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Lone Star Slide-Action OTF Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

Price:

39.99


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Frontier Banner OTF Slide Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5148/image_1920?unique=734e0b4

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Late light on a Panhandle lease road, one hand on a gate chain, the other on your OTF knife. The slide snaps that black stonewash blade forward, serrations chewing through sun-baked rope and nylon strap. Texas flag aluminum rides solid in the hand, pocket clip tight on your jeans. No fuss, no flashing — just a slide, a cut, and the quiet confidence of carrying a knife that matches how you work.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB194TXCS

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For When Work Comes First

The first time this knife feels right is not under glass. It’s in the gravel beside a half-open gate outside San Angelo, wind pushing dust across the lease road. One hand is on the chain that’s been rained on, baked, and forgotten. The other finds the slide on that Texas flag handle and sends a black stonewash blade straight out the front.

No flourish. Just a clean single-action snap and a partial-serrated edge that bites into rope that’s seen more seasons than you care to count. This is what an OTF knife in Texas is supposed to do — look like pride, work like a tool.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Belongs In Your Daily Carry

In a state where your day can run from office to lease road to high school game without crossing county lines, a pocket knife has to keep up. This Texas OTF knife was built for that kind of swing. Closed, it sits just over five inches in your pocket, clipped against denim or work pants without dragging. At nine inches open, the blade is long enough to matter when you’re cutting truck-bed cardboard, fuel hose, or hay netting behind the barn.

The slide actuator rides the spine where your thumb naturally lands. You don’t have to hunt for a button or flip a tab — just push forward, feel the spring drive that black stonewash clip point straight ahead, and you’re cutting. In a crowded feed store parking lot or standing in a Hill Country driveway, it stays controlled, direct, and out of the way until you need it.

OTF Knife Texas Edge: Built For Real Work, Not Just Show

There are knives that wear flags to get noticed and knives that earn the right to carry one. This one starts with a steel blade long enough — about three and three-quarter inches — to open feed sacks, slice zip-ties off fence panels, or break down a stack of boxes in the back room of a Houston shop. The black stonewash hides the scuffs from cinder blocks, metal edges, and truck beds, so it looks used, not abused.

Up front, a clip point gives you a fine tip for carton tape, irrigation line, or splintered pallet slats. Down by the handle, a run of partial serrations takes the lead on nylon strap, braided rope, and heavy plastic ties that don’t cut clean with a plain edge. That mix matters on a long, hot day along a South Texas pipeline right-of-way, where you don’t have time to baby a blade or swap tools.

The handle is aluminum — not fancy, just right. Matte finish, Texas flag graphic worn a little on purpose. It feels like it belongs in a glove box or center console, not in a display case. Jimping along the spine and edges keeps your grip honest when your hands are slick with sweat, oil, or creek water from a quick wash. At a little over eight and a half ounces, it rides solid without feeling dainty or disposable.

Texas OTF Knife Carry, Culture, And The Law

If you’re buying an OTF knife in Texas, you already know the old stories — what used to be called a switchblade, the sideways looks, the question about whether you can even carry it. Laws changed. The habits of cautious buyers took longer.

Where This OTF Fits In Texas Knife Laws

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTFs are legal to own and carry for most adults, statewide. The big dividing line is blade length. This OTF comes in under four inches, which keeps it in the "location-restricted" safe zone for everyday carry in most places that aren’t already off-limits for other weapons. You still have to respect posted signs, schools, certain government buildings, and any spot where weapons are barred by statute or notice, but you’re not skirting the edge of the law just by clipping this in your pocket.

That’s why Texas buyers look for a true OTF with a working blade length like this. It gives you the speed and one-handed control of a switchblade without dragging you into the long-blade category that complicates carry around town.

Carry That Fits How Texans Actually Live

The pocket clip sits deep enough to ride steady on starched jeans in Fort Worth or oilfield FR pants outside Midland. It doesn’t shout, and it doesn’t need to. For some, it lives on the inside pocket of a starched pearl-snap. For others, it drops into the door pocket of an F-250, Texas flag handle easy to spot against registration papers and a worn-out insurance card.

The single-action system keeps it simple: blade drives forward when you push the slide, locks open, and you reset it by hand after the cut. That’s one less moving part to break when it bounces around in a truck console from Llano to Lubbock and back again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its ban on automatic knives, including OTF and what used to be called switchblades, several years ago. Adults can own and carry them. What still matters is blade length and location. This knife’