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Crossbones Rapid-Rescue Assisted Knife - Red Skull

Price:

11.99


Galaxy Drift Fast-Deploy Assisted Pocket Knife - Purple
Galaxy Drift Fast-Deploy Assisted Pocket Knife - Purple
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Blue Line Reaper Assisted Rescue Knife - Black Steel
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Crossbones Rescue Skull Assisted Knife - Black Stainless

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8006/image_1920?unique=36fa791

3 sold in last 24 hours

West of Abilene, when the only light is your dash and the red glow of hazards, this skull-handled assisted knife earns its keep. The spring-assisted drop point snaps open fast to cut a jammed belt, while the glass breaker and dedicated cutter ride ready in your console. Stainless steel, blacked out with a blood-red crossbones, built for Texans who drive long, run late, and don’t wait on help.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

PWT311A

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Handle Finish
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Skull-Handled Insurance for Texas Backroads

Out past the last streetlight, between a caliche driveway and a two-lane farm road, this skull-handled assisted knife makes more sense than any roadside service number. It rides in a truck console, door pocket, or range bag, black stainless frame hiding a red crossbones that’s easy to spot in low light when you need it fast.

Spring-assisted and eight inches open, it feels like a compact rescue tool built for the way Texans actually drive: long stretches, late nights, busy highways, and ranch roads that don’t see a patrol car for hours.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers and the Assisted Alternative

Plenty of Texans search for an OTF knife when what they really need is fast, one-handed steel they can trust. This spring-assisted knife answers that same need without the automatic mechanism. Dual thumb studs ride near the pivot; a firm push sends the 3 3/8-inch blade snapping into place, liner lock solidly engaged.

For the driver pulled over on I-35 with hazard lights blinking and a seat belt jammed after a fender-bender, the speed difference between a good assisted and an OTF knife in Texas is measured in half-seconds. Here, you still get that quick, positive deployment, but in a straightforward folding build that rides flat and familiar in pocket or console.

Drop Point Steel Built for Real Texas Use

The blade is plain-edge stainless steel, drop point, with a black coating and satin-style grind line that shows where the work gets done. It’s not a safe-queen edge. It’s for the nylon straps in a stock trailer, the cheap rope from a feed store, the shrink wrap on pallets in a San Antonio warehouse, and the plastic banding that shows up on every oilfield delivery.

At 3.375 inches, it clears the handle with enough reach to bite cleanly without feeling like a pocket sword. Stainless makes sense in Texas heat and humidity — from Gulf Coast salt air to a glovebox in August — when lesser steels start picking up rust just from neglect. A quick touch-up on a stone or pull-through sharpener keeps it honest.

Crossbones Styling, Rescue Function

The red skull and crossbones stamped across the black handle isn’t subtle. It’s meant to stand out in a sea of black gear, and it does. But the graphics ride on full stainless steel scales, matte finished, with a finger groove and jimping that keep your hand anchored when sweat, rain, or power-steering fluid get involved.

At the tail, the business end of this knife shows up: a pointed glass breaker built into the handle and a dedicated seat belt cutter slot. On a West Texas highway with a rollover in the bar ditch, this is what you want in your hand when you lean into a window. The breaker goes to work on tempered glass. The cutter bites into a belt without threatening the person you’re trying to free.

The pocket clip runs along the handle so it can ride clipped in a front pocket in town or snugged into the edge of a truck visor when you’re outside the city limits. Closed, it sits at 4.75 inches — long enough to get a full grip, short enough to disappear when you’re not thinking about it.

Texas Knife Law Confidence for Assisted and OTF Buyers

Texas knife laws have opened up over the past few years. Where certain blades were once a gray area, state law now treats most knives — including automatics and OTF designs — far more simply. For an assisted opener like this one, you’re well inside the comfort zone for everyday carry almost anywhere a standard folding knife is allowed.

There are still location-based restrictions in Texas for particular blade lengths and "location-restricted" knives in places like schools, secure government buildings, and certain events. This 3 3/8-inch assisted folder stays away from the extremes. It gives you a fast-deploying tool that fits how Texans actually move — from jobsite to gas station to Friday night game — without pushing into the oversized territory that draws unwanted attention.

How This Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

For the working Texan who keeps a blade in the pocket and a backup in the truck, this skull-assisted knife fills that second role cleanly. It’s the one that lives in the door of a work truck that runs from Amarillo to Lubbock, or in the center console of a Houston commuter car that sees more miles on 610 than on gravel.

It isn’t a gentleman’s folder and doesn’t pretend to be. It’s a glove-compartment rescue knife with attitude — legal, fast, and simple, for drivers who care more about function than polite looks.

Texas Weather, Texas Wear

From a deer lease outside Junction to a shipyard job along the Houston Ship Channel, stainless handles and blade mean less babying. Sweat, grime, a bit of diesel, a splash of coastal air — this knife shrugs most of it off. Rinse, dry, keep it reasonably clean, and it’s ready for the next shift.

The black coating on the blade cuts glare when you’re working under headlights or a flashlight beam on the side of Highway 6. The red skull is less about menace, more about visibility when you’ve dropped it in gravel or on the dark rubber mat of a truck floorboard.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic and OTF knives are broadly legal at the state level, much like other knives, as long as you respect location-based restrictions for certain blade types and sizes. This assisted-opening knife isn’t an OTF or fully automatic; it uses a spring to finish the opening after you start it. That puts it firmly in the comfortable category for everyday carry, whether you’re in Dallas or a small Hill Country town.

Is this skull-assisted knife practical for Texas roadside emergencies?

Yes. The design is built for that exact kind of Texas moment — a wreck on a dark farm-to-market road, a flooded low-water crossing, or a pileup on a busy Houston freeway. The glass breaker gives you a focused impact point for side windows, while the dedicated belt cutter lets you free someone without waving a bare blade around in tight quarters. The assisted opening means you can get the main blade into play with one hand if the other is bracing you against the door frame.

How does this compare to the best OTF knife in Texas for daily carry?

The best OTF knife in Texas will deploy with a button or slider and lock with authority, but it also brings more complexity, more cost, and more attention. This skull-assisted folder gives you one-handed speed close to an OTF with a simpler mechanism, solid liner lock, and rescue tools all in one package. For the Texan who wants a throw-it-in-the-truck-and-forget-it blade that still answers when trouble comes, this is a smart, low-profile choice.

A Texas Night, a Hard Shoulder, and a Ready Blade

Picture a late run between San Angelo and Midland, wind pushing the pickup, radio low, sky black across the mesquite. Up ahead, you catch the uneven flash of hazards on the shoulder. You nose in behind, gravel crunches, and you grab this skull-handled assisted knife from the console without thinking about it.

The blade snaps open under your thumb, clean and fast. Glass breaker meets window. The cutter slides through a locked belt. When the dust and adrenaline settle, you clip it back where it lives, engine idling, West Texas wind still moving the truck. Out here, this is the kind of knife that earns its place within reach.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless steel
Theme Skull
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock