Skip to Content
Crusader Cross Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - Blue

Price:

15.99


Frontier Crest Mirror-Edge Bowie Knife - Black Pakkawood
Frontier Crest Mirror-Edge Bowie Knife - Black Pakkawood
33.99 33.99
Patrol Tribute Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Rescue Knife - Police Graphic
Patrol Tribute Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Rescue Knife - Police Graphic
7.99 7.99

Crusader Guard Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife - Blue Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/6466/image_1920?unique=833ef1f

10 sold in last 24 hours

Dust, heat, and a long Texas road. You thumb the flipper and the black dagger blade snaps open like it’s been waiting all day. The crusader cross rides bright against the blue aluminum handle, set deep into your grip. At nine inches open with a spring-assisted, one-handed action and pocket clip carry, it’s the medieval-leaning knife that still feels right at home in a modern Texas truck console or back pocket.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

PF35BL

Not Available For Sale

5 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
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

When a Workday Turns Long and the Blade Has to Keep Up

The sun’s slipping low over a mesquite fenceline, and the heat hasn’t broken yet. You’re cutting baling twine out past the last gate, working by habit more than light. The knife in your hand isn’t fussy or delicate. You thumb the tab and the Crusader Guard Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife snaps open with that clean, spring-assisted pop you can feel through the handle. Black dagger blade, blue aluminum grip, bold cross in the middle. Medieval look, Texas purpose.

Closed, it rides five inches in your pocket or tucked in a truck visor. Open, at nine inches overall with a four-inch stainless blade, it feels like a short sword for real work—slicing rope, breaking down boxes in a hot warehouse, or trimming hose behind a barn. The crusader styling is what catches the eye. The way it cuts, and how fast it’s there when you need it, is what keeps it in your hand.

Why This Spring-Assisted Knife Works for Texas Carry

Texas favors tools that move quick and stay simple. This isn’t an OTF knife; Texas buyers who like that fast-deploy feel still reach for spring-assisted folders when they want a blade that looks less tactical on the belt but works just as hard. One-handed deployment matters when you’ve got feed bags in the other hand or a coil of irrigation line fighting you. Here, a firm push on the flipper sends the black-coated dagger-style blade into lockup with a liner lock you can trust.

The aluminum handle scales keep the weight down and the balance forward, toward that spear-like point. Finger grooves and guard-like flares at the front give you something to brace against when you’re bearing down on tough plastic straps or nylon rope. The cross isn’t just decoration; it’s raised enough to bite a bit into the palm and remind you where the knife sits when your hands are slick with sweat or oil.

Texas OTF Knife Culture, Spring-Assisted Reality, and Legal Ground

Ask around any Texas shop that sells blades and you’ll hear the same thing: folks search for an OTF knife in Texas because they want speed and convenience. But under state law, the real question isn’t OTF versus assisted—it’s whether the knife is a “location-restricted” weapon. Texas law removed the old switchblade ban years back. Today, automatic, OTF, and spring-assisted knives are legal to own and carry in most situations, as long as the blade length and location rules are respected.

This Crusader Guard sits at about a four-inch blade. For most adults, that keeps it usable as an everyday tool—clipped inside the pocket at a feed store in Weatherford, or riding in a backpack heading into a Hill Country campsite. Texas law focuses on where you carry and what you do with it, not whether it’s spring-assisted. That’s why a lot of Texans who ask if switchblades are legal here leave with a knife like this instead. It opens fast like an auto, feels familiar like a standard folder, and stays on the right side of how folks expect a working knife to look.

Legal Context Texas Carriers Actually Care About

Most buyers don’t want a law book; they want a straight answer. For a knife in this size and style, the concern isn’t the spring assist—Texas doesn’t single that out. It’s how big the blade is for your daily routine and whether you’re walking into a school, courthouse, or posted venue. For normal work, ranch, shop, or daily carry, this quick-deploy assisted blade checks the boxes: fast, reliable, and built to look like a tool, not trouble.

