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Undercover Ring-Guard Karambit Comb Knife - Purple

Price:

2.06


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Urban Halo Ring-Control Comb Knife - Matte Pink
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Plain Sight Ring-Guard Comb Knife - Purple

https://www.selfdefensestunguns.com/web/image/product.template/756/image_1920?unique=278076a

15 sold in last 24 hours

This hidden comb knife looks like a simple purple grooming tool until you slide a finger through the ring and draw the 3-inch hawkbill blade. The ring-guard handle locks your grip, the jimping adds traction, and the lightweight fixed blade stays nimble for quick utility cuts. The comb sheath protects the edge and blends naturally into bags, vehicles, or pocket organizers. For discreet carry that favors normalcy over drama, this karambit comb knife keeps a capable edge where a comb already belongs.

2.06 2.06 USD 2.06

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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Hidden comb knife that stays ordinary until you need control

This isn’t a stunt prop or a fantasy piece; it’s a hidden comb knife designed to look like a normal purple comb and feel like a real ring-guard karambit in hand. The comb cover rides in a pocket, gym bag, or vehicle kit without drawing attention. Underneath is a slim 3-inch hawkbill blade with an integrated finger ring, giving you secure retention and directional control when you actually need to cut something.

Design story: why a ring-guard comb knife works so well in plain sight

The most effective concealed tools borrow the shape of everyday objects. A comb is routine—nobody gives it a second look. This hidden comb knife leans into that. The purple plastic cover has functional teeth and a lanyard hole, so it behaves like a real comb. Under that cover, the ring-guard handle and curved blade track directly from modern karambit design: you get a positive index point (the ring) and a cutting edge that naturally pulls material into the blade.

The result is a fixed-blade comb knife that lives where a comb lives but performs like a purpose-built utility tool when drawn. No moving parts, no flashy hardware—just a disguised profile and simple, reliable geometry.

Field feel: how this hidden comb knife handles in real use

In the hand, the difference between “comb” and “knife” is immediate. Once your finger is through the ring, the handle locks into place and the hawkbill curve orients itself without thought. That’s exactly what you want from a discreet blade: predictable orientation and secure retention.

  • Blade length: 3 inches, offering useful edge without excess bulk.
  • Overall length: 7.5 inches bare; about 7.875 inches with the comb cover.
  • Closed length: 4.5 inches, compact enough for pockets and organizers.
  • Weight: just 1.16 oz for easy, all-day carry.
  • Blade style: silver hawkbill, plain edge for controlled pull cuts.
  • Handle: purple matte finish with integrated finger ring.
  • Grip: jimping near the guard for extra traction under pressure.
  • Sheath: detachable purple comb with fine teeth and a lanyard hole.

Ring-guard retention and hawkbill control

The ring-guard is more than a visual cue—it’s the core of how this hidden comb knife works. With a finger through the ring, you gain three things: retention if your hand is bumped, consistent alignment of the edge, and leverage for pulling cuts. Paired with the hawkbill profile, the blade tends to “grab” into the cut rather than slip out, which is exactly what you want when opening tough packaging, cutting cord, or working in awkward angles.

Lightweight fixed blade disguised as a comb

Because this is a slim fixed-blade comb knife, there’s no deployment mechanism to fail. You remove the comb cover, and the blade is live. At 1.16 oz, it disappears into your loadout but still offers a full-hand grip. The cover protects the edge, breaks up the outline, and visually reads as a harmless grooming tool—especially in casual purple rather than tactical black.

Best hidden comb knife for discreet everyday carry

If you want discreet capability without announcing that you carry a knife, this hidden comb knife fits that role cleanly. It doesn’t flash clips on pocket edges, doesn’t clack around like metal hardware, and doesn’t shout “tactical.” It simply looks like a comb. For many buyers, that low profile is the point: effective edge access without social friction.

EDC enthusiasts can drop it in a pouch, desk drawer, or console. Retailers can demo it in seconds: show the comb, reveal the ring, slide off the cover, and the story tells itself. It lives in the same category as pen knives and credit-card tools, but with better grip geometry and more intuitive control once drawn.

Hidden comb knife vs other disguised fixed blades

There are plenty of “hidden” blades on the market, but not all of them handle like real tools. This comb knife focuses on functional ergonomics first, disguise second.

  • Versus pen knives: You gain a full finger ring and a curved blade that excels at pull cuts, instead of a tiny, awkward handle.
  • Versus credit-card knives: You get a solid fixed blade with a real grip instead of a flat slab that’s hard to control.
  • Versus neck knives: You avoid a visible outline under shirts and the giveaway cord; the comb silhouette feels normal in nearly any setting.

For anyone who wants a hidden knife that still behaves like a purpose-built cutting tool, this ring-guard comb knife is a practical middle ground between pure novelty and overt tactical gear.

Carry reality and practical use for a hidden comb knife

Day to day, this knife will spend most of its time just being a comb in your bag or pocket. That’s fine—that’s the design. When you do need it, you want the steps to be simple: grip the comb, index the ring, pull free, and remove the cover. No catches, no buttons, no surprises.

The purple comb helps in three ways: it visually normalizes the object, it protects the blade, and it gives you a larger surface to grab during the draw. The lanyard hole offers an option for adding cord or a pull tab if you prefer fixed anchor points in packs or organizers.

What People Ask Before Buying a Stun Gun for Protection

Even though this product is a hidden comb knife, many buyers who look at discreet tools also research stun guns for self defense and personal protection. The questions overlap: effectiveness, how they work, and what’s legal. Here are straight answers grounded in real-world use, not marketing hype.

How effective are stun guns for self defense?

A stun gun for self defense can be effective, but only when used within its limits. It’s a close-contact tool: you must physically touch the attacker with the electrodes and maintain contact for at least 1–3 seconds to create pain and muscular disruption. Short touches mostly create a pain response and may break momentum; longer contact can cause loss of balance or temporary incapacitation. Build quality, amperage (current), and your ability to access and apply it under stress matter far more than any “million volt” claims in the marketing.

Does voltage or amperage matter more in a stun gun?

Voltage gets the headlines, but amperage does the work. High voltage helps the stun gun arc through clothing and skin oils, but the current (amperage) is what actually affects nerves and muscles. Real defensive stun guns operate in a low-amperage range designed to be non-lethal yet disruptive. Once voltage is high enough to arc reliably, more voltage is mostly marketing. When comparing devices, pay more attention to reputation, contact area, and power system (battery quality and consistency) than to exaggerated voltage numbers.

Is this stun gun legal to carry in my state?

Stun gun and Taser-style device laws vary by state and sometimes by city. Some locations treat a stun gun for self defense like any other defensive tool; others require permits, restrict carry in certain places, or ban them outright. Before you buy or carry a stun gun for personal protection, check your state statutes and local ordinances, and note whether there are age limits, training requirements, or location bans (schools, government buildings, etc.). When in doubt, consult a recent state-by-state summary or ask a local attorney.

Why this hidden comb knife earns a place in your kit

This comb knife works because it respects two truths: everyday life favors normal-looking objects, and tools should still feel like tools when you grip them. The purple comb cover makes it visually unremarkable. The ring-guard handle and hawkbill blade make it functionally capable. Whether you’re stocking a shop that caters to discreet EDC or building your own low-profile carry, this piece offers real utility wrapped in ordinary appearance.

If your goal is calm, competent preparedness—not theatrics—this hidden comb knife fits that mindset. It doesn’t demand attention, it doesn’t complicate deployment, and it doesn’t pretend to be more dramatic than it is. It simply gives you a secure grip, a sharp edge, and a familiar form factor that can go almost anywhere a comb goes.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Silver
Handle Finish Matte
Concealed Length (inches) 7.875
Concealment Type Comb