Blade vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade Laws

Here’s where this knife earns quiet respect: it sidesteps the legal minefield that comes with buying an automatic knife or switchblade. In the United States, federal law targets interstate commerce of certain automatic knives (often lumped under the switchblade label). Day-to-day carry rules for automatic, OTF, or switchblade-style knives are set by individual states and even cities, with restrictions on blade length, mechanism, and concealment.

A fixed blade like the Marble Range is usually regulated separately. Some jurisdictions are stricter on fixed blades than folders; others don’t care as long as you’re not concealing a prohibited weapon. You still need to check your local and state laws for knife length, open vs. concealed carry, and where fixed blades are allowed.

But this much is true: if you’re used to navigating the legal landscape around the best automatic knife for EDC or wondering if a particular automatic knife is legal to carry, a straightforward fixed blade is almost always the lower-friction option for camp, ranch, and private-land use.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Even on a fixed blade product page, serious buyers are also hunting for their next automatic knife for sale. So let’s tackle the big questions that live in the same mental drawer.

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Act) restricts the interstate shipment and sale of certain automatic knives and switchblades, especially across state lines and into specific restricted jurisdictions. However, it does not directly regulate simple possession for most civilians—that’s where state and local laws come in.

State laws vary widely. Some states allow automatic knives and OTF knives with few restrictions, others limit blade length or carry method, and a few still prohibit civilian possession or carry altogether. Before you buy an automatic knife or OTF, you should:

  • Check your state statutes on automatic, OTF, and switchblade knives.
  • Look for local city or county ordinances that may be stricter.
  • Confirm rules on concealed vs. open carry and blade length.

This Marble Range fixed blade avoids the automatic-specific laws, but you’re still responsible for knowing your own fixed blade regulations.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

The terminology gets abused constantly, so here’s the clean version:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): A folding knife whose blade is held closed by spring tension and a mechanical catch; pressing a button or actuator releases the blade to snap open from the side.
  • OTF knife (out-the-front): A knife where the blade travels in line with the handle, deploying straight out of the front. Double-action OTFs use the same slider to deploy and retract; single-action OTFs fire with a control and retract manually.
  • Switchblade: In U.S. legal language, this is a broad term that usually includes both side-opening automatic knives and many OTF knives—anything where a button or similar device causes the blade to open automatically.

The Marble Range isn’t any of these—it’s a fixed blade. No deployment, no spring, no internal track. It’s the control variable in a collection full of mechanisms.

What makes this fixed blade worth buying?

Three things: honest materials, real-world usefulness, and design that doesn’t feel cheap.

  • Honest steel: 3Cr13 stainless won’t win super steel debates, but it sharpens easily and shrugs off corrosion—ideal for a working fixed blade you won’t baby.
  • Functional size: A 7-inch blade and 12-inch overall length hit the sweet spot between camp utility and field knife capability.
  • Distinct look, usable ergonomics: The chrome and red marbled handle gives it identity without compromising grip or control.
  • Complement to your automatics: It lets your automatic and OTF knives stay clean and tuned while this one does the hard, dirty jobs.

If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how a double action OTF tracks on its rails, you also know there’s a place for a simple, honest fixed blade like this one in the same kit.

Own It Like an Enthusiast, Use It Like a Tool

The Marble Range Field Fixed Blade Knife - Red Chrome isn’t pretending to be an automatic knife for sale or a trick OTF conversation piece. It’s the quiet worker next to your high-end side-opening autos and your best automatic knife for EDC. You get a full-sized, stainless fixed blade with a distinctive red marbled handle, ready for camp, truck, or range duty. If your collection is all action and no backbone, this is the knife that gives it some.

No Specifications