Crusader Styling, Texas Workload

Plenty of Texas knives lean plain and unmarked. This one doesn’t. The crusader cross hardware, blue aluminum inlays, and guard-like ends give it a medieval backbone—something that would look natural stuck upright in a cedar post while you take a breather. But the styling never gets in the way of the cut.

The matte black stainless blade shrugs off tape residue and grime from warehouse work. On a hot day in a San Antonio shipping bay, you’ll appreciate that coating when you’re opening shrink-wrapped pallets and breaking down thick cardboard. Out near Lubbock, it’ll bite clean into hay bale twine that’s gone stiff with dust and age. The plain, dagger-style edge lets you pierce feed sacks, slice poly rope, or notch kindling without fighting recurve shapes or gimmick serrations that don’t match the job.

Real Texas Use Cases in Mind

In a deer lease cabin west of Junction, this is the knife that opens MREs, cuts paracord for a new tarp line, and cleans up loose strap ends on a stand. In a Houston garage, it’s what you grab to trim fuel line, shave down a stubborn zip-tie, or open another box of parts. That quick spring assist keeps your other hand free, whether it’s holding a light, a ladder, or a fence panel that doesn’t want to stay put.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Spring-Assisted Alternative

People who come in asking about an OTF knife in Texas usually want three things: speed, control, and a blade they can live with day in, day out. This Crusader Guard checks those boxes from a different angle. The spring-assisted mechanism gives you that rapid deployment feel a lot of Texas OTF knife fans chase, but in a format that rides easy clipped inside a jeans pocket or nested in a truck console.

With its pocket clip, it disappears along the seam of your Wranglers or work pants. The blue handle gives you a quick visual when you’re fishing around under a truck seat or in a crowded range bag. Liner lock engagement is positive; you hear and feel it settle. Close it one-handed, stow it, move on. No fuss, no drama, just the same motion you’ve used on folders for years—quicker.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted and OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF and switchblades, are generally legal to own and carry for adults. The law no longer singles out switchblades or automatic actions as banned weapons. What matters more now are blade length and where you carry. Certain places—like schools, courthouses, and secured government buildings—have restrictions regardless of whether the knife is OTF, automatic, or spring-assisted. For everyday adult carry in normal public spaces, both OTF and spring-assisted knives like this Crusader Guard are typically lawful, but it’s smart to stay current on state and local rules.

Is this Crusader Guard Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife practical for Texas ranch and truck carry?

Yes. At five inches closed with a pocket clip, it rides clean in jeans or along a truck visor, and the four-inch dagger-style blade is long enough for fence-line chores without feeling clumsy inside a cab. The aluminum handle and cross-guard shape give you control when your hands are dusty or wet, whether you’re cutting twine in the Panhandle wind or stripping tape off irrigation line on a humid Gulf Coast morning.

How does this compare to buying a Texas OTF knife for daily use?

If you like the idea of an OTF knife in Texas but don’t need a full automatic, this spring-assisted folder is a strong middle ground. It opens nearly as fast, locks up solid, and looks more like a traditional work knife with personality than a pure tactical auto. For many Texas buyers, that means fewer questions from coworkers, smoother acceptance in everyday settings, and the same ready-to-work edge when it’s time to cut.

First Use: Where This Knife Fits Your Texas Day

Picture a late drive back from a lease outside Brownwood, the sky gone deep purple, gear rattling soft in the bed. You climb out to tie down one last cooler that’s shifted on the caliche. One hand on the ice chest handle, the other flicks the Crusader Guard open by feel alone, the spring assist doing the rest. The black blade flashes once in the dome light, the blue handle and cross bright in your palm as you slice a length of cord and cinch it tight.

That’s where this knife belongs—between the range and the highway, in the door pocket, in the shop drawer, or riding clipped inside your everyday jeans. Not a showpiece, not a gimmick. A fast-opening, crusader-styled blade that feels as natural in a Texas hand as dust on your boots.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Crusader
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock