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Dixie Banner Micro Precision OTF Knife - Matte Aluminum

Price:

15.99


Feather-Edge Micro Precision OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber
Feather-Edge Micro Precision OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber
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Patriot Micro Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - USA Flag
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Dixie Banner Micro Precision OTF Knife - Matte Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4741/image_1920?unique=c9214d2

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Panhandle two-lane, late summer, glovebox rattling over chip seal. This micro OTF knife waits there, 3.25 inches closed, feather-light at 1.35 ounces. Thumb hits the slide and the 1.99-inch American tanto snaps out clean, matte blade steady in a matte aluminum frame. It opens feed bags, slices hose, nicks cord, then disappears back into the pocket clip. Quiet, fast, and easy to forget until the minute you need it—that’s the kind of OTF Texans actually carry.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB103DF

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

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Micro OTF Built for the Backroads

Out past the last gas station, where the road breaks up into caliche and cattle guard, a big fixed blade just gets in the way. What you actually reach for is small, quick, and sure. This micro out-the-front knife was made for that space between the truck seat and the ranch gate—light enough to forget, sharp enough to matter.

Closed, it runs only 3.25 inches. In the hand, the matte aluminum handle feels like a slim pen more than a chunk of hardware. But one push on the side slide and the 1.99-inch American tanto blade jumps forward with a crisp, mechanical certainty. No flourish. No drama. Just a straight, fast line of steel ready to work.

Texas OTF Knife Carry Without the Bulk

Texas days swing from office AC to parking-lot heat to gravel lots outside feed stores. You don’t always want a heavy frame printing through your jeans. At 1.35 ounces, this is the kind of OTF knife Texas carriers favor when they need something that rides low and quiet.

The deep-carry clip anchors the knife along the pocket seam, disappearing under a t-shirt or pearl snap. That matte aluminum handle doesn’t grab fabric, doesn’t chew up pockets, and doesn’t feel like a brick when you’re wedged behind a steering wheel on I-35 between Waco and Austin. It’s there if you need to cut zip ties off a load or strip tape off a box, and invisible when you don’t.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Excels at Small, Precise Work

Most days in this state, “tactical” means cutting open feed sacks in a stiff Hill Country wind, trimming frayed paracord on a deer blind ladder, or cleanly slitting shrink wrap on a pallet in a San Antonio warehouse yard. That’s where the American tanto on this blade earns its keep.

The 1.99-inch steel edge gives you a straight cutting line for clean push cuts and a strong tip for controlled punctures. You can punch into tough plastic banding without worrying the tip will snap, then roll into a slice without losing control. The matte finish keeps reflection down under floodlights in a refinery lot or midday glare on a white gravel driveway.

Textured scalloped edges along the handle give your fingers a secure grip, even when your hands are sweaty from a Gulf Coast afternoon or cold from a north wind cutting across a Panhandle lease. This is not a showpiece. It’s a small working knife tuned for exact, everyday cuts.

Texas Knife Law, Small Blades, and Everyday OTF Carry

There was a time when folks stood at a counter and asked if they could even touch an automatic. Those days are gone here. Texas law now allows switchblades and OTF knives to be owned and carried like any other blade, with the main line drawn at location-restricted knives—those with blades over 5.5 inches in certain places.

Where This Micro OTF Fits Under Texas Law

At under two inches of steel, this knife sits well below that 5.5-inch threshold. That means for most daily life—truck cab, jobsite, ranch road, office parking lot—you’re clear on length. It’s still on you to respect posted signs, schools, secure facilities, and common-sense no-go zones, but in terms of blade size, this one lives far on the safe side for typical Texas carry.

Because it’s a single-action out-the-front, you get that quick, one-direction deployment without the complexity of a double-action system. You thumb the slide forward, blade deploys. Retract it manually back into the handle once you’re done. Simple, mechanical, dependable.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Trust in the Pocket, Not the Display Case

There’s a place for big, polished autos in a glass case. This isn’t that. This is the knife that rides in the fifth pocket of your jeans when you’re walking an East Texas lease, or clipped inside your scrub pants on a long night shift in Houston. It’s the one you lend your neighbor in the bleachers to cut a loose thread off a kid’s jersey.

Texas-Specific Everyday Tasks This Knife Handles

Think about your week: cutting tubing on a stock tank line outside Kerrville, scoring cardboard in a Dallas warehouse, breaking nylon twine off square bales near Lubbock, or snipping a wristband after a late Friday in Fort Worth. That short American tanto blade with a plain edge handles all of it cleanly.

The steel takes a working edge that’s easy to tune up with a pocket stone or small sharpener thrown in the console. No exotic alloys, no fussy maintenance. Just a straightforward blade you can keep honest in a few passes, even on the tailgate.

Beneath the Banner: Build, Feel, and Identity

The full-handle flag graphic isn’t subtle, but the rest of the knife is. Matte aluminum frame. Black screws running the spine. Slide switch tucked into the side where your thumb naturally falls. A small lanyard hole at the butt if you want a short pull cord for grabbing it between truck seats or from deep inside a gear bag.

In the hand, it feels narrow and neutral—no aggressive finger grooves locking you into a single grip, just a straight, controllable profile. That makes it easier to shift from a pinch grip for careful box work to a firmer hold for cutting nylon rope or heavy tape in the field.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF and switchblades, are legal to own and carry. The main restriction is on location-restricted knives, defined largely by blade length—over 5.5 inches—in specific places like schools, polling locations, and certain government or secure facilities. With a 1.99-inch blade, this micro OTF sits well under that limit, making it a practical everyday carry option across most of the state, provided you still respect posted rules and obvious security zones.

Is this micro OTF knife big enough for real work in Texas?

For heavy field dressing or chopping mesquite, no—reach for a bigger blade. But for the real daily grind—cutting banding off feed, trimming hose, opening boxes in a Midland shop, or breaking tape on cases in a San Antonio back room—this size is ideal. The short American tanto gives you control you won’t get from a longer blade in tight spaces, and the compact frame means you’ll actually have it on you when a larger knife would be sitting back in the truck.

Why pick a micro OTF over a regular folding knife in Texas?

A lot of Texas buyers carry both. The advantage here is one-handed, straight-line deployment in a very small footprint. When you’re hanging onto a gate with one hand, holding a ladder, or balancing on the bumper of a work truck, being able to thumb the slide and get instant blade without shifting your grip matters. And because this knife rides so light and flat, it doesn’t compete with the larger folder or multi-tool you might already carry. It fills the gap between big task and quick cut.

First Cut in a Texas Moment

Picture a late fall evening outside Abilene, wind pushing dust across the lot behind a metal building. You’re standing at the open tailgate with a load of boxes that need breaking down before dark. You reach to your pocket, feel the slim matte handle, and the blade snaps out with that clean, mechanical sound you’ve come to trust. One by one, the boxes fall flat. The knife goes back in the pocket without a thought.

That’s where this micro OTF belongs—not in a glass case, not in a drawer—but in the quiet, in-between moments of real Texas days, doing small work well every time you call on it.

Blade Length (inches) 1.999
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.25
Weight (oz.) 1.35
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme Confederate Flag
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes