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Stainless Steel Blunt Force Kubaton T-Shaped

Stainless Steel Blunt Force Kubaton T-Shaped

Regular price $14.99 USD
Regular price $17.99 USD Sale price $14.99 USD
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Your Discreet Yet Powerful Self-Defense Solution
Engineered for maximum protection, our Stainless Steel Blunt Force Kubaton combines tactical functionality with everyday carry convenience. This T-shaped kubotan (kubaton) serves as both a protective keychain and a personal defense tool, giving you confidence and security wherever you go.


Key Features:

 Ultra-Durable Stainless Steel – Built to withstand extreme force without bending or breaking.
 T-Bar Design for Maximum Impact – Delivers blunt force effectiveness for self-defense situations.
 Compact & Discreet – Easily attaches to keys as a low-profile defense keychain.
 Multi-Functional Use – Works as a kubotan for self-defense, glass breaker, or everyday tool.
 Lightweight Yet Powerful – Designed for quick access and secure grip in emergencies.


Why Choose Our Tactical Kubaton?

  • Self-Defense Ready: A legally carried kubaton that provides a non-lethal but effective way to protect yourself.

  • Everyday Practicality: Doubles as a protective keychain—functional and unobtrusive.

  • Trusted Durability: Made from high-grade stainless steel for long-lasting reliability.

Perfect For:

  • Personal Safety – Ideal for runners, travelers, and night-shift workers.

  • Tactical EDC Enthusiasts – A must-have addition to your everyday carry gear.

  • Minimalist Protection – Compact enough for pockets, bags, or keychains.

 

What is a Kubaton (or Kubotan)?

Kubotan is a genericized trademark for a self-defense keychain weapon developed by Sōke Takayuki Kubota in the late 1960s. It is typically no more than 140 millimetres (5+1⁄2 inches) long and about 13 mm (1⁄2 in) in diameter, slightly thicker or the same size as a marker pen. The material is usually a hard high-impact plastic such as Lexan. The body of the Kubotan is lined with six round grooves with a screw eye or swivel and split ring attachment at one end for keys.

History

The Kubotan keychain was originally based on a small bamboo weapon called a "hashi stick", an invention by Kubota's father, Denjiro. Its popularity grew from 1969 to the 1970s when Kubota, at the request of California State Senator Edward M. Davis then former Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department, created the weapon and began training female officers in its application. It is often touted as extremely effective in breaking the will of unruly suspects with painful locks and pressure point strikes. Because of this, the Kubotan is also sometimes dubbed the 'instrument of attitude adjustment'.

Usage

Applied as a weapon, some of its uses can be similar to that of the yawara stick or koppo stick. The principal targets in self-defence include bony, fleshy, and sensitive parts such as knuckles, forearms, bridge of the nose, shins, stomach, solar plexus, spine, temple, ribs, groin, neck, and eyes. It is 130–150 mm (5–6 in) long and easily concealable in the hand. The Kubotan is usually held in either an icepick grip (for hammer fist strikes) or a forward grip (for stabbing, pressure point attacks, and seizing). Common uses include hardening the fist (fist load) for punching, attacking vulnerable parts of an assailant's body, and gaining leverage on an assailant's wrist, fingers, and joints. With keys attached, it can function as a flailing weapon. As a pressure point weapon, it can attack any point a finger can, but with greater penetration because of the smaller surface area at the ends. For example, a law enforcement officer may wrap their arm around a suspect's neck while simultaneously digging the end of the Kubotan into the small of the attacker's back. The officer may also reach around the suspect's neck and underarm from behind and cause pain by stabbing the end of the Kubotan into the top of the pectoral muscle. In other locking and compliance applications, the body of the Kubotan can be used to create pain. A typical pain compliance technique involves seizing an attacker's wrist and sealing both hands around it with the length of the Kubotan laid across the radius bone. Downward squeezing pressure is applied to the bone to take down the attacker.

 

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