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Shadowline Covert Dagger OTF Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

112.99


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Backroad Quiet Strike OTF Dagger - Midnight Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4290/image_1920?unique=201770b

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You’re easing down a caliche backroad, ranch gate up ahead, fence wire sagging. This Texas OTF knife rides flat in your pocket until you thumb the slide. The black D2 dagger blade snaps out clean, cuts wire, straps, or tape without glare from a high sun or parking lot lights. Light in the hand, all business in use, it’s the kind of quiet strike Texans keep in the truck, on the belt, and out of sight until it’s needed.

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When a Texas Backroad Demands a Quiet OTF Knife

The dust on a Hill Country caliche road doesn’t care how pretty your gear is. Gates stick, wire sags, straps fail at the wrong time. This Stealth Slide Dagger OTF knife belongs in that world — riding flat in your pocket or truck console, all blacked out until the moment you thumb the slide and let the blade go to work. Nothing flashy, nothing loud, just a Texas OTF knife tuned for the kind of days that never make it to social media.

The dagger-profile D2 blade comes out of the handle in a straight, decisive line, more like a tool you’ve trusted for years than a new toy. At just over eight inches overall and a hair above three ounces, it carries like a slim pen but hits like a full-size working knife when you need it to.

Why This Stealth OTF Knife Fits Real Texas Carry

In West Texas, the wind pushes grit into everything — ropes, tarps, irrigation lines. Along the Gulf, salt starts chewing on steel the first day you bring it near the water. You don’t pick an everyday blade here by accident. You pick something you know will open on command, cut clean, and tuck away without drawing eyes.

This Texas OTF knife runs a side-mounted slide actuator that sits high enough for a gloved thumb, low enough not to snag on a pocket seam. Push forward and the black-coated dagger blade fires out with a firm, controlled snap. Pull back and it disappears into the titanium-coated aluminum handle, locked away until the next job. The double-action mechanism doesn’t chatter or rattle; it feels like a piece of honest machinery — the way Texans expect a working tool to feel.

OTF Knife Texas Performance: Built for Heat, Dust, and Asphalt

From a Houston parking garage to a Panhandle windbreak, conditions change fast. An OTF knife in Texas has to answer to heat that softens plastics, dust that finds every gap, and sudden tasks that don’t wait for you to fumble a folder open.

The D2 steel dagger blade gives you what matters out here: edge retention that makes sense over a long Texas work week. Cut nylon feed sacks, heavy zip ties on conduit, shrink wrap on freight, or that stubborn section of poly pipe. The central fuller reduces weight and lets the blade move quick without feeling fragile. The black coating throws off glare, whether you’re under stadium lights at a Friday night game or out on a lease road with the sun dropping behind mesquite.

The handle is straight, slim, and finished in a titanium-coated midnight black that shrugs off the little insults — sweat, pocket grit, console dust. Machined grooves along the sides give your fingers a track even when your hands are slick from oil, rain, or July humidity rolling off the Gulf.

Texas OTF Knife Carry: From Office Garage to Lease Road

Certain tools cross over clean in this state. This Texas OTF knife is one of them. It looks at home clipped inside slacks in a Dallas high-rise garage, and just as natural bouncing in the pocket of worn jeans on a South Texas sendero.

At 3.21 ounces, it won’t drag your pocket down or feel bulky when you’re sliding in and out of a truck all day. The blackout finish keeps it discreet in a crowded restaurant, a Buc-ee’s stop, or an evening walk around the block. When you need it, the deployment is direct and controlled — no flailing wrist, no extra motion, just thumb forward, blade out, problem handled.

Texas Use Case: Night Work on the Service Road

You’re pulled onto the shoulder off I-35, hazard lights ticking. Strap broke on the load, and traffic noise drowns everything. You slide your hand into your pocket, find the actuator by feel, and drive the OTF blade out one-handed. Nylon strap, frayed rope, loose shrink wrap — two or three clean cuts and you’re re-tying with paracord you trust, blade back in the handle before anyone even notices.

Texas Use Case: Quiet Tool Around Town

Not every job is ranch wire and oilfield hose. Sometimes it’s breaking down boxes by the dumpster behind a San Antonio shop, snipping zip ties on a kid’s new bike in a Fort Worth driveway, or slicing packing tape in a Houston warehouse. This OTF knife does that work without turning into a spectacle. A quick slide, a black blade that doesn’t flash, and you’re done.

Texas Knife Laws and This OTF Knife’s Place in Them

A lot of buyers still ask if an OTF knife is legal in this state. The law here changed years ago, but the old stories hang on. Today, automatic knives — including OTF and switchblade designs — are legal to own and carry in Texas for most adults, as long as you respect the basic location and conduct rules.

This dagger-blade OTF is a full-size "location-restricted" style knife by Texas standards because of its overall length and profile, which means you don’t take it into places like schools, polling locations on election day, secure areas of airports, or certain government buildings. But for day-to-day carry in your truck, on the ranch, in your shop, or walking a neighborhood that knows you, this style of Texas OTF knife fits cleanly inside current state law.

The straight handle, positive lock-up, and controlled deployment all support that reality: this isn’t a toy, it’s a serious cutting tool. Treat it like you would any capable blade in Texas — with respect, awareness of where you are, and an eye on posted signs that restrict all knives, not just OTF models.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal for adults to own and carry, as long as you avoid certain restricted locations like schools, secure government buildings, and airport security zones. This OTF knife falls into the class of serious, full-size blades, so you treat it with the same respect you’d give any larger knife here: mind where you bring it, stay clear of posted no-knife zones, and remember that behavior matters as much as the tool itself.

Is this dagger-style OTF knife practical for everyday Texas use?

It is. The double-edged dagger profile gives strong penetration and precise point control, but the plain edges still handle common Texas tasks — cutting feed bags, cordage, tape, and strapping. The black coating and slim build keep it discreet in urban settings, while the glass-breaker pommel and quick deployment make sense in a truck on a long stretch between towns. It’s built for the Texan who wants one knife that can live in the pocket Monday through Saturday.

How do I decide if this OTF knife is right for my Texas carry style?

Think about where your days actually happen. If you split time between a shop floor, a truck cab, and short walks through town, this Texas OTF knife fits. It’s light enough for office or warehouse carry, blacked out enough to stay quiet at night, and tough enough to live in a hot glove box without complaint. If you prefer a big belt knife always in view, this isn’t that. If you want a low-profile blade that opens fast and rides unnoticed until needed, this one earns its space.

A First Cut in Real Texas Light

Picture a late summer evening outside Abilene. Trucks lined along a fence, ice chest lid kicked open, last pieces of cardboard and plastic still clinging to new gear in the bed. You reach into your pocket, thumb the slide on this midnight-black OTF, and the blade snaps out with quiet certainty. Tape parts, straps drop, the mess is gone in a handful of clean cuts. No fuss, no show. Just a knife that fits the land, the work, and the way Texans actually carry steel.

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