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Field‑Weathered Patriot Rapid‑Deploy OTF Knife - USA Flag

Price:

17.99


Tricolor Pride Fast-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS
Tricolor Pride Fast-Deploy OTF Knife - Mexico Flag ABS
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Field‑Weathered Patriot Rapid‑Deploy OTF Knife - USA Flag

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5307/image_1920?unique=e9951ca

12 sold in last 24 hours

Dust off the cab of a truck outside a Hill Country range and this OTF knife makes sense. The field‑weathered flag handle rides light in pocket or console, 5.5" closed and ready. A firm thumb on the side slide snaps the 3.5" double‑edge stainless blade out clean, then back in just as fast. Pocket clip, nylon sheath, and a fast, no‑nonsense action made for real Texas days, not glass cases.

17.99 17.99 USD 17.99

SB312LSFDP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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Field‑Weathered Steel for Real Texas Days

The finish on this knife looks like it’s already seen a few miles of caliche road. The flag on the handle isn’t bright parade paint. It’s scuffed, subdued, like it’s ridden in a truck door pocket through more than one Central Texas summer. That’s where this out‑the‑front blade belongs — in a ranch truck, a range bag, or the center console rolling down I‑35 at dusk.

Closed, it sits at 5.5 inches, long enough to fill the hand, short enough to disappear along the seam of a pair of jeans. Thumb finds the side slide by feel alone, even with sweat or dust on your fingers. Push forward and the blade snaps out, 3.5 inches of double‑edge stainless sliding into place with a clean, mechanical stop you can feel through the handle.

Why This OTF Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Across the state, from a repair shop in Lubbock to a bay boat pulling out of Rockport, folks want a knife that runs as fast as their day. This OTF knife answers with double‑action deployment: the same thumb slide that drives the blade out brings it back home. No flipping, no wrist tricks, just straight‑line motion that makes sense when you’re holding a feed bag, a coil of rope, or a bundle of wire in the other hand.

The handle is ABS with a glossy seal over the weathered flag. It wipes clean after riding through mesquite dust or getting splashed in a muddy parking lot. Jimping along the spine near the handle gives your thumb a bite point, handy when you’re breaking down cardboard at a warehouse dock in Dallas or trimming nylon strap behind the seat of a work truck.

Pocket clip keeps it riding edge of pocket or on a belt, vertical and out of the way. For folks who prefer stowing gear, the nylon sheath tucks in a glovebox, console, or range bag with room to spare. This isn’t a safe queen. It’s an OTF you won’t mind tossing on the dash.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence: Steel, Size, and Purpose

The blade runs dagger‑style, double‑edged with a central fuller to keep the weight honest. Stainless steel gives you a good mix of toughness and corrosion resistance, which matters if this lives in a coastal truck near Corpus or in a barn where humidity and sweat are part of the air. It’s finished matte so it doesn’t flash when the sun bounces off a metal roof or a hood.

At 9 inches open, you’ve got full‑size working reach. That’s long enough to get behind a stubborn pallet strap, punch through heavy plastic wrap, or cut tie‑down rope on a trailer without feeling cramped. Plain edges on both sides give you clean cuts on everything from leather to irrigation hose. No gimmicks, just straight profiles you can touch up with a simple stone.

For many buyers looking to buy an OTF knife in Texas, the point of a knife like this isn’t just looks. The weathered flag is a nod to service and country, sure, but the way the mechanism runs — quick out, quick in — is what earns its keep in a workday.

Legal Ground: Understanding Texas OTF Knife Law

There was a time when folks asked if carrying a switchblade or OTF knife would get them in trouble. Texas changed that. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and out‑the‑front knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you respect the state’s location‑restricted rules and any age considerations. The key benchmark for a "location‑restricted knife" is a blade over 5.5 inches.

This OTF knife carries a 3.5‑inch blade, well under that 5.5‑inch mark. For most Texans, that means it falls into the category of legal everyday carry in public spaces where knives are allowed, instead of crossing into the longer "location‑restricted" territory. You still have to use common sense: certain government buildings, schools, and posted venues have their own rules, and city or county policies can change how those rules get enforced on the ground.

Reading Texas Law in Real‑World Terms

In practical terms, this size and style works for the guy walking into a hardware store in Waco, the woman fueling up outside Amarillo before a long haul, or the ranch hand grabbing breakfast in town before heading back through the gate. They can clip this OTF inside a pocket or carry it in the included nylon sheath without worrying that the blade length alone pushes them into restricted territory.

Texas doesn’t single out OTF knives anymore the way some states still do. What matters most here is length, location, and behavior. A compact automatic like this sits on the right side of that line for most day‑to‑day carry.

Texas OTF Knife Uses: From Shop Floor to Lease Road

Picture a mechanic in San Antonio leaning over an engine bay. He’s got one hand on a hose and needs the other free to cut back worn line. A side slide on this double‑action OTF lets him get steel in play without shifting his grip or setting tools down. Blade out, quick cut, blade in. No drama.

Out on a deer lease west of Junction, this knife rides in the leg pocket of a pair of brush pants. The weathered flag blends into dust and cedar pollen. It comes out to slice cord, trim wrap on a new feeder, or open up a box of ammo by lantern light. The matte blade doesn’t flare and blind you when you’re working under a clear night sky.

Heat, Dust, and Everyday Texas Abuse

ABS handles don’t swell with humidity or crack just because you left the knife in a closed truck at a roadside café off Highway 59. Stainless steel shrugs off a bit of sweat from a humid Houston afternoon or salt air blowing in from the Gulf. When it gunks up, the straight profile and exposed hardware make it easy enough to clean and get back into rotation.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and Everyday Identity

This knife isn’t for people who want their gear to look untouched. The weathered flag design speaks more to someone who respects miles, not polish. Maybe they did time downrange. Maybe they grew up in a house where the flag went up at first light and came down at dusk. Either way, they’re not carrying it to make a speech. They’re carrying it because it works and the look says enough.

For someone searching for the best OTF knife in Texas at a workingman’s price point, this sits in a sweet spot: automatic action, usable blade length, pocket clip, sheath, and a finish that feels at home in a welding shop, a patrol car console, or a ranch kitchen junk drawer.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, OTF knives are legal in Texas for most adults. The law no longer bans automatic or switchblade‑style knives. Instead, it focuses on blade length and where you carry. This knife’s 3.5‑inch blade is under the 5.5‑inch limit that defines a "location‑restricted knife," so it’s generally legal for everyday carry in most public places where knives are allowed. Still, you should avoid restricted locations like schools, certain government buildings, and any place clearly posted against weapons.

Is this OTF knife practical for Texas work and ranch use?

It is. At 9 inches open with a 3.5‑inch double‑edge stainless blade, it’s built for cutting rope, strapping, hose, and packaging — the kind of chores that fill a day on a ranch outside Abilene or a jobsite in Fort Worth. The double‑action mechanism means you can open and close it one‑handed while the other hand holds wire, feed sacks, or gear.

How do I choose the right Texas OTF knife for daily carry?

Start with blade length and how you plan to carry. Under 5.5 inches of blade keeps you on the easier side of Texas law for most public spaces. Then think about your day: if you’re in and out of trucks, warehouses, or pastures, a double‑action slide like this gives fast access and fast retraction. Finally, pick the design you won’t mind seeing every day — this weathered flag speaks to folks who tie their identity to work, country, and the miles they’ve logged.

First Ride: This Knife in a Texas Moment

End of the day, sun dropping behind a line of pecans along a two‑lane farm road. You ease the truck onto the shoulder, step out to check a loose strap on the trailer. One thumb flick sends the blade out, clean and sure. Strap trimmed, blade back in, the knife disappears into your pocket like it was never there. Just another tool that fits the way you live — scuffed, reliable, and ready for whatever the state throws at you next.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Slide switch
Theme USA Flag
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath