Skip to Content
Kalashnikov Legacy Tactical Automatic Knife - Black Serrated Tanto

Price:

82.99


Carbon Talon Rapid-Deploy Karambit OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber
Carbon Talon Rapid-Deploy Karambit OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber
60.99 60.99
BK HNDL SL TANTO BLD OTF
BK HNDL SL TANTO BLD OTF
36.99 36.99

Blackline Breach Automatic Knife - Tanto Serrated

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8585/image_1920?unique=27f911f

13 sold in last 24 hours

Heat’s still hanging over the lot when you pop the truck door and slide your hand past receipts and spent shells. The Blackline Breach automatic knife is right where you left it. One push and that black D2 tanto blade snaps out, serrations chewing through hose, nylon, or seatbelt without complaint. Aluminum handle locks into your grip, even slick with sweat or oil. Legal to carry across the state, built for the kind of days that don’t end at five.

82.99 82.99 USD 82.99

BOKS102

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

When a Hard Day Runs Long on a Texas Backroad

Dust hangs in the beams of your headlights, thirty miles from the nearest town. Fence is down again along a mesquite line, and the last thing you want is a tool that hesitates. The Blackline Breach Automatic Knife sits clipped in your pocket. One push on the button and that black tanto blade is out, serrations biting into old wire and sun‑baked nylon like they’ve been waiting all day.

This isn’t a showpiece. It’s a side‑opening automatic built for the same Texas jobs you keep putting off until dark—tying off new T‑post wire, trimming radiator hose on the side of I‑10, or cutting hay string with gloves on when the wind finally cools off.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers and the Pull of a Proven Auto

Plenty of folks hunting “OTF knife Texas” really want what this Boker brings to the table: fast, one‑handed action and a blade that doesn’t quit. This isn’t an OTF; it’s a Kalashnikov‑series side‑opening automatic. Same push‑button speed Texans expect from an OTF, but with the solid, rifle‑inspired frame that soaks up abuse in a truck console, duty belt, or range bag.

The 3.35‑inch D2 steel tanto blade rides in a black aluminum handle cut with deep finger grooves. That shape matters when you’re sweating through August or working in freezing Panhandle wind. You get a full, locked‑in grip, jimping under your thumb, and a spine that feels like it was made for stripping hose or bearing down through thick webbing.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Alternative Earns Its Spot in Your Rotation

Folks shopping for a Texas OTF knife want something that opens right now and stays put when it’s closed. The Blackline Breach does both with a simple push‑button automatic mechanism and a stout plunge lock. It rides tip‑up on a pocket clip that disappears against jeans or work pants, whether you’re in a Midland yard, outside a Hill Country shop, or running calls in a coastal town.

The blade’s black, matte finish shrugs off glare in bright pasture sun or parking‑lot lights. Partially serrated edge at the base chews through braided rope, pallet wrap, and heavy strap—the kind you find on oilfield loads, feed deliveries, or double‑stacks headed down I‑35. The tanto tip gives you a strong point for punching into heavy plastic, cutting open feed totes, or starting a controlled cut in thick leather.

Built for Texas Jobs, Not Glass Cases

D2 tool steel matters more in Texas than a spec sheet ever will. It holds an edge through a week of real work—breaking down cardboard, trimming irrigation line in the Valley, cutting cedar saplings along a rocky draw. You’ll still want to touch it up, but not every night.

The aluminum handle doesn’t care if it’s baking on a dash in August or riding in a cold ranch truck before sunrise. It doesn’t swell, warp, or get slick. The finger grooves keep you anchored even with work gloves or when your hands are oily from a roadside repair. Jimping along the spine and handle gives your thumb and forefinger somewhere honest to bite down.

There’s a lanyard hole tucked in the butt for the guys who like a pull cord hanging out of a boot top or want a bright fob so it doesn’t disappear into the shadows of a center console.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and Where This Automatic Stands

Texas buyers ask the same thing at the counter, every time: can I legally carry this? Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades are legal to own and carry for adults in most day‑to‑day situations. The old switchblade bans are gone. What matters now is blade length and location.

How Texas Size and Location Rules Apply

This automatic sits under the common “location‑restricted knife” cutoff, so it stays on the right side of everyday carry for most Texans. The places you still need to mind are the obvious ones—schools, certain government buildings, secured areas where any knife can be an issue. But for ranch work, city carry, or riding in a truck across the state, this is a practical, legal companion for an adult who knows where they’re going.

That’s why a lot of folks who start out searching for the best Texas OTF knife end up with a Kalashnikov‑style auto. They get the same quick deployment they wanted, but in a package that feels like a tool first and a collectible second.

Texas Use Cases: From Highway Shoulder to Lease Road

Picture a blowout on 287 with a trailer full of gear. You’re on the shoulder, wind hammering the side of the truck, and you need to cut ratchet straps and rope without fumbling. This automatic comes out of the pocket, opens with a flat, authoritative snap, and the serrations do the dirty work while the tanto tip handles the precise cuts.

Or you’re on a lease outside Junction, riding the fence line. The knife lives on your pocket every day. Cutting feed bags in the morning, scraping mud from a boot, trimming tie‑offs on fresh wire. You stop noticing the weight—barely over four ounces—until the moment you need it. Then the action and grip feel as familiar as the truck door.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal for adults to own and carry in most everyday settings. The key points are blade length and where you bring it—schools, certain government buildings, and other restricted locations are still off‑limits. If you’re an adult carrying a knife like this automatic in normal Texas life—on the job, around town, or on the ranch—you’re within what the law allows, as long as you respect those restricted places.

How does this automatic handle Texas heat, grit, and sweat?

The black aluminum handle doesn’t mind riding in a hot cab or on a belt all summer. The texture and finger grooves keep your grip solid even when sweat or dust gets into the works. The push‑button action is simple and proven; a quick wipe‑down keeps it snapping open in West Texas dust, Gulf Coast humidity, or Panhandle cold. It’s built for real pockets, not display cases.

Should I choose this over a true OTF knife for Texas carry?

If you want pure speed and a solid working tip, this automatic is a smart pick. You get push‑button deployment like an OTF, but in a tougher, rifle‑inspired frame that handles side pressure and rough tasks better than many double‑action OTF designs. For most Texans who cut rope, hose, straps, and packing more than they show off mechanisms, this style of automatic is the more practical everyday choice.

First Use: Night Air Over a Texas Lot

You kill the engine outside a small‑town feed store, last stop before heading back down the highway. The air finally feels cooler. A pallet strap needs cutting, and everyone’s waiting on you. Hand drops to your front pocket, finds the familiar aluminum frame. One press, a clean mechanical snap, and the black tanto blade is working before anyone finishes their sentence. No drama. No flourish. Just a knife that fits the way you live here—and keeps fitting, day after day, mile after mile.

No Specifications