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Aqua Vector Double-Action OTF Knife - Turquoise Carbon Fiber

Price:

31.99


Redline Carbon Double-Action OTF Knife - Black Blade
Redline Carbon Double-Action OTF Knife - Black Blade
31.99 31.99
Shadowline Quick-Slide Double Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
Shadowline Quick-Slide Double Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
36.99 36.99

Aqua Vector Compact Double-Action OTF Knife - Turquoise Carbon Fiber

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Hot afternoon on a Hill Country lease, you’re cutting feed bags in the shade of the truck. This compact Texas OTF knife snaps out clean with a thumb slide, bites through plastic and rope with its two-tone serrated dagger, then vanishes back into turquoise carbon-fiber scales. At 4.25 inches closed, it rides deep in pocket or tucks in a console sheath, glass breaker ready for the wreck you hope never comes. Quiet, fast, and built for real Texas carry.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Style
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  • Handle Finish
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Turquoise Steel in a Mesquite Shade

Truck doors thud shut, cicadas drone, and the only breeze is coming off the caliche road. You’re standing in a sliver of mesquite shade, breaking down salt blocks and feed bags. Out comes a compact automatic from your front pocket—turquoise scales, black dagger blade—and with one forward push of the thumb slide, the edge is working. No flourish, no fumble. Just a Texas OTF knife doing exactly what you brought it for.

The Aqua Vector Compact Double-Action OTF Knife - Turquoise Carbon Fiber is built for those small, constant cuts that stack up in a day: baling twine outside San Angelo, box tape on a Houston dock, nylon strapping in the back of a Fort Worth warehouse. It’s a modern OTF knife Texas buyers carry because it’s fast, compact, and legal to run statewide.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Earns Pocket Time

Walk any job site in Midland or a loading bay near the Ship Channel and you’ll see the same story: whoever has the quickest blade ends up doing most of the cutting. This Texas OTF knife is built for that life. Closed, it’s just 4.25 inches long and 4.43 ounces—heavy enough to feel, light enough to forget until you need it.

The side-mounted thumb slide sits inside a carbon-fiber inlay, slightly raised from the turquoise handle. That contrast isn’t for looks alone. In a dark barn or under a tanker at night, your thumb finds the track by feel. Forward for deployment, back for retraction. No flipping, no lining up a liner lock, no two-handed dance in cramped space. On a ladder in a Lubbock shop or in the driver’s seat off I-35, you can run this automatic OTF knife one-handed without shifting your grip.

Built for Real Texas Materials

The two-tone black dagger blade runs 2.625 inches, with partial serrations near the base. That lets you pierce shrink wrap, feed sacks, or leather, then lean into the teeth to saw through webbing, cord, or old nylon halters. At 6.875 inches overall when open, there’s enough handle for a full fist, even with work gloves on.

The matte turquoise finish keeps glare down in West Texas sun while staying easy to spot if you drop it in coastal grass near Matagorda or in the dust near a cattle guard. Torx fasteners through the handle tell you it’s meant to be maintained, not tossed when it gets dirty.

Double-Action OTF Knife Texas Carriers Can Trust

In Texas, an automatic knife that hesitates once never fully earns its way back into your pocket. This double-action OTF knife is tuned for repeatable, no-nonsense function. Slide forward, the spring drives the blade out on a straight track with a decisive snap. Pull back, it locks home with the same certainty. That consistent cycle is what turns a novelty into a trusted work tool.

It matters in the places where time compresses: a tire blowout at 75 outside Sweetwater, cutting a stuck seatbelt; a stock trailer tangle south of Abilene; a pallet strap hung up in a Dallas warehouse with a forklift waiting. The glass breaker at the pommel is there for worst-case scenarios—tempered glass, side windows, or a quick impact tool when metal needs a sharp tap instead of a cut.

Carry That Fits Texas Life

The deep-carry pocket clip lets this Texas OTF knife disappear in jeans or work pants—no big silhouette, no chatter against a steering wheel. When your pockets are full of gloves, keys, and receipts, the included nylon sheath takes over, riding on a belt in Amarillo wind or strapped to a pack in the Davis Mountains.

Whether it lives in a center console in San Marcos, on a duty belt in El Paso, or clipped inside a scrub top pocket at a Houston ER, the form factor stays the same: slim, flat, and ready.

Texas Knife Laws and This OTF Knife

Texas buyers care about more than action and edge—they want to know if they can carry it without trouble. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal to own and carry. The key distinction is blade length when it comes to certain restricted locations and age-based “location-restricted knife” rules. This blade sits at 2.625 inches, comfortably under the 5.5-inch threshold that matters in many settings.

That means this OTF knife Texas carriers pick up in a shop in Waco or Laredo can ride in a pocket for day-to-day use without having to play guessing games about length. You still respect posted signs, schools, courthouses, and secured areas, but for most everyday runs—from the feed store to the job site—it’s a straightforward, legal companion.

OTF Knife Texas Compliance in Everyday Carry

Because the blade is under common legal cutoffs and the overall profile is compact, it slides into those gray zones where a big fixed blade would draw stares. In a Hill Country brewery, a Plano office park, or a small-town hardware store, it reads as a clean automatic tool, not a showpiece.

OTF Knife Texas Uses: From Coastal Docks to Hill Country Leases

Different corners of the state ask different things from a blade. On the Gulf Coast, this Texas OTF knife lives in a tackle bag, cutting braided line, trimming leaders, and nicking away frayed rope ends on a bay boat. Inland, it becomes a ranch hand that breaks down mineral bags, trims paracord, and slices hay-string in late light.

The partial serration chews through stubborn synthetic fibers and thick plastic, while the smooth edge handles more precise cuts—zip ties under a truck, worn leather straps, or nylon lashing on a roof rack heading west on I-10. The two-tone finish on the dagger blade isn’t just for attitude; it visually breaks the blade doors from cutting edge, making it easier to read where the edge starts in low light.

Control When Hands Are Slick or Gloved

Hot, humid evenings along the Trinity or sweat-soaked mornings in the Panhandle don’t favor slick tools. The matte handle finish and carbon-fiber inlays give your fingers something to bite into even when your hands are wet or gloved. The inlays act like rails, guiding your thumb to the slide without hunting for it.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry. The main concern is blade length and specific restricted locations. With a 2.625-inch blade, this model stays below the 5.5-inch length that defines many “location-restricted knives,” making it suitable for typical everyday carry across the state. Always check the most recent Texas statutes and respect posted restrictions in secured or sensitive areas.

Is this compact enough for discreet Texas urban carry?

Closed at 4.25 inches with a deep-carry clip, this OTF knife rides low in jeans, work pants, or slacks in Austin, Dallas, or San Antonio. It doesn’t print like a big folder or fixed blade, but it still opens fast with a single thumb motion when you’re juggling packages, cutting banding in a warehouse, or breaking down boxes behind a storefront.

How does this Texas OTF knife compare to a traditional folder for ranch work?

A good stockman or lockback has its place, but this automatic shines when you’re opening and closing a knife all day. On a lease outside Kerrville or a place out near Ballinger, that double-action slide saves seconds every time you cut twine, rope, or hose. Forward to work, back to stow—no closing arc to manage around your fingers, no two-handed shut when you’re holding a gate with the other hand.

First Use: A Quiet Texas Upgrade

Picture a late fall evening on a lease road outside Llano. Tailgate down, light fading, you’re cutting open sacks, trimming cord, and rigging one last feeder before dark. You slide your thumb forward and the dagger blade snaps out in a straight line, does its work, then disappears with a pull of the same thumb. No drama. No wasted motion.

That’s how this Texas OTF knife earns its keep—not by being the loudest thing in your pocket, but by taking weight off every small task. Turquoise carbon-fiber scales catch just enough light to find it in the cab or in tall grass, the glass breaker stands by for the rare bad day, and the compact frame stays legal and useful from city streets to gravel ranch roads. For Texans who want an automatic that fits the land they live in, this one makes sense the first time you run the slide.

Blade Edge Serrated or Partial-Serrated
Blade Length (inches) 2.625
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.25
Weight (oz.) 4.43
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style Dagger
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Double Action
Safety None
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath