Safety Technology 2-Piece Throwing Knife Set Black and Gold BioHazard Design – 9-Inch 440 Stainless Steel Blades, Beginner to Intermediate, Nylon Sheath Pouch Included, 0.7 lbs

SKU: ST-TK2-107

$15.95

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Two 9-inch throwing knives in a black and gold BioHazard design, made from 440 stainless steel. Solid starting point for someone learning to throw — balanced, consistent, and forgiving enough for beginners while holding up fine for intermediate throwers who know what they’re doing. Comes with a nylon sheath pouch. At $15.95 for the pair, you’re not going to lose sleep if one hits a tree wrong.

  • 440 stainless steel construction — holds up to repeated throwing without bending or chipping
  • 9-inch overall length, 1.38-inch width — well-proportioned for consistent rotation and release
  • Black and gold BioHazard design — distinctive look, good visibility when retrieving from a target
  • Beginner to intermediate level — forgiving enough to learn on, durable enough to stick with
  • Nylon sheath pouch included — keeps both knives together and protected during storage or transport

A Decent Pair of Throwers to Learn On

Throwing knives are one of those hobbies that looks harder than it is once you’ve practiced a bit. The main thing is having knives that are consistent — same weight, same balance, same feel in your hand every time. This set handles that. Both knives are the same, made from the same 440 steel, and at 9 inches they’re in the right range for standard half-spin and full-spin throws at beginner distances.

The BioHazard design is eye-catching, which is a practical benefit when you’re retrieving them from a wooden target or backstop. Black and gold stands out against most backgrounds. Small thing, but you notice it when you’re walking back and forth to a target for an hour.

Who This Throwing Knife Set Is For

Anyone picking up throwing knives for the first time. The 9-inch size is a common recommendation for beginners — long enough to get a clean grip, balanced enough to rotate predictably. They’re also priced where you can actually practice without stress. Throwing knives take a beating against wood targets. At this price point, that’s not a concern.

Intermediate throwers who want a backup set or practice set will find them capable. They’re not collector-grade display pieces, but 440 stainless is legitimate throwing knife steel and they’re made to be thrown, not just looked at.

If you’ve been curious about knife throwing and want to try it before investing in premium gear, this set is a practical starting point. Pick up a pine board or buy a proper throwing target, read up on the basics, and you’ve got what you need to get started.

Is This the Right Choice for You?

Choose this throwing knife set if you want:

  • An affordable entry point into knife throwing — real steel, real quality
  • A 9-inch size that works well for standard beginner and intermediate distances
  • A matched pair so both knives behave the same in practice
  • A striking design that’s easy to spot when retrieving from a target

Consider something else if you need:

  • Competition-grade or professional throwing knives — this is a practice and hobby set
  • A larger set for extended practice sessions — this is a 2-piece set

What Makes These Work for Learning

440 stainless steel is a practical choice for throwing knives — it’s hard enough to resist bending when it hits a wood target, but not so brittle that it chips on a bad throw. At 9 inches, these knives have enough mass to carry through a rotation without slowing down unpredictably in the air. That consistency is what you’re actually looking for when you’re learning — if the knife does something different every time, it’s hard to know if the problem is your throw or the equipment.

The no-handle design (common to dedicated throwing knives) means either end of the knife can be used for gripping during a throw, giving you flexibility as you experiment with blade and handle grips at different distances. The nylon sheath pouch keeps both knives together and protects the edges during transport.

Quick Comparison: How Do These Throwing Knives Stack Up?

Feature BioHazard 2-Piece Set Budget Throwing Knives (3–5 piece) Mid-Range Throwing Set Professional Competition Knives
Steel Quality 440 Stainless ✓ Often unspecified 420–440 Stainless ✓ High-carbon steel ✓
Length 9 inches ✓ 6–8 inches 9–12 inches ✓ 12–16 inches ✓
Beginner-Friendly Yes ✓ Yes ✓ Moderate No — technique required
Price Point Budget ✓ Budget ✓ Mid-range Premium
Included Storage Nylon sheath pouch ✓ Sometimes Usually ✓ Usually ✓
Best For Learning, hobby practice, starter set High-volume practice, multiple targets Progressing beginners, intermediate use Tournament, advanced throwers

Practical Details

Each knife is 9″ x 1.38″ and the set weighs 0.7 lbs total. Material is 440 stainless steel with a black and gold BioHazard finish. Comes as a matched 2-piece set with a nylon sheath pouch for storage and transport. Priced at $15.95 for the pair.

Two well-made throwing knives, solid steel, good size for learning, and priced where you can actually practice — that’s a practical package for anyone getting into knife throwing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s a good starting distance for throwing these?

Most beginners start at about 7 to 10 feet — close enough to get a half-rotation throw dialed in before moving back. The 9-inch length on these knives works well in that range. As you develop your technique, you’ll move to 12–15 feet for a full rotation. There are good free tutorials online that walk through distance progression for each throw style, which is worth reading before your first session.

What kind of target should I use?

Soft wood is standard — pine boards or a section of a log work well. The target needs to be soft enough for the blade to stick without bouncing back, but solid enough to stand up to repeated impacts. Avoid hardwood like oak; the knives will bounce back rather than stick and the edges will take a beating. A 2×10 pine board leaned against a wall is a simple starting setup.

Are these balanced for blade throw or handle throw?

These are designed as no-handle throwing knives, meaning both ends are usable for gripping, and the balance is set for the knife as a whole rather than favoring one grip style. This is common for beginner-oriented throwing knives and gives you flexibility as you experiment with different techniques. Blade throw and handle throw both work — which is better depends on your throw speed, distance, and personal preference, which you’ll figure out with practice.

Can these be used for anything other than throwing?

Technically yes — 440 steel holds a working edge — but they’re designed and balanced for throwing, not for utility tasks or carry. The no-handle design prioritizes throwing balance over grip comfort for extended use. If you’re looking for a general-purpose knife, you’d want something designed for that. These are throwing knives, and they do that job well.

Type of KnifeThrowing
Material440 Steel
HolsterNylon
Weight0.7 lbs
Dimensions9" x 1.38"

Additional information