Skip to Content
Tricolor Pride Fast-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS

Price:

17.99


Shadowline Gentleman’s Double-Edge OTF Knife - Two-Tone Black
Shadowline Gentleman’s Double-Edge OTF Knife - Two-Tone Black
40.99 40.99
Cosmic Edge Balanced Throwing Star - Blue Accents
Cosmic Edge Balanced Throwing Star - Blue Accents
6.99 6.99

Borderline Heritage Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5305/image_1920?unique=fdc518e

13 sold in last 24 hours

South Texas heat, border wind, and a knife that says exactly where you come from. This OTF knife snaps out a 3.5-inch black clip-point blade with a hard, clean double-action you can trust. The Mexico flag ABS handle rides light in pocket or console, but locks in when you draw. For the ranch hand, the refinery worker, or the weekend cookout—heritage in your grip, work edge out front.

17.99 17.99 USD 17.99

SB312LMEXCP

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

When Heritage Rides in a Texas Pocket

Late afternoon along Highway 83, sun dropping behind the mesquite, Border Patrol trucks easing past ranch gates. In the driver’s door pocket, this OTF sits clipped and quiet—Mexico flag colors worn smooth from months of use, black blade waiting behind ABS scales. When it comes out, it’s not for show. It’s for feed bags, pallet wrap, and the stubborn nylon on a tangled tie-down.

This out-the-front automatic was built for Texans who live with one boot in South Texas dust and the other in border city concrete. A 3.5-inch black clip-point blade runs dead straight out the front, locked by a side slide that snaps with the same clean sound every time. Nine inches overall when open, 5.5 when closed, it tucks into a front pocket, truck console, or vest without printing loud, but it never disappears from mind. The Mexico flag handle isn’t an accent. It’s the point.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Place

Most folks looking for an OTF knife in Texas want more than a gimmick. They want a tool that lives where they do. Here, that means a knife that can ride from Eagle Pass to Laredo in a work truck, spend the night clipped to basketball shorts in a San Antonio apartment, then land on a tailgate cutting fajita packs by Saturday.

The textured ABS handle is where that starts. ABS doesn’t mind South Texas humidity or the dry Panhandle wind. It shrugs off sweat, dust, and the grit that comes from working yards, loading docks, or oilfield laydown yards. The Mexico flag print wraps the full handle, not just a token patch. The coat of arms sits centered where your thumb lands, so every time you fire the double-action slide, you feel the emblem under skin.

The black stainless clip-point blade is plain edged, no serrations to snag on cardboard, feed sacks, or plastic banding. Stainless steel holds up to sweat and the odd forgotten night in a center console. The blade geometry gives you a fine tip for piercing shrink wrap and a long, straight main edge for clean, controlled cuts on rope and hose.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Built for Legal, Everyday Use

Not long ago, a switchblade or OTF knife in Texas got second looks and questions. That changed. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF designs are legal to own and carry for most adults, with the main limits tied to blade length around certain locations like schools and government buildings. This knife’s 3.5-inch blade sits under the big five-and-a-half-inch threshold that defines a “location-restricted knife” in Texas statutes.

In practice, that means a grown Texan can pocket this OTF for daily carry at work, around town, or on the ranch, while still using common sense about where it comes out. It’s sized to stay well within everyday carry expectations in Houston office towers, along the Valley, or in Midland service yards. The side-mounted slide makes it obvious this is an automatic, and that honesty matters—no flippers disguised as something else, no hidden springs. Just a straightforward Texas OTF knife that lives inside the law.

Texas Knife Laws and Real-World Use

If you spend time near courthouses, schools, or posted venues, you already know to check signs and local rules. That’s where this compact 3.5-inch blade earns its keep. It gives you fast, one-handed deployment, the convenience of an automatic, and still fits comfortably into the everyday side of Texas knife laws. For most Texans—contractors, ranch hands, warehouse leads, or cooks working late-night kitchens—it’s a legal, workable middle ground between toy and overkill.

