Skip to Content
Sterile Seal Emergency KN95 Face Mask - White

Price:

8.99


Backcountry Sunrise Southwest Breakfast Skillet Meal - Adventure Blue
Backcountry Sunrise Southwest Breakfast Skillet Meal - Adventure Blue
14.99 14.99
Water Heater Adaptor for Frontier Pro Filter
Water Heater Adaptor for Frontier Pro Filter
2.99 2.99

Dustline Barrier Tactical Respirator Mask - White KN95

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9509/image_1920?unique=3766d04

9 sold in last 24 hours

Panhandle dust, cedar pollen in the Hill Country, a refinery flare‑off on the ship channel—Texas air isn’t always kind. This KN95 respirator rides flat in a console or go‑bag, then opens into a tight, three‑dimensional seal when you need it. The 3M-grade filtration knocks down at least 95% of airborne particles, from fine dust to flu season crowds, so you can focus on the job, the drive, or the storm cleanup instead of what’s hanging in the air.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

3M9502PLUS

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

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

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

When Texas Air Turns Against You

A caliche road outside Lubbock, a grass fire kicking smoke across a Hill Country low water crossing, a flu wave rolling through a Houston ER waiting room—there are days when Texas air stops being background and becomes a problem. That’s when a serious KN95 respirator stops feeling like overkill and starts feeling like standard gear.

This Dustline Barrier Tactical Respirator Mask is built for those days. Flat-fold in its single pack, it disappears in a truck console, range bag, or storm tote until the moment the wind shifts, the dust kicks up, or you walk into a crowded clinic and decide you’d rather not gamble.

Serious Filtration for Real Texas Conditions

West Texas dust isn’t polite. Neither is a refinery outage, a plant leak alarm, or a torn-up sheetrock job in a San Antonio renovation. This KN95 particulate filtering facepiece respirator is rated to filter at least 95% of airborne particles under the KN95 and GB2626-2006 standards. It’s built for the fine stuff—dust, smoke, aerosols, and the respiratory junk that rides along in cold and flu season.

The inner layer uses an activated carbon filter that helps strip out harmful gases and harsh odors you find around stock tanks, barns, and work sites. Around that core you get a 360-degree, three-dimensional breathing space. It doesn’t collapse into your mouth when you’re climbing a scaffold in August or talking through a hardware run in January. Airflow stays steady so you’re not ripping it off just to catch your breath.

Comfort That Holds Up From Coast to Caprock

Texans wear gear long, not just for a quick walk across a parking lot. The soft nonwoven material on this respirator is built to stay comfortable through a full shift, a long drive, or a long wait. It’s lightweight and smooth against the skin, cutting down on irritation and the hot spots that make people fiddle with their mask until the seal is useless.

Instead of loose ear loops, high-elastic headbands run above and below the ears, anchoring the mask around the back of your head. That matters on a Beaumont jobsite scaffolding or a dusty rodeo fairground, where ear loops slip and you bend down once and lose your seal. These bands stretch, absorb sweat, and stay put without feeling like a clamp.

Up top, a concealed plastic nose bridge shapes tight over the ridge of your nose. That hidden cartilage-style strip lets you mold the respirator to your face, cutting fog if you’re behind safety glasses in an oilfield yard or prescription lenses in a Dallas clinic line.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Think About Readiness. This Mask Belongs in the Same Kit.

If you’re the kind of Texan who asks where to buy an OTF knife in Texas because you like having the right tool in your pocket, you already understand why this respirator belongs in your truck. A dependable Texas OTF knife rides in a console or pocket until a fence wire, feed bag, or pallet strap makes it necessary. This KN95 rides the same way—quiet, flat, and ready when the air changes on you.

In a hurricane season run down I‑45, a panhandle windstorm throwing grit across the highway, or a wildfire haze drifting into a Hill Country subdivision, pulling a single-packaged KN95 from the visor is as simple and natural as thumbing open your everyday blade. Different problem, same mindset: handle it instead of hoping it passes.

Texas Carry Culture, Texas Preparedness, and Why This Respirator Fits

Texans pay attention to what’s on their belt and what’s in their truck. A Texas OTF knife answers one category of problem—cutting, prying, breaking down. Respiratory protection answers another. Emergencies don’t care if you’re in Amarillo or Brownsville; they show up in the form of mold after a flood, drywall dust on a weekend remodel, or a crowded ER when a virus is making its rounds.

This mask is single packaged for that exact reason. Seal stays intact in a glove box that bakes through August. It tucks into a range bag beside ear pro and safety glasses. It lives in an emergency bin with batteries and bottled water, ready for the day a pipe bursts or a storm peels the roof off a neighbor’s place and you’re helping clear debris in fiberglass and blown insulation.

Legal Peace of Mind: Respirators and Texas Law

OTF knife buyers spend time reading Texas knife laws and asking if their automatic is street legal. Respirators aren’t like that. In Texas, there’s no special restriction on carrying or using a KN95 mask. You can keep it in your truck, wear it on a jobsite, walk into a feed store, or stand in line at the county hospital without worrying about legal fine print.

How This Compares to Regulated Gear

Where a Texas OTF knife used to bump into switchblade rules before the law changed, this 3M-style KN95 lives in a different world. It’s safety equipment. Compliance here is about filtration standards—KN95 and GB2626-2006—not criminal codes. That means the only question is whether you trust the protection, not whether you’re allowed to carry it.

When a Mask Matters More Than a Knife

There are moments—like walking into a nursing home during flu season in Abilene or helping a buddy muck out a flooded garage in Houston—when a respirator solves more than a blade will. This mask is for those times: when the air, not the task, is the threat.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About KN95 Respirator Masks

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF (out-the-front) knives, are legal to own and carry for most adults, with some location-based restrictions like certain schools, secure government facilities, and similar sensitive areas. That’s why you see so many Texans pairing a legal Texas OTF knife with other preparedness gear—flashlights, med kits, and respirators like this KN95 mask.

Is a KN95 respirator like this overkill for everyday Texas use?

Not if your days take you through dust, crowds, or cleanup. Panhandle ranch roads, refinery-adjacent neighborhoods near the ship channel, and older homes with mold or blown insulation all throw fine particles in the air. A KN95 that filters at least 95% of airborne particles is a simple way to keep your lungs from taking that hit. Most Texans stash one or two and forget about them until the day they’re glad they did.

Why not just use a simple cloth or surgical mask?

Cloth and basic surgical masks mainly catch larger droplets. They’re loose, easygoing, and better than nothing, but they’re not built for fine dust, smoke, or high-risk indoor crowds. This KN95 is a fitted particulate respirator. It seals to your face with adjustable headbands and a moldable nose bridge, then forces the air you breathe through multiple filtering layers, including an activated carbon inner layer. Different tool, different level of protection.

From North Texas Dust to Gulf Coast Storms: A First Use

Picture a late-summer evening outside Wichita Falls. A storm has rolled through, dropped hail, and passed, leaving snapped limbs and insulation scattered across a neighbor’s yard. The wind is up, hanging fiberglass and dust in the air. You park, step out, pull this flat-pack KN95 from your console, and snap the bands over your head. The mask opens into a firm, three-dimensional cup, nose bridge pinched down, breath moving easy behind the filter. You’ve got a Texas OTF knife on your belt for tarps and rope, work gloves in the bed, and clean air running through a 95% filter. Not dramatic. Just ready—the way Texans prefer it.

No Specifications