The knife I chose was a smaller-sized knife from the Warrior Poet Society called the Splinter Knife.
The Splinter is a small fixed blade knife that ships with an adjustable Kydex sheath.
The knife is designed with a forward angle to be used in a punching manner against an attacker.
The Splinter knife is a fixed-blade tool with a razor-sharp blade. Designed for concealed carry, it is a compact and durable design.
The Splinter is equipped with fantastic G10 grips, my favorite grips for blades.
The blade is just over 3 long, and the total overall length is 5.4.
The first thing I noticed is that the Splinter is much smaller than I thought it would be.
The blade is just over 3″ long, with a full length of 3.1″. The total overall length is 5.4″.
This is one extremely compact knife.
I do have to say Warrior Poet Society has excellent presentation and branding of its products.
The sheath itself for the knife is fantastic.
The author carried the Splinter knife alongside his Springfield Hellcat Pro as part of his EDC gear while testing the knife.
The adjustable retention and belt clip it comes with are superb.
The trade-off, of course, would be that it wouldnt conceal as easily.
The Splinter, in my mind, is closely related to a razor.
The author found the Splinter is a knife built and shaped to be jabbed at opponents in a punching motion.
It is small in size, like a razor, and it is unbelievably thin.
On top of that, it is razor-sharp.
The blades edge and the point it comes to are incredibly sharp.
The author preferred the knife to sit higher when carried. Lower improves concealability, while higher makes it easier to draw.
Thankfully, most of us will never need to draw our concealed carry firearm to defend ourselves.
But it could happen, and being prepared is never a bad thing.
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