Design Details That Matter South of Amarillo

The double-action mechanism is the heart of this knife. Push the slide forward and the blade fires straight out with a positive, mechanical snap that cuts through truck noise and bar chatter. Pull the slide back and it retracts just as surely, no awkward two-hand reset. That matters when you’ve got one hand full of rope, cable, or a feed bucket and no patience for fidgety hardware.

At nine inches open, there’s enough reach to clear thick braid on a trotline or slice tape on a full pallet without choking up dangerously near the edge. Closed at 5.5 inches, it rides deep against a pocket seam or inside a boot top without digging into your leg when you climb into a lifted truck or drop onto a barstool after shift.

The glass-breaker style pommel tip isn’t decoration. On Texas highways full of work trucks, farm pickups, and long-haul rigs, it’s the feature you hope you never need. But if you do, one hard strike to tempered glass beats fumbling with a toolbox. A lanyard hole at the back lets you tie in a short cord or fob, easy to grab even from under a welding jacket or cold-weather gloves in a Panhandle norther.

Mexico Flag Handle in a Texas Landscape

On the Rio Grande, in El Paso neighborhoods, or at a Sunday carne asada in Dallas suburbs, this knife speaks without you saying a word. The tricolor ABS handle is a clear nod to Mexican heritage tied tight to Texas soil. It’s the knife that sits on a grill-side table next to a cast-iron skillet, that comes out to open beer boxes, cut limes, or slice open bags of mesquite chunks.

For some it’s a reminder of family still across the river; for others it’s pride in a shared culture that runs from Brownsville to Fort Worth. Either way, the symbol is on your handle, not hanging on a wall.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Work They Do

The person who buys this Texas OTF knife isn’t chasing collector’s cases. They’re lining up gear for real days. They might weld pipe on the Gulf Coast shipyards, run cable in a San Antonio high-rise, or load produce at a McAllen warehouse. Their knife sees plastic banding, pallet straps, nylon cord, and the occasional stubborn zip-tie that won’t give to fingers alone.

The stainless steel edge cuts clean through those materials without rolling at the first sign of cardboard. The ABS handle doesn’t chill your hand like bare metal on a cold Panhandle morning or burn your palm after a truck-bed nap in August. And the pocket clip keeps the knife riding where you left it—on the inside seam of jeans, on scrubs, or along the edge of basketball shorts when you run out for late-night tacos.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives are legal to own and carry for adults. The key detail is blade length and where you take it. Knives with blades over 5.5 inches are considered location-restricted and can’t be carried into certain places like schools, polling sites, and some government buildings. This knife’s 3.5-inch blade stays under that mark, making it a practical everyday carry across most of the state when you still use common sense about posted locations.

Will this Mexico flag OTF hold up to Texas heat and sweat?

The ABS handle and stainless blade were chosen for exactly that. ABS doesn’t warp or crack under dashboard heat in August, and it doesn’t get slick when your hands are damp from Gulf humidity or long shifts. Stainless steel shrugs off sweat and the salt in border air better than cheaper mystery metals, and the black finish helps mask wear from constant use without shouting for attention.

Is this the right OTF if I only want one Texas carry knife?

If your knife needs are mostly cutting boxes, straps, light cord, and the daily odds and ends of working in Texas, this OTF is a solid single-knife answer. It’s compact enough to carry every day, quick enough for one-handed use when the other hand is full, and legal-sized for most situations. If your work leans toward heavy game processing or deep backcountry camp chores, you might pair it with a larger fixed blade—but for city-to-ranch daily life, this covers more than most people admit.

First Draw: A Texas Moment

Picture a Friday evening in a backyard off Military Drive, grill smoking, kids chasing each other around a trampoline. You feel the buzz on your hip as another bag of meat hits the table still wrapped tight in plastic. Your hand finds the Mexico flag handle without looking. You thumb the slide, hear the quiet, sharp click of the blade locking out. Two clean cuts and the plastic falls away. Nobody watches closely, but a few take note. Not because you flashed steel, but because your knife fits the scene—border air, Texas ground, heritage in your hand, work getting done without a word.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Sleek
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Slide
Theme Mexican Flag
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes