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Honor Guard Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife - Army Graphic

Price:

7.99


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Battlefield Honor Quick-Deploy Rescue Knife - Army Green

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7541/image_1920?unique=80108b5

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Night on 281, rollover in the median, glass everywhere. That’s when this spring-assisted rescue knife earns its place. The flipper snaps out a 3.5" partially serrated stainless blade for cutting belts, hoses, or ranch wire, while the built-in cutter and glass breaker finish the job. Honeycomb-textured Army-green handle locks into your grip, even with sweat or motor oil on your hands. It rides quiet on the pocket clip until it’s needed. Texans who work the road, the rigs, or the range carry tools like this.

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PK3164AR

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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  • Deployment Method
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When the Shoulder Lane Turns into a Scene

West of Waco, late summer, two-car tangle on the access road. Hazards blinking, dust hanging in the air, and you’re the first one who actually stops. That’s where a spring-assisted rescue knife like this belongs — not in a display case, but on a pocket in a truck that sees real miles.

This Battlefield Honor Quick-Deploy Rescue Knife carries an Army battlefield graphic across its stainless blade, tank rolling through smoke. The handle is olive, honeycomb-textured, shaped to stay in your hand when your boots are in gravel and your heart rate’s climbing. It’s built for people who move toward trouble instead of around it.

Battlefield Honor in a Texas Rescue Knife

The blade opens on a spring-assisted flipper, clean and fast. One firm pull on that tab and the 3.5-inch clip point swings out and locks on a liner you can trust. The edge is part plain, part serrated — the kind of profile that slices a seatbelt in one motion, then chews through nylon, hose, or stubborn feed bag without complaint.

The stainless steel is tuned for real work, not bragging rights. It sharpens easy on a stone in the tailgate light behind a Buc-ee’s or at the kitchen table after a shift. At 8.25 inches overall and 4.75 inches closed, it fills your hand without feeling like a boat anchor in your pocket. Four-point-eight ounces is just enough weight to know it’s there when you reach for it in the dark of a cab or a patrol SUV.

This isn’t an OTF knife Texas collectors chase for the mechanism; it’s a spring-assisted rescue blade built for speed without crossing into automatic territory. The Army artwork is more than decoration — it’s a nod to anyone who’s stood post, worked convoy security, or simply wants a tool that carries the same attitude: get there fast, do the job right.

How This Texas Rescue Knife Rides, Opens, and Works

Clipped to a pocket in a DPS-style duty belt, hooked inside the back pocket of a pair of rig jeans in Midland, or parked in the console of a half-ton outside San Antonio, this knife disappears until it’s needed. The pocket clip keeps it pinned where you plant it; no wobble, no twist.

Draw is straight, like grabbing a pen. The flipper tab gives you a consistent index point. Coming out of a truck cab on I-35 with hazard lights flashing behind you, you don’t want to hunt for a thumb stud. One pull, blade snaps out, liner locks. The jimping along the spine and handle lets your thumb dig in, even if your hands are slick from rain or transmission fluid.

The partial serrations handle the materials Texans actually fight: webbing, rope, feed sacks, stubborn shrink wrap on a pallet in a Laredo yard, or that ancient garden hose that won’t quit leaking. The plain edge up front is there for clean cuts — cardboard, plastic, tape, bandage, or light camp prep outside a deer lease shack in Junction.

Texas Knife Laws, Rescue Tools, and Everyday Carry

Texas knife laws changed in a way that favors people who carry real tools. Automatic knives and OTFs that used to sit in a gray area are now legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you stay clear of restricted locations and the wrong side of intent. This spring-assisted rescue knife isn’t an automatic or a switchblade. It uses a manual flipper with spring assist — you start the motion, the mechanism finishes it.

For most Texans, that means you can slip this into your pocket, onto a work vest, or in a truck console without having to explain yourself. The blade length sits in that comfortable under-four-inch range that works in uniform policies, job sites, and day-to-day carry across the state. It’s the kind of knife a supervisor in an oilfield yard nods at, not one he sends you back to the truck over.

Rescue Tools Built for Real Texas Emergencies

At the end of the handle, opposite the blade, two details matter more than any graphic. First, the seatbelt cutter — narrow, guarded, sharpened just enough to bite webbing without opening you up if you slip. You slide it over a belt and pull. In a ditch off 59 or on a farm-to-market road north of Lubbock, that’s the motion that gets someone free when a buckle won’t release.

Second, the glass breaker. A hardened point meant for tempered side windows that won’t cooperate. One solid strike in the lower corner and the glass spiders, then gives. On a July afternoon when the cab’s filling with smoke or the river crossing went sideways, that single feature turns a bystander into the person who got them out.

Where a Texas Buyer Uses This Knife

Think about the real places this knife ends up. Clipped to the pocket of a volunteer firefighter in a Panhandle town where the whole department shares one bay. In the glove box of a Border Patrol spouse who drives long stretches of empty highway. In the backpack of a ranch hand who keeps finding upside-down trucks in bar ditches after Friday nights in town.

It’s not there for show. It’s there for when the call comes five feet in front of you instead of over a radio.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Rescue Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry, as long as you avoid certain restricted places and follow general weapon rules. This particular knife is not an OTF; it’s a spring-assisted folder using a manual flipper. That keeps it in the same practical category as other everyday carry blades while still delivering fast one-handed deployment.

Is this rescue knife reliable enough for Texas highway and ranch emergencies?

The build is meant for exactly that. The stainless clip-point blade holds up to sweat, humidity, and the fine dust that rides West Texas wind. The liner lock is exposed and easy to clean if it picks up grit in a stock trailer or in a caliche lot. The ABS handle shrugs off heat from a dash baking in August and doesn’t crack if it hits gravel or concrete. For the realities of Texas miles — long roads, high speeds, thin shoulders — it’s a tool you trust more the more you use it.

Should I choose this spring-assisted rescue knife over an OTF knife in Texas?

If your priority is rescue work, this is the smarter pick. An OTF knife in Texas has its place in collections and tactical carry, but this design gives you partial serrations, a dedicated seatbelt cutter, and a glass breaker in one package. The action is nearly as fast as many autos without stepping into full switchblade mechanics, which keeps employers and some policies more comfortable. For a Texas buyer who spends time on the road, at job sites, or working around heavy equipment, those rescue tools matter more than a fancy deployment system.

Why This Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Texas carry culture isn’t about showing off steel at every chance. It’s about having the right blade when something goes wrong fifty miles from the nearest help. This Battlefield Honor rescue knife lives in that quiet space. It’s priced and built to be used, abused, resharpened, and used again.

You feel the Army tribute every time you flip it open, but it doesn’t scream for attention. It just sits there in your hand, 8.25 inches of ready, with the kind of balance that lets you cut a tarp in a Hill Country thunderstorm as easily as opening feed in a dusty barn near Abilene.

First Use, Somewhere Between Towns

Picture a two-lane stretch between towns, dusk pressing down, one pair of taillights in front of you, one behind. A flash of gravel, a pickup fishtails, then settles hard into the bar ditch. You pull over before you think about it. Door open, boots crunching rock, you reach back and feel that honeycomb handle slide free.

The flipper bites your finger, blade snaps out with a sound you don’t have to think about. One pull through the belt, one strike to the glass, and suddenly you’re not just watching a scene, you’re changing it. Later, when the adrenaline burns off and the troopers wave you on, you clip the knife back where it rides every day and drive into the dark, knowing you were ready when it counted. That’s why Texans carry steel like this.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 4.8
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Printed
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material ABS
Theme Army
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock