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Forged Weave Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber

Price:

32.99


Forged Current Double-Action OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber
Forged Current Double-Action OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber
32.99 32.99
GreenForged Weave Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Green
GreenForged Weave Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Green
32.99 32.99

Forged Weave Rapid-Deploy OTF Blade - Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/6570/image_1920?unique=a9a8cae

15 sold in last 24 hours

West of Abilene, when the wind kicks dust across the lease road, you don’t think about your gear—you just run it. This OTF knife rides flat in the pocket, then launches a 3.5-inch dagger blade on command with a clean, double-action slide. Forged carbon fiber keeps it light, the glass-breaker and clip keep it ready. It’s the quiet, fast piece that lives in Texas trucks, work pants, and nightstands.

32.99 32.99 USD 32.99

SB318BSFDP

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Forged Carbon, Straight Roads, and a Texas OTF Knife

Out past the last gas station on Highway 281, the ranch road turns to caliche and the sun drops fast. That’s when you notice what you’re carrying. This forged carbon fiber OTF blade doesn’t ask for attention; it just waits in the pocket of your jeans until your thumb finds the slide. Then the 3.5-inch dagger blade tracks out in a straight line, the way a West Texas fence runs between mesquite and rock.

Closed, it sits at 4.5 inches. Open, it stretches to 8, long enough to get work done without feeling like you’ve strapped on a belt knife. The forged weave in the handle catches the light like storm clouds over the plains—subtle, sharp, never loud.

Why This Double-Action OTF Knife Belongs in Texas Carry

Texas days run long. Fence wire, feed sacks, cardboard boxes in a Houston warehouse, straps in the back of a Dallas work truck—your blade sees more than most people do in a week. This Texas OTF knife is built for those runs. The double-action slide lets the 440 stainless dagger blade fire out and retract along the same track, no wrist flicks, no drama, just a sure, mechanical motion you can work by feel.

The matte handle and forged carbon fiber inlay stay grippy when your hands are slick with sweat from a San Antonio August or cold from a Hill Country creek. Jimping along the edges gives your fingers something honest to hold onto. You can draw it out of a pocket in a Buc-ee’s parking lot without flashing steel, let it sit in your palm, and only send that blade forward when the job calls for it.

Texas OTF Knife Action: Slide, Fire, and Go Back to Work

Ask anyone who lives with a knife in their pocket: deployment matters. This isn’t a showpiece you baby on a shelf in Austin. It’s the one you flip open leaning against a stock trailer or in the shade of a metal building in Lubbock. The side-mounted slide switch is textured and sure under a thumb, even in gloves. Push it forward and the 3.5-inch dagger-style blade snaps into place with a sound that’s more affirmation than noise.

Because it’s double-action, that same switch pulls the blade back into the handle with equal certainty. No two-handed wrestling, no hoping springs line up. Just out, cut, back in, all on the same rail. In a crowded San Antonio parking garage, that straight-line motion keeps the knife tight to your body, not arcing into open space. In a deer camp near Junction, it lets you open feed bags and cut line without thinking about mechanics.

Built for Texas Conditions: Blade, Handle, and Hardware

Texas doesn’t treat tools gently. Between coastal humidity, Panhandle dust, and Hill Country limestone, cheap blades show their weakness fast. This OTF knife carries a 440 stainless steel dagger blade with a matte finish that shrugs off glare and cleans up easy. It takes a good working edge, tough enough for zip ties, nylon rope, shrink wrap, and the odd piece of irrigation hose without feeling dainty.

The handle frame rides in black, with exposed Torx screws that remind you this is a machine built to be used, not a locked-up safe queen. The forged carbon fiber inlay panel isn’t just for looks; it cuts weight while holding firm, so the knife disappears in slacks in a Dallas office as easily as in the thigh pocket of ranch pants. A deep-carry clip pins it low in the pocket of your Wranglers or the watch pocket of a pair of work shorts, keeping it there when you slide into a hot truck seat in August.

At the pommel, a glass-breaker tip waits for the moment you hope never comes. If a water crossing on a back road turns bad or someone tags you at an intersection in Houston, that hardened point gives you one honest chance at a window when seconds count.

Texas Law, Switchblades, and Carrying This OTF Every Day

For years, folks asked if a Texas OTF knife was a problem under state law. It used to be. Now it isn’t. Texas changed its knife laws so that switchblades and OTF knives like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not somewhere restricted and you’re not carrying what the law calls a location-restricted knife into the wrong places.

This OTF knife carries a blade under the size that triggers those location-restricted rules. That means an average adult can drop it in a pocket in Fort Worth, clip it inside the waistband in Corpus, or leave it in a console in Longview without worrying the simple fact that it’s an automatic makes it illegal. You still respect posted signs, schools, certain government buildings, and any spot where knives are clearly barred. But out in daily Texas life—feed stores, job sites, suburban driveways—you can treat this like the working tool it was built to be.

Texas Use Cases: From Truck Console to Lease Road

In a half-ton parked outside a San Angelo feed yard, this knife lives in the console, riding in its EVA case until you need it. The case keeps dust and grit off the mechanism, which matters when West Texas wind blows sand into everything. Down on the coast, it rides clipped inside board shorts or lightweight fishing pants, ready to cut braid, trim line, or open a bag of ice without dragging half the bay into your pocket.

In the suburbs north of Houston, it disappears in office chinos, then moves straight into weekend duty—opening mulch bags, cutting irrigation tubing, trimming paracord on a backyard project. Always the same motion: thumb on slide, blade out, job done, blade back in.

Legal Peace of Mind in Texas Carry Culture

Because Texas no longer singles out switchblades and OTF mechanisms as unlawful by themselves, this knife fits right into the modern Texas carry culture. Folks who moved here from stricter states are often surprised to learn they can legally buy and carry an automatic like this. That’s why a clear, under-5-inch blade OTF has become a favorite for people who want rapid deployment without wondering if they’re bending state rules.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal for most adults to own and carry. The key line in the sand is blade length and certain locations, not the automatic mechanism itself. This OTF carries a blade short enough to avoid the location-restricted category, which means you can pocket it for everyday use across the state—just stay clear of obvious prohibited places like schools, certain government buildings, secured areas, and any spot where weapons are clearly barred.

Will this OTF handle Texas work, or is it just a fidget knife?

The 3.5-inch 440 stainless dagger blade and solid slide-switch mechanism are built for work first. It opens feed bags in Amarillo, slices shipping straps in an Austin warehouse, and trims nylon and paracord at a Hill Country campsite without complaint. The forged carbon fiber handle keeps it light, but the jimping and full-length frame give you a firm grip when your hands are sweaty or gloved. Yes, it’s fidget-friendly, but it earns its keep as a real tool.

Is this the right OTF if I’m buying my first Texas automatic?

If you’re new to OTF knives in Texas, this is an easy starting point. The blade length stays on the practical side, the profile is slim for everyday pocket carry, and the double-action slide is simple to learn. It doesn’t shout with wild colors or strange shapes, so it won’t draw extra eyes when you use it at work or around neighbors. It feels like what it is—your first honest, working Texas OTF knife, not a gimmick.

First Use: A Texas Moment You’ll Recognize

Picture the tailgate dropped on a dusty pickup outside a low tin barn near Weatherford. Evening wind carries the smell of hay and a distant mesquite fire. There’s a stack of feed bags to open, nylon straps to cut, and one piece of rope that’s seen better days. You feel the slim weight of this OTF riding clipped in your front pocket, carbon fiber weave just under your fingertips as you draw.

Your thumb finds the slide without looking. The blade fires out in a straight, clean line, does its work, and disappears back into the handle with the same easy motion. No fuss, no show, just a tool that fits the place and the job. That’s how this OTF settles into your Texas life—quietly, use by use, until you can’t picture walking out the door without it.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster EVA case