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Obsidian Dragon Rapid-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - Purple 3D Handle

Price:

10.99


Emerald Warden 3D-Embossed Spring-Assisted Knife - Aluminum Green
Emerald Warden 3D-Embossed Spring-Assisted Knife - Aluminum Green
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Midnight Phantom Skull Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - Black Oxide
Midnight Phantom Skull Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - Black Oxide
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Dragoncoil Rapid-Deploy Assisted Blade - Purple Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5913/image_1920?unique=165aa24

8 sold in last 24 hours

West of Austin, where cedar gives way to limestone cuts and rusted fence wire, a spring-assisted blade like this earns its keep. One hand on the gate, the other snaps the black 3.5-inch drop point into place with a clean, fast assist. The purple 3D dragon handle isn’t for show alone—it’s contoured aluminum that sits sure in the palm, liner lock firm, pocket clip ready. For the Texan who likes a little legend in a working knife, this one fits the pocket and the day.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

DSA2005PL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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When a Work Knife Carries a Little Legend

Out past New Braunfels, where the Guadalupe runs low in August and the cypress roots snag any line that drifts too close, a pocket knife is just part of getting through the day. Cutting braided cord, trimming a zip-tie on a kayak rack, opening the feed sacks you tossed in the truck before first light. A spring-assisted blade that opens clean, locks solid, and rides light in the pocket is what you reach for without thinking. This one just happens to wear a dragon on its back.

The black oxidized drop point folds into a purple 3D dragon handle that feels more serious than it looks. Textured scales roll under your fingers, while the aluminum handle keeps the weight down and the balance right where your thumb meets the jimping on the spine. Flip it open with the assisted action, and it moves from pocket art to working edge in one smooth motion.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Spring-Assisted Alternative

Across the state, from Amarillo techs running service calls to Houston warehouse hands, a lot of folks go looking for an OTF knife Texas shops might keep behind the glass. They want speed, one-handed deployment, and a blade that’s where it needs to be the moment they need it. A spring-assisted folder like this scratches the same itch for fast, sure deployment while keeping the mechanics simple and the maintenance easy.

Instead of a blade firing straight out the front, this assisted knife swings a 3.54-inch drop point from the side, riding on a coil and pivot you can feel but barely see. One press and the blade snaps out with a quiet authority that stands up fine in a noisy Dallas loading dock or a San Antonio yard after dark. For Texans who prize a quick, legal, pocketable blade, it’s a practical answer to the same problem that drives interest in a Texas OTF knife.

How This Assisted Blade Works in Texas Carry Culture

Walk any jobsite in Midland or Odessa and you’ll see the same pattern: clip knives riding at the edge of worn denim, handles peeking out from high-vis vests and oil-stained cargo pockets. This spring-assisted blade was built for that kind of carry. Closed, it runs just under five inches, with a slim profile and pocket clip that disappears against your waistband or the inside of a work vest.

The aluminum handle shrugs off sweat, limestone dust, and the grit that seems to work its way into everything from the Panhandle to the Valley. The glossy 3D dragon art isn’t a delicate overlay you have to baby; it’s printed deep into the handle, tough enough to ride in a truck console with a handful of spent shells, scattered receipts, and an old lighter. Thumb the opening and the assisted action does the heavy lifting, even if your hands are slick from motor oil or river water.

The liner lock engages with a click you can feel through the handle, locking that black oxidized 3Cr13 stainless blade in place for real work—cutting nylon rope on a deer lease, shaving a sliver of kindling in a Hill Country campground, or breaking down cardboard that’s stacked up by the back door in a Lubbock duplex.

Legal Ground: How This Knife Fits Texas Knife Laws

Knife conversations in this state often start with the same question: are OTF knives legal in Texas, and what about everything else that opens fast? Since September 2017, Texas law removed the old switchblade ban, so automatic knives, OTF designs, and spring-assisted folders like this are legal to own and carry for most adults. The key legal term now is blade length and location, not mechanism.

State law draws the line for a "location-restricted knife" at blades over 5.5 inches. This assisted folder runs a blade around three and a half inches, well under that mark. For most Texans over 18, that means it’s lawful for everyday carry in typical spots—hardware stores, gas stations, ranch supply shops, and most workplaces that don’t set their own stricter policies. Some locations—schools, polling places, certain government buildings, and a few other posted spots—still restrict knives regardless of type, so it’s on you to know where you’re walking in.

For buyers who have been searching for the best OTF knife in Texas and then reading up on Texas knife laws OTF owners have to know, this assisted blade offers a simpler path: fast deployment, compact legal blade length, and a familiar folder profile that draws less attention clipped to a pocket in a Fort Worth coffee shop or a Corpus jobsite.

Blade and Build for Texas Conditions

A knife that lives in Texas has to handle more than clean cuts. It rides through inland humidity, coastal salt air, Hill Country dust, and the occasional dunk in stock tank or river water. The 3Cr13 stainless steel used in this black oxidized drop point favors easy sharpening and decent stain resistance over fussy edge retention. It’s the kind of steel you can bring back on a basic stone at a camp table outside Junction after a day of cutting rope and hose.

The drop point profile keeps the spine strong and the tip honest—enough belly for slicing through feed bags and plastic wrap, enough point control to pick a thorn out of a dog’s paw on a South Texas ranch road. The black oxidized finish cuts down on glare when you’re working under bright West Texas sun or overhead jobsite lights.

The handle’s curved, ergonomic shape fits a range of hands, from a teenager cleaning fish on a Lake Texoma dock to an older rancher mending fence after a blue norther. Finger grooves and the flared guard help lock your grip, while jimping on the spine gives your thumb a sure place to bear down when you’re cutting heavy nylon strap or thick cardboard.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its switchblade and automatic knife ban in 2017. OTF knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you respect the 5.5-inch blade threshold for restricted locations. Any knife with a blade over 5.5 inches—OTF, fixed, or folding—counts as a location-restricted knife. That means no carrying into certain places like schools, some government buildings, secure areas, and a few other protected spots. A compact assisted folder like this one, with a blade under that mark, fits everyday carry better for most Texans.

How does this spring-assisted knife fit real Texas use?

Picture a day that starts at a Buc-ee’s outside Temple and ends under stadium lights at a Friday night game. In between, you’ve cut loose a stubborn zip-tie in the truck bed, opened bags of ice and charcoal, trimmed cord on a pop-up canopy, and sliced straps on a pallet of feed. This knife handles all of that. It clips inside your pocket, opens one-handed in tight quarters, and closes with a simple push of the liner lock. The dragon handle adds some personality when you lay it on the tailgate, but its real job is control and comfort when you’re working.

How do I choose between a Texas OTF knife and this assisted folder?

If your priority is pure speed and you like a blade firing straight out the front, you’ll keep hunting down a Texas OTF knife. If you want fast, one-handed deployment in a simpler, pocket-friendly package that draws less attention when clipped to your jeans at H-E-B or in a Waco shop, this assisted folder makes more sense. It trades the novelty of an OTF mechanism for familiar maintenance, easy sharpening, and a blade length that stays comfortably under the legal threshold for most carry situations across the state.

A Blade That Looks Wild and Works Straight

By the time the heat finally bleeds out of a July evening in San Angelo, you’ve already put a knife like this through its paces—cutting hay string, breaking down cardboard, opening the last pack of links headed for the pit. You flick it closed, feel the dragon scales under your thumb, and slide it back into your pocket. It’s not a showpiece stuck in a drawer; it’s a working spring-assisted knife that lives in your truck, your waistband, your day. A little myth on the handle, a straightforward edge up front. That’s the kind of blade Texans actually carry.

Blade Length (inches) 3.54
Overall Length (inches) 8.26
Closed Length (inches) 4.72
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Black oxidized
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3Cr13 stainless steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock