Cityline Specter Push-Button Automatic Knife - Jade G-10
10 sold in last 24 hours
Rush hour on I-35, glove box rattling with receipts, toll tags, and that one tool you actually trust. This automatic knife rides slim in pocket or console, snaps open on a clean push, then locks down behind a positive safety. The jade G‑10 handle stays grippy when the cab’s hot and your hands are slick. From cutting hose behind the shop to breaking down boxes in a Hill Country garage, it’s quiet, quick, and built for how Texans really carry.
City Streets, Hot Wind, and a Knife That Keeps Up
End of the workday off 290, traffic stacked and the sun bouncing off every windshield. You swing into the feed store anyway because the list on your dash won’t wait. In your front pocket, this slim automatic knife sits flat, the jade G-10 just a cool edge against your jeans. Cardboard, zip ties, feed bags, the odd length of nylon rope in the bed—everything gets handled with one clean push of a button and a blade that earns its ride.
Why This Automatic Knife Belongs in a Texas Pocket
This isn’t a glass-case showpiece. It’s built for people who move between air conditioning and 100-degree pavement all day. Closed, it runs about five inches, long enough to fill the hand, slim enough to vanish next to a phone or wallet. The clip rides deep, so it doesn’t flash every time you step out in a tucked shirt in Dallas or San Antonio. The matte silver clip point blade hits that sweet spot around three and three-quarter inches—enough reach to work clean, not so big it feels like a belt knife stuffed into your pocket.
The push button sits right where your thumb lands when you draw, which matters when you’re standing in a cramped Houston warehouse or leaning over a tailgate out in the Panhandle wind. The action is decisive, no half-steps: press, open, locked. Then that sliding safety clicks into place, so it stays shut when it’s rattling in a truck console or clipped inside gym shorts on a quick run to H-E-B.
Jade G-10 Built for Texas Heat and Hard Use
Texas heat doesn’t care what you paid for your knife. Handles swell, slick up, and bake. G-10 doesn’t. These jade scales stay stable in August parking-lot heat or a cold front blowing through Amarillo. The texture is subtle but real—enough bite when your hands are dusty from a jobsite outside Midland or slick from fish on a pier in Corpus Christi. No high-polish drama, just matte, practical grip.
That pale jade color also does one quiet thing right—it looks modern and low-key. In an Austin office, it reads like a clean tool, not a movie prop. On a night run to a South Texas gas station, it doesn’t shout for attention when you pull it to slice a wrapper or cut twine. Silver blade, matte finish, no wild markings; it’s the kind of automatic knife you can carry daily without turning it into a conversation piece unless you want to.
Texas OTF Knife and Automatic Culture: How This Fits In
Across the state, folks carry OTF knives, autos, and flippers for the same reason: one-handed speed when the other hand is full. While an OTF knife Texas buyers might choose shoots straight from the handle, this side-opening automatic takes a quieter path. Same fast deployment, different profile. It slim-lines into jeans on a San Angelo ranch visit or slacks in a downtown Houston office, trading the more aggressive OTF look for something understated but just as ready.
When people go hunting out near Llano or camping in the pines outside Lufkin, they might toss an OTF in the pack, but this automatic folder often ends up in the pocket. It rides easier when you’re in and out of trucks, diners, and feed stores. It’s the knife you reach for when you’re cutting venison wrap in the kitchen, trimming a tag, or opening a stubborn bag of deer corn at the lease.
Texas Knife Law Confidence with an Automatic
Not too long ago, you had to think twice about automatics and switchblades. That changed. Current Texas law treats automatic knives and OTF knives much like any other, with the main hard line being on blade length for restricted locations and certain age and place rules. This blade length sits in that everyday-carry comfort zone, making it a practical choice for most adults going about normal business across the state.
The safety matters here. When you’re dropping it into a work bag in Fort Worth or clipping it inside a boot on a West Texas road trip, that sliding lock gives peace of mind. The button won’t snag on a pocket seam and fire by accident. For many Texans who grew up hearing that switchblades were always trouble, this design feels like a welcome middle ground—modern automatic performance with the kind of mechanical restraint that earns trust over time.
Reading the Law Like a Texan Who Actually Carries
Ask around any gun show in Waco or knife counter in El Paso and you’ll hear the same thing: know your blade length, know where you’re walking in with it. This automatic folder runs a working-length blade without pushing into the kind of oversized territory that gets second glances. It’s an honest pocket tool, not a show-off piece meant for shock value.
From City Blocks to Backroads
In Dallas, it might spend the week opening shipping cases, trimming cable ties, and slicing tape under fluorescent lights. Come weekend, that same knife clips into the pocket of a worn pair of jeans headed down a two-lane outside Lockhart. The clip point shines cutting sausage casing on butcher paper, trimming line on the lake, or cutting a quick notch in cedar kindling. It floats cleanly between both lives without needing to be babied.
Everyday Details That Matter to Texas Carriers
Look close and you’ll see small choices that pay off across Texas miles. Jimping on the blade spine gives your thumb a place to lock in when you’re bearing down on tough plastic or hose under a truck. The hardware is straightforward Torx, so if you’ve got a driver set in the garage in Katy, you can tighten a pivot or clip screw yourself. A lanyard hole at the back lets you tie in a short cord if you like to fish a knife from deep pockets or hang it in the truck.
The pocket clip sits at the end of the handle, set for one consistent ride. It’s not trying to be all things to all people, just doing its job without loosening or snagging. Whether it’s clipped in the inner pocket of a ranch coat outside Abilene or the front pocket of chinos in The Woodlands, it draws the same way every time. That predictability becomes muscle memory, and muscle memory is what you want when your hands are busy and something needs cutting now.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives
Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?
Today, OTF knives and other automatic knives are generally legal for most adults to own and carry in Texas, with blade-length rules and place-based restrictions still in play. The big shift from years past is that automatic and switchblade-style knives are no longer banned outright. You still need to respect posted rules in courthouses, schools, and certain government buildings, and keep an eye on length if you prefer to stay well within the everyday-carry comfort zone. For most daily tasks—work, ranch, errands—a reasonably sized automatic or OTF knife rides within what many Texas carriers choose.
How does this automatic knife handle Texas heat and sweat?
G-10 scales don’t soak up sweat like some natural materials, and they don’t turn slick the minute your hands get damp working fence or loading gear in August. The jade G-10 on this handle stays stable going from AC to blacktop. The matte texture keeps grip when your palms are dusty from a job in the Hill Country or damp from coastal humidity. Paired with the matte blade finish, it’s built for real Texas conditions, not just a clean bench photo.
Is this the right automatic knife for everyday carry in Texas?
If you want one knife that rides Monday through Sunday—from office to lease, from suburbs to caliche backroads—this size and profile hit the mark. The blade is long enough to be useful on ranch work, warehouse floors, or late-night box runs, but not so oversized it feels out of place clipped in slacks at a client meeting in downtown Austin or Houston. One-handed push-button opening, solid lockup, and a pocket-friendly frame make it easy to build into your daily habit, the way most Texans prefer to carry: quiet, prepared, and not looking for attention.
First Cut, Long Drive, and Knowing You Brought the Right Knife
Picture a Friday, rain just cleared off I-10. You slide into a bay at the truck wash outside Boerne, windows still spotted, back seat a mess of straps, mail, and gear. You reach for the automatic clipped in your pocket, feel the jade G-10 under your fingers, draw, and hit the button. The blade snaps open clean. A length of nylon rope, stubborn shrink-wrap on a pallet, the plastic band around a new bag of feed—they all fall away in a few quiet cuts. You thumb the safety, slip it back into your pocket, and step into the evening knowing this is the kind of knife that belongs on Texas roads, not just in a drawer at home.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.75 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8.75 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 5 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | G-10 |
| Theme | None |
| Safety | Safety Lock |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |