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Stealth Linear Strike Automatic Knife - All Black

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13.99


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Blackout Line-Cutter Automatic Knife - All Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8634/image_1920?unique=63d3cc6

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Late evening on a Panhandle lease, light going fast, you’re cutting feed sacks open by feel. This automatic knife snaps out with a firm button push, that 4-inch Wharncliffe blade running straight and true. Matte black steel and aluminum keep it low-profile in a pocket or console. At just over nine inches open, it’s big enough for ranch chores, small enough to carry into town. This is the kind of automatic Texans keep handy when work doesn’t stop at dark.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

SB207BKT

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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When Work Runs Past Sundown, This Blade Earns Its Keep

End of a long day outside San Angelo, you’re still breaking down boxes by the shop light and cutting nylon rope off the trailer. Your hands are tired, grip not what it was at noon. You hit the round button on this blackout automatic, feel the snap, and that straight Wharncliffe edge goes right to work. No fuss. No show. Just a clean, controlled cut every time.

This all-black automatic rides easy in a front pocket or truck console, but opens to a full 9.375 inches when locked out. The 4-inch matte black steel blade gives you straight-line power for push cuts, while the 5.375-inch aluminum handle fills your hand without feeling bulky in jeans or work pants. At 7.59 ounces, it carries with some weight—enough to feel solid when you bear down on a cut, not so much that it drags your pocket.

Why This Feels Like the Right Texas OTF Knife Alternative

Plenty of Texans search for an OTF knife Texas buyers can count on for fast deployment. This automatic sits in that same world of quick, one-handed action, but with the familiar strength of a side-folder and a push-button you can find without looking. In a truck cab outside Lubbock or on a four-wheeler south of Kerrville, that matters.

The round silver button is easy to index with gloves or slick hands. Press, and the blade drives out with a positive, mechanical snap. The pocket clip keeps it anchored tip-down along the seam of your pocket, so you learn exactly where it sits. Those cutouts in the blade spine shave a little weight and give the knife a no-nonsense, modern profile that doesn’t draw eyes when you flip it open at a jobsite in Midland or a warehouse in Dallas.

Built for Real Cutting in Texas Conditions

Texas work is hard on edges. Cardboard in the back of a delivery truck in Houston, baling twine out near Abilene, zip ties and rubber hose under a shade tree in Waco—this blade is shaped for all of it. The Wharncliffe profile keeps the cutting edge dead straight, so when you push down through material, all your pressure translates into the cut.

The matte black coating on the steel helps shrug off glare and surface rust when you forget it on the tailgate during a Gulf Coast morning. The plain edge makes it easy to run on a stone or ceramic rod at the kitchen counter or in a barn. No serrations to half-sharpen, no fancy grinds to baby. Just a straight working edge you keep honest.

The aluminum handle is likewise simple and honest. Matte black, with elongated cutout slots to break up the profile and give your fingers a place to land. The textured grip along the lower handle keeps it from shifting when sweat, rain, or oil gets involved. At a roadside stop off I-10 or in the bed of a work truck, you’ll feel that texture earn its place.

Carrying This Automatic Like a Texas OTF Knife

Whether you’re in Amarillo wind or Hill Country cedar, how a knife carries matters as much as how it cuts. Texans who look for a Texas OTF knife are often chasing three things: speed, pocket comfort, and reliability when their other hand is busy.

This automatic checks those boxes in its own way. Closed, it’s 5.375 inches, roughly the length of a large phone, but narrower and flatter. The tip-down clip anchors it deep along your pocket seam, so it doesn’t roll around when you’re climbing in and out of a skid steer or sliding across a bench seat. The weight sits low in the pocket, which keeps it from printing in thinner pants when you head into town.

In the glovebox of a ranch truck, the all-black finish doesn’t flash when you reach across and hit the button to cut a length of paracord or slice into a wrapped pallet. On a belt or in a boot, the straight scales make it easy to draw without snagging. It’s the kind of knife that fades into the background until you need it, then gets the job done and disappears again.

Texas Knife Laws, Autos, and How This Fits

Texans search are OTF knives legal in Texas and wonder the same about automatics. Current Texas law allows adults to own and carry automatic knives, OTFs, and what used to be called switchblades, so long as they’re not restricted from possessing weapons and they respect location-based knife rules, like certain schools or secure areas.

This automatic falls well within what Texas law allows for everyday carry. It isn’t oversized, doesn’t hide a novelty blade shape, and operates with a straightforward push-button mechanism. For many buyers who want the fast action of an OTF knife Texas carriers rave about, but prefer the security and familiarity of a side-opening automatic, this knife sits in that middle ground with ease.

Understanding Texas Carry Culture with Automatic Knives

Across the state—from Corpus dock workers to West Texas ranch hands—carry culture is more about trust than trend. Folks want a blade that opens when asked, holds up to dust and sweat, and won’t raise eyebrows when used to cut a loose strap at the feed store.

This all-black automatic keeps a low profile in that culture. It’s not flashy. It’s not delicate. It’s something you can flip open to break down boxes behind a San Antonio shop or cut tubing in a Laredo yard without feeling like you brought the wrong tool to work.

Where This Knife Belongs in a Texas Day

Morning, it’s in your pocket when you stop for kolaches on 71. Midday, it’s riding in a center console as you bounce down a caliche road to check a gate. Evening, it’s at the kitchen counter opening packages, cutting twine off hay, or trimming irrigation line behind the house.

It doesn’t need ceremony. The knife is just there—solid in the hand, predictable in the cut, ready when you hit that button.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults may legally own and carry OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives. The old statewide switchblade ban is gone. What still matters are location restrictions and any personal legal status that might limit weapon possession. As long as you’re clear on those, carrying an OTF or an automatic like this one in your pocket or truck around the state is lawful.

How does this automatic compare to a true Texas OTF knife for daily carry?

A true OTF pushes the blade straight out the front; this knife swings out from the side on a pivot. For many Texans, that means a little more perceived strength at the hinge and a familiar folding profile that rides easier in jeans. If you want fast, one-handed deployment and a straight cutting edge, but don’t need a dual-action OTF mechanism, this automatic gives you most of what you’re after with less to maintain in grit and dust.

Is this the right choice if I want one main work knife in Texas?

If your main jobs are cutting rope, breaking down boxes, trimming hose, and opening feed or seed bags—from the Valley to the Panhandle—this all-black automatic is a strong candidate. The Wharncliffe blade handles real utility cuts, the weight gives it authority in hand, and the button deployment means you’re never fighting a nail nick with cold or gloved fingers. If you want a single work knife that feels at home in a Texas truck or pocket, this one fits that role.

Picture a hot, still evening outside a metal building on the edge of town. Trucks parked in a row, someone rolling down the bay doors. You reach into your pocket, find the familiar clip, and the knife settles into your palm. One press, the black blade snaps into place, straight edge ready against nylon, cardboard, or rubber. That quiet, capable moment—that’s where this automatic belongs in a Texas day.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.375
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 7.59
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Wharncliffe
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Button
Theme None
Safety None
Pocket Clip Yes