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Blackwood Velocity Assisted Opening Knife - Damascus Pattern

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10.99


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Blackwood Ripple Spring-Assisted Folding Knife - Damascus Pattern

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7249/image_1920?unique=673931c

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Late light on a Hill Country lease, tailgate down, one more length of poly rope to cut. This spring-assisted folding knife opens with a clean, quick snap and settles into your hand on that dark, smooth blackwood. The Damascus-style spear point slices feed bags, cord, and cardboard without drama, then disappears into your pocket on the clip. It’s the kind of quiet, reliable blade Texans tuck into a jeans pocket and forget—until it’s the only tool that matters.

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When a Damascus Pattern Belongs in a Texas Pocket

Fence line south of San Angelo, wind pushing dust across the caliche, you’re standing on a flatbed staring at another roll of barbed wire. You don’t want a showpiece; you want a blade that opens fast, cuts clean, and rides light in your pocket. That’s where this spring-assisted folding knife with its Damascus-style spear point and blackwood grip earns its keep.

Closed, it sits at about five inches, slim enough to ride in a front pocket beside a truck key. One flick on the flipper tab and the 3.75-inch patterned blade snaps out with a sure, spring-backed motion. No wrist theatrics, no double-takes. Just steel, open, ready.

Blackwood in the Hand, Work in Front of You

Texas work is rough on tools. Hot tailgates, gravel driveways, mesquite thorns, and feed dust don’t care how a knife looks on a shelf. The blackwood handle on this knife is shaped to disappear into your palm and stay put when sweat and dust get involved. Subtle grooves and jimping along the spine and handle give your thumb and fingers a place to lock in, whether you’re cutting baling twine outside of Lubbock or trimming drip line in a Hill Country vineyard.

The steel blade brings a modern Damascus-style pattern—those ripples across the silver finish aren’t just for looks. They give the knife a sense of depth and movement, like water sliding down a stock tank overflow pipe after a rare summer rain. But underneath the pattern, it’s still a plain-edge spear point built to cut rope, cardboard, feed sacks, and light brush without snagging.

How a Spring-Assisted Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

All across the state, from office towers in Dallas to pump jacks outside Midland, folks carry a knife the way they carry a wallet. This one was made for that rhythm. At 8.75 inches open and just 4.6 ounces, it feels full-sized in use but never heavy in the pocket. The spring-assisted mechanism means one-handed opening is simple and repeatable—push the flipper or guard-style tab, feel the spring take over, hear that quiet, confident click of the liner lock engaging.

That liner lock is the quiet hero here. Once the blade is open, it settles in solid. No wobble, no second-guessing. You can choke up on the spine, put pressure into a cut, and not worry about the knife folding back on you while you’re breaking down boxes behind a San Antonio warehouse or trimming nylon strap on a boat trailer down at the coast.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and Where This Assisted Folder Fits

In this state, knife law changed in a way that favored people who actually use their blades. For years, switchblades and certain automatic knives sat in a legal gray or red zone. That shifted. Today, both automatic knives and OTF blades are legal to own and carry for most adults here, with a key distinction tied to blade length and location.

This spring-assisted folder isn’t an automatic OTF; it’s a manually initiated, spring-assisted opening knife. You start the motion, the spring finishes it. Under current Texas law, that makes it solid everyday carry territory for most people. With a blade under four inches, it stays below the “location-restricted knife” threshold that kicks in above 5.5 inches. So slipping this into your pocket before heading into town, walking a feed store aisle in Weatherford, or stopping into a roadside diner off I-45 keeps you well within the practical carry norms across the state.

Reading Texas Terrain and Tasks

From brush country to high plains, the jobs change but the need for a quick, capable edge doesn’t. This assisted opening knife gives you enough blade length to slice through cinch straps on a flatbed near Odessa, while staying trim enough to peel an orange at a Friday night football game outside Abilene without drawing attention.

Why Texas Buyers Lean Toward Assisted Instead of OTF

Plenty of Texans looking up an OTF knife in Texas end up deciding a spring-assisted folder like this one is the better fit. You still get that fast, one-handed deployment, but in a simpler, more familiar folding format that rides easy in work jeans and doesn’t rattle around in a glove box. For ranch hands, linemen, and oilfield crews who already beat up their gear, fewer moving parts and a strong liner lock matter more than a pure OTF showpiece.

Where a Texas OTF Knife Buyer Finds Value in This Folder

Search for an OTF knife in Texas and you’ll see a wall of tactical black hardware. This knife takes a different track. It keeps the speed and one-handed readiness OTF buyers expect, but wraps it in natural blackwood and a Damascus-style blade that wouldn’t look out of place clipped inside a sport coat pocket in downtown Houston.

The pocket clip holds the knife high enough for a quick grab, low enough not to print loud against your shirt. The lanyard hole at the tail gives ranchers and river guides a way to tether it to a belt loop or PFD strap. In a state where so much gear ends up at the bottom of stock tanks, creeks, and bays, that little detail can save a favorite blade.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults. The real dividing line is blade length and certain sensitive locations, not the mechanism itself. Knives with blades over 5.5 inches fall into a “location-restricted” category and can’t be carried into places like schools, courthouses, and some events. This spring-assisted folding knife keeps the blade shorter than that threshold, putting it squarely in everyday carry territory for typical Texas use. Always check the latest statute and any local rules before you clip on.

How does this spring-assisted knife handle Texas heat, dust, and sweat?

Texas climate is rough on pivots and pocket clips. The steel blade and liner lock, paired with the blackwood handle, hold up well to dry heat and day-in, day-out pocket carry. Dust from caliche roads near Uvalde, or sand off the Gulf, wipes off easily from the patterned blade. A drop of oil at the blue-accented pivot now and then keeps that assisted action snapping open clean, even after weeks of going from air-conditioned truck cabs to job sites and back again.

Is this the right choice if I’m deciding between an OTF knife and a folder?

If you’re drawn to an OTF knife in Texas for the speed, but plan to use your blade for everyday work—cutting rope, boxes, plastic banding, zip ties—this spring-assisted folding knife offers a strong middle ground. You get one-handed, fast deployment with a simpler mechanism, a natural wood handle that feels good in the hand, and a blade length that stays easy to carry into most places you go on a Texas day. For many buyers, that balance of speed, discretion, and reliability is what they end up carrying long term.

First Cut: A Texas Moment

Picture yourself back at the truck as the sun drops behind a live oak line outside Kerrville. Cooler in the bed, tie-down straps still snug across a load of lumber. You reach into your pocket, feel the smooth blackwood, flick the flipper, and the Damascus-pattern blade is there—no fuss, no pause. One clean slice through the strap, the kind of job you’ve done a thousand times, but this time the knife doesn’t drag, doesn’t fight you. It just works, then slips back into your pocket as you climb into the cab. That’s how this knife fits into a Texas day: quiet, fast, and always where you expect it to be.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.6
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Patterned
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Natural
Handle Material Wood
Theme Damascus
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock