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Frontline Weave Clip-Point OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber

Price:

39.99


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Carbon Weave Quick-Slide OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber
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Carbon Frontline Clip-Point OTF Knife - Black Weave

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4961/image_1920?unique=46589f7

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You’re easing off a caliche lease road, truck idling, last light leaking out over mesquite and fenceline. This OTF knife sits flat in your pocket, carbon fiber locked under your fingers as the front button snaps the clip-point blade into play. It punches through feed bags, slices busted hose, and cleans up loose cord without fanfare. Legal to carry, easy to reach, it feels less like gear and more like part of how Texans move through their day.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB122BKCP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Double/Single Action
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Frontline Edge for Real Texas Days

Long after the sun has baked the last bit of moisture out of a Hill Country pasture, you still have work to finish. Gates drag. Hose splits. Feed bags slump in the dust. That’s where a front-deploy OTF with a carbon fiber spine earns its place. This single-action clip-point doesn’t ride as a showpiece; it rides as the tool you reach for when both hands are busy and the work won’t wait.

In a truck door pocket rolling I‑35, in a pocket on a West Texas lease, or pinned inside a plate carrier at a night match, the knife stays out of the way until the moment the front button slides forward and the blade drives straight out, ready to cut clean and get back to quiet.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Trust When Seconds Are Tight

Across the state, the draw is the same: one straight push of your thumb and the 3.75-inch clip-point blade tracks out of the handle in a single line, no swinging arc, no wasted motion. In tight truck cabs, cramped deer blinds, or at a crowded Houston range, that direct Out-the-Front deployment keeps the edge where you want it—forward, controlled, predictable.

At 9.25 inches overall and 5.375 inches closed, this isn’t a toy-sized automatic. It fills the hand the way a working blade should. Still, at 9.2 ounces with a flat-sided profile and pocket clip, it settles into jeans or uniform pants without printing like a brick. The carbon fiber inlay anchors your grip when your hands are slick with sweat, oil, or rain off the Gulf.

Carbon Fiber, Matte Steel, and Texas Wear

Texas eats gear. Grit, sand, and caliche dust find every seam. That’s why the handle wears a matte finish with a carbon fiber weave panel instead of glossy show steel. The carbon inlay gives just enough bite to stay put when you’re gloveless on a July fence repair, or running latex gloves in a San Antonio shop bay.

The matte black clip-point blade carries a clean grind line and oval cutouts that shave weight without feeling fragile. It’s straight steel—tough enough to run through rope, pallet wrap, irrigation line, and heavy cardboard day after day. The plain edge sharpens easy on a truck stone, no fuss, no exotic metallurgy to baby. This is the kind of Texas OTF knife that sees more use on job sites and leases than in glass cases.

Texas OTF Knife Carry: Console to Belt Line

Ask around any Panhandle co-op or coastal marina: how a knife rides matters as much as how it cuts. The pocket clip plants this OTF high and secure along your pocket seam, where you can get to the front button even while seated behind a steering wheel or strapped into a side-by-side. For those who run gear on a belt, the included deluxe sheath locks it down along a duty belt, backpack strap, or chest rig, where a straight pull gets you steel without digging.

The lanyard hole at the butt end lets you tie in a short pull cord—handy gloved up on a cold Panhandle wind day or working a night shift in a refinery where you can’t spare a second looking down to find your grip. Torx hardware along the handle keeps the build tight under vibration, from washboard lease roads to Houston traffic.

Texas Knife Laws and This OTF in Your Pocket

For years, buyers used to ask if a switchblade was trouble under state law. Not anymore. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF designs like this one, are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not taking them into the specific prohibited locations the Penal Code lays out—places like schools, certain government buildings, and secured areas.

There is no special carve-out that makes an OTF knife Texas illegal simply because it deploys automatically. The focus now is on blade length and location, not the action itself. With a sub-4-inch clip-point blade, this knife sits in a comfortable zone for daily carry across most Texas towns and counties. You still use the same common sense you would with any blade: know your local rules if you’re around courthouses, school events, or lock-secured venues, and keep the knife holstered and quiet where the law expects it.

Understanding OTF Knife Texas Carry Reality

In practice, that means this knife works as a daily driver from Amarillo to Brownsville. On a ranch, it’s a working edge for cutting poly rope, hay twine, and PVC wrap. In a city, it’s a low-profile opener for boxes, strapping, and work around the house or shop. The automatic action is legal; misuse never is. Treat it like the tool it is, and it will ride with you for years without drawing the wrong kind of attention.

Why a Texas OTF Knife Over a Folder Here

Folding knives need room to swing open. Out in the brush or cramped in a feed truck, that arc can fight you. A Texas OTF knife like this one comes straight out in line with your forearm. When you’re hanging off a gate with one hand and holding a roll of wire with the other, that straight-line deployment can be the difference between fumbling and getting the cut made on the first try.

Built for Texas Use, Not for the Shelf

This isn’t a dainty, double-action showpiece. The single-action mechanism is tuned to one job: send the blade straight forward with authority when you drive the button. That brings more confidence in dusty conditions where a lighter-duty, double-action system might start to struggle. Wipe this one down, clear the tracks, and it’s back to full strength the next day.

The deep black look keeps it from flashing around strangers. In a San Marcos parking lot, a big shiny blade can turn heads you don’t want. With this OTF knife, the matte handle and dark steel keep your work private. You draw, cut, and return without the crowd even noticing you had a blade in hand.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal for most adults to own and carry. The law no longer bans automatic knives just because of their mechanism. What still matters are restricted places—schools, certain government facilities, secure areas—and any local or situational restrictions that may apply. This clip-point OTF, with its manageable blade length, is well suited for everyday carry in most Texas settings, provided you stay clear of those prohibited locations and use it as a tool, not a weapon.

Will this OTF handle dust, sweat, and Texas heat?

It was built with that in mind. The matte handle and carbon fiber inlay hold steady when your palms are slick in August heat or gloved in a January front. The front button is textured and broad enough to find without looking, even when you’re wearing work gloves. Keep the tracks blown out and the blade lightly oiled, and it will shrug off the mix of dust, sweat, and temperature swings that come with a long day anywhere from the Permian Basin to the Pineywoods.

Is this the right Texas OTF knife for everyday carry or just for emergencies?

It does both. As a daily tool, it slices cord, boxes, hose, and strap all week without drama. As a backup in a truck console or duty kit, the single-action, straight-line deployment and secure sheath make it a reliable emergency option when seconds matter. If your goal is one blade that lives with you from gate checks to grocery runs, this Texas OTF knife hits that middle ground: big enough to work, compact enough to carry without thinking about it.

First Use: Where This OTF Knife Fits Your Texas Day

Picture a late fall front pushing through outside Abilene. Wind cuts down the lane, sky gone flat and gray. You climb out of the truck to find a panel of field fence bowed under some stray cattle pressure. One hand steadies the wire, the other finds the carbon fiber in your pocket. The front button moves under your thumb, the clip-point blade snaps forward, and you’re cutting tie wire before the dust even settles around your boots.

No drama, no flourish. Just a Texas-ready OTF knife doing exactly what you asked of it, then sliding back into your pocket until the next small problem shows up along the road home.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 9.2
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Front Button
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Deluxe Sheath