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Liberty Talon Rapid-Action OTF Knife - USA Flag

Price:

16.99


Dixie Flag Slide-Action OTF Knife - Gloss ABS
Dixie Flag Slide-Action OTF Knife - Gloss ABS
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Freedom Talon Double-Action OTF Knife - USA Flag

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5168/image_1920?unique=5ee0802

15 sold in last 24 hours

Friday night under stadium lights, tailgate smoke hanging in the air, this OTF knife rides clipped in your jeans. The double-action slide snaps that polished dagger blade out clean, then pulls it back just as fast. Light ABS handle, bold eagle-and-flag wrap, glass-breaker pommel if a highway moment turns sideways. It’s compact, quick, unmistakably American—exactly what a Texas pocket expects when you reach for an automatic.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB217EA

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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When a Patriotic OTF Belongs in a Texas Pocket

It’s late September, Panhandle wind cutting across a high school parking lot, stadium lights kicking on one row at a time. You lean against the truck, one hand around a Styrofoam cup, the other resting near the Freedom Talon Double-Action OTF Knife clipped in your pocket. Flag on the handle, eagle in mid-cry, polished dagger blade riding inside the frame until your thumb hits the slide. In a crowd that still stands quiet for the anthem, this isn’t decoration. It’s part of the way you show up.

This is a compact OTF automatic built for real Texas carry. It’s light enough for summer shorts in Houston, sturdy enough to live in a ranch truck console outside Abilene, and bold enough to sit on a desk in downtown Dallas without getting lost in the noise. One knife, same story: quick, sure deployment when you call on it.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence in Hand and in Pocket

Thumb over the black slide, you feel just enough resistance to know it won’t jump by accident. Push forward and the dagger-style blade rides out the front with that familiar, confident snap. No fumbling with flippers or two-handed opening when you’re trying to cut hay twine against a Hill Country fence or open a pallet strap behind a Fort Worth shop.

The dagger profile comes to a fine point with clean, plain edges, polished bright so you can spot tape residue, dirt, or rust starting to form. For real-world Texas use, that means it cuts plastic wrap off feed, slices zip ties in the heat of an August afternoon, and opens boxes in an air-conditioned warehouse without dragging or chattering. When the work is done, drag the slide back and the blade disappears into the handle just as fast as it came out.

The ABS handle keeps the weight down, which matters when you’ve already got a phone, keys, and maybe a pistol on your belt. The texture and shape give you enough bite to manage sweat in a South Texas dove field or cold fingers in a Panhandle blue norther. It’s not a safe queen. It’s an OTF knife meant to be carried hard across a big state.

OTF Knife Texas Legality, Carried the Right Way

For years, out-the-front automatics and switchblades sat in a gray area for regular folks. In this state, that changed. Modern Texas knife laws now allow adults to own and carry automatic and OTF knives, including daggers like this one, so long as you respect location restrictions laid out in state statute. That’s why you see more of these riding in pockets from Lubbock to Laredo.

This Freedom Talon sits well inside what most Texans want from an OTF: legal to own statewide, practical to carry, fast to deploy. No novelty tricks, no gimmicks. Just a direct, double-action mechanism you can work with one hand while the other holds a feed bucket, steering wheel, or flashlight.

Reading Texas Knife Law in Real Life

Standing in your driveway in Waco, you don’t need to think like a lawyer. You need to know whether you can clip this OTF knife in your pocket and head to the feed store, the lease, or a buddy’s house. For most everyday adult Texans, you can. The restrictions kick in at certain sensitive places — schools, secure government buildings, posted venues — where any blade can run into issues. Outside those, this kind of automatic knife has a home on your person, in your truck, or on your workbench.

It’s the kind of clarity Texas buyers look for now that OTFs and other automatics no longer live in the shadows of the law. You get the speed and satisfaction of a switchblade-style OTF knife without wondering if you’re carrying something the state doesn’t want you to have.

Patriotic Details Built for Texas Carry Culture

The first thing you notice is the artwork. Red, white, and blue flag sweeping the length of the handle, stars sharp, stripes clear, a bald eagle head locked into the lower half like it’s watching the horizon. Under the print sits ABS, chosen to keep the knife light and affordable while still handling regular pocket abuse — grit from West Texas caliche roads, dust from a rodeo lot, sweat from a Houston workday.

Along the spine, black hardware holds the frame together. At the tail, a glass-breaker style pommel gives you a last-resort tool if you ever hit high water on a Hill Country low-water crossing or stumble on a wreck on I-10 at two in the morning. It’s not there for show. It’s there because Texans drive long distances, sometimes on empty stretches, and like tools that do more than one thing.

The pocket clip rides deep, dark, and out of the way on a pair of Wranglers or cargo shorts. In an office in Austin, it stays quiet and low-profile. In a deer blind in East Texas, it keeps the knife pinned where you left it when you climb down in the dark with gloves on and a rifle in your other hand.

Texas Use Cases: From Stadium Lots to Lease Roads

In a stadium lot in College Station, you’re slicing open a fresh bag of charcoal. On a lease road outside Uvalde, you’re trimming torn cord off a feeder leg. In a San Antonio warehouse, you’re stripping wrap off a pallet of tile. Same motion every time: thumb to slide, blade out, work done, blade back. The OTF mechanism makes sense in a state where you’re always doing three things at once and don’t like wasting motion.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, adults can legally own and carry OTF knives, including automatic and switchblade-style designs like this one. The state removed the old ban on switchblades and no longer singles out OTF mechanisms as prohibited. What still matters are restricted locations — schools, certain government buildings, secured areas, and other places where knives in general can be limited. Day to day, from feed store runs to late-night shifts, most Texans can carry an OTF knife without issue as long as they respect posted rules and state-listed sensitive locations.

Is this patriotic OTF knife tough enough for Texas truck and ranch duty?

The Freedom Talon was built with that kind of life in mind. The ABS handle shrugs off being tossed in a center console with change and receipts. The polished dagger blade handles the usual Texas jobs — feed sacks, nylon rope, packaging, light field use — and the double-action system lets you work it while juggling gear or gloves. It’s not a delicate collector’s piece you’re afraid to scratch. It’s the one you actually keep in the truck and don’t baby.

How do I decide if this is the right Texas OTF knife for me?

Ask yourself three things. First: do you want a fast, one-handed automatic you can trust to open and close cleanly? Second: do you prefer a lighter knife that disappears in pocket but still feels ready on a long Texas day? Third: does the eagle-and-flag handle match the way you see yourself — not loud for its own sake, but clear about where you stand? If the answer is yes down the line, this is the right OTF to clip on and use without overthinking it.

A Texas Moment, First Use

The first time you really lean on this knife, you’re not thinking about the art on the handle. You’re standing beside your truck somewhere between towns, last light dropping fast, trying to cut a stubborn strap holding down a cooler. Wind smells like dust and mesquite. You thumb the slide, hear the blade lock home, and the strap gives on the first draw. The knife goes back in your pocket, edge still clean, eagle and flag catching the last orange in the sky. It rides with you the rest of the way, just another tool that fits the way this state lives and moves.

Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme USA Flag
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes