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Red Dragon Dual Spring-Assisted Knife - Black Aluminum

Price:

16.99


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Ember Fang Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7595/image_1920?unique=f1edf2f

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Late night on a Hill Country backroad, this dual-blade assisted knife rides quiet in your pocket until you need it. Twin matte-black dagger blades snap out with a clean, spring-backed pull, framed by a black aluminum handle wrapped in red dragon art. It’s more statement than ranch tool, but it still opens feed bags, slices cord, and lives in a truck console like it belongs there.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

MCA004BR

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
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  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
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Dual-Blade Attitude for Texas Nights

There’s a certain stretch of Texas highway where the billboards thin out and the sky opens up. That’s where a knife like this makes sense. The Ember Fang Dual-Blade Assisted Knife rides clipped in your pocket or tossed in the console, twin matte-black blades folded into a black aluminum handle wrapped in a red dragon. It’s not a fence-mending knife. It’s the one you reach for when you want something with presence.

Those twin dagger-style blades run short and sharp, about one and three-quarter inches each, with a non-reflective black finish that doesn’t flash in the light. Closed, you’re at roughly six inches. Open, you’re closer to nine and a half with both ends extended. The whole profile curves like a claw, finger grooves locking your hand in behind that dragon artwork. It looks like it came off a game cover, but it settles into the palm in a way any Texas hand will understand.

Texas OTF Knife Culture, Assisted-Open Attitude

Folks who search out an OTF knife in Texas usually want fast deployment and a little drama when the blade comes alive. This one hits the same nerve, even though it’s built on a dual spring-assisted mechanism, not an OTF track. Instead of a thumb slide pushing a blade straight out the front, you roll the flipper or stud and feel the spring drive a dagger blade into place with that same quick, decisive snap Texans look for in an automatic or OTF-style carry.

If you’re used to a Texas OTF knife, this dual-blade design feels familiar in intent. Quick, one-handed, no nonsense. The difference is mechanical, not emotional. Stainless steel blades take the work—cutting cord in a hot feed room, opening shrink-wrapped pallets in a San Antonio warehouse, or trimming tape off a box on a Dallas loading dock. The black aluminum handle keeps the weight down, so it doesn’t drag your pocket in jeans or cargo shorts when the heat index climbs past reasonable.

How This Assisted Knife Fits Texas Carry Reality

Most days in this state, a knife like this lives quiet. Clipped inside your pocket as you walk a Houston parking garage after dark. Dropped into the door pocket of a work truck rolling between job sites along I-35. Hooked on basketball shorts at a late-night gas station run. The pocket clip settles the frame low enough you’re not advertising it, but high enough to grab when things get strange.

The dual spring-assisted action gives you options. Open one blade for everyday stuff—breaking down boxes in an Austin apartment hallway, cutting a zip tie off a cooler, trimming cord on a deer lease down near Laredo. Keep the other blade clean for more precise work. There’s a reason Texans like redundancy. Two blades in one handle means one can take the knocks while the other stays sharp for when it matters.

Urban Edge, Backroad Comfort

In Texas cities, a knife like this leans more toward statement piece than quiet ranch tool. The red dragon artwork turns heads when you flip it open on a steel workbench in a Fort Worth shop. But the build is still practical. Stainless steel shrugs off sweat and humidity, whether you’re working a Gulf Coast dock or stuck in stop-and-go traffic on 610 with the AC half-failing.

Out past the city limits, it fits just as well tucked in a backpack on a night hog hunt or sitting on the dash of a mud-splattered side-by-side. The matte finish on the blades cuts glare under a high sun or dim dome light, and the dagger geometry bites quick into nylon, tape, or thin plastic without fuss.

Texas Knife Law: Where This Dual-Blade Assisted Fits

Texas knife law used to make folks nervous about anything that looked like a switchblade or an OTF. That changed. Today, the state treats knives by blade length and a narrow list of restricted places, not by whether the blade is spring-assisted, automatic, or OTF. That matters for a dual-blade assisted knife like this.

These dagger-style blades stay tucked until you make a deliberate move. You work the flipper or opening tab, the internal spring helps finish the motion, and a liner lock snaps into place. No button hiding in the handle, no mystery mechanism, just a clean assisted open. Under current state law, that assisted action doesn’t make it off-limits by itself. Adults can carry knives like this in most everyday Texas spaces—walking Main Street, working at a shop, driving cross-country—while still respecting posted rules and restricted locations like certain schools and courts.

Are Dual-Blade Assisted Knives Treated Like Switchblades Here?

Texas no longer bans switchblades or automatic knives outright. The focus is on blade length and specific off-limits places, not the spring that helps the blade open. A spring-assisted dual-blade like this sits comfortably inside that reality. It delivers the snappy feel Texans expect from a modern folder without pushing into the old switchblade stigma that used to ride in the law books.

Know Your Local Rules Inside a Big State

Texas is large enough that city rules and private policies can feel like their own worlds. The state might allow this dual-blade assisted knife, but a downtown office tower, music venue, or stadium in Arlington can still set their own security rules. Out on a lease or in your own shop, this knife is just another tool. In a courthouse line, it becomes a problem. The responsibility follows the carrier, not the steel.

Fantasy Handle, Working-Blade Steel

That red dragon across the handle is the first thing anyone sees. It runs the full length of the black aluminum frame, wings stretched, head forward, like it’s daring you to hit the flipper. It speaks more to late-night gaming sessions and comic shop counters in San Antonio than to branding calves or fixing windmills out by Marfa.

Under the artwork, though, you’ve still got a solid aluminum handle with enough contouring and finger grooves to keep your grip honest. The matte finish on both handle and blades hides fingerprints and small scratches. Stainless steel may not be the fanciest alloy on the market, but in Texas heat and sweat it does what it needs to do—resist rust, clean up easy, and keep a practical edge with a few passes on a stone in a garage or camp trailer.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal for adults to own and carry in most everyday settings. The law focuses more on blade length and a short list of off-limits places than on whether the blade is OTF, automatic, or spring-assisted. You still need to respect restricted locations like certain schools, courts, and secured venues, and know that private property owners can set tighter rules. But in general, that OTF knife Texas buyers worry about is no longer banned just because it’s an automatic.

Is this dual-blade assisted knife practical beyond collecting?

Yes. While the dragon theme and twin dagger blades lean toward fantasy and collecting, in Texas it still pulls real duty opening feed sacks, cutting paracord on a camp table at a Hill Country river, or breaking down shipping boxes behind a strip-center shop. The two blades let you keep one edge cleaner for finer work while the other takes the rough stuff.

Should I choose this over a Texas OTF knife for everyday carry?

If you want the snappy action of a modern knife with less mechanical complexity and a lower price point, this dual spring-assisted design makes sense. You get fast one-handed deployment that scratches the same itch as a Texas OTF knife, but in a simpler package that’s easy to maintain and easy to replace if it walks off from a job site, truck, or dorm room.

End of the day, picture this: you’re parked just off a Farm-to-Market road, sun dropping behind a mesquite line, tailgate down. Cooler needs opening, cord needs cutting, a stubborn knot on a tarp has to go. You roll the knife out of your pocket, feel the dragon scales under your fingers, and pop one of those black blades into place with a tight, spring-backed snap. No speech, no show. Just steel, artwork, and a slice of Texas evening where a good knife feels like part of the landscape.

Blade Length (inches) 1.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 6
Blade Color Black
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted