SureFire

Outland Equipment – Kryptos K2 Knife

Kryptos K2 Sell Sheet 2015-11-23.ai

Outland’s Kryptos knife was developed with American Special Operations Forces as a knife for optimum concealed carry, swift and natural draw, and reliable retention. The handle’s shape and sheath profile was designed for discreet horizontal carry, and the sheath is ambidextrous for left or right-handed draw. The handle’s pinky hook is designed to give the user’s hand a secure location for a quick draw, and the handle also has jimping for additional bite. Included in the kit is an aluminum trainer with blunt edges and a rounded point. The trainer handle geometry and sheath draw match the live knife. Kryptos is available in both single and double edge versions.

Full tang CPM 3V steel construction
Single or double-edged versions
3.7 inch primary cutting edge
G10 handle grips
Deep finger choil and aggressive jimping for a secure grip
Pinky hook allows for fast, sightless grip acquisition and sheath draw
Sheath straps horizontally along your belt

www.outlandequipment.com/product/kryptos-k2

Tags:

10 Responses to “Outland Equipment – Kryptos K2 Knife”

  1. Robert says:

    “Special Operations Forces” not “Special Forces”.

    • Bobby Davro says:

      Special forces must have knives dripping off them every man and his dog have a sf mega blade

  2. darrel says:

    I will probably never buy another knife now that I have a Winkler Belt Knife.

  3. Steve says:

    I purchased one of these knives a couple of months ago. A superb blade and handle design. The sheath is of tremendous quality. I am not a fan of the horizontal carry mount this design restricts the user to. The butt end of the grip protrudes noticeable. True concealed carry is not possible with the sheath mounting system.

    • Chris says:

      Have you tried positioning the sheath so that the end rides over your buckle? This kicks the knife butt down against the belt.

  4. jrexilius says:

    I’ve been looking for exactly this for years.. hopefully this “pre-order” actually materializes.

  5. P.J. says:

    Looks like the exact same knife as the K2 I gripped about them limiting to 10. Glad to see it become a production model, but why rename it?

    • Chris says:

      K2 is nearly identical to the original K1. The model number was changed because parts are not swappable between models due to slight changes to the blade and handle.

    • SSD says:

      Last time we mentioned it, folks said it was a copy of a different knife. Oh well. This knife was influenced by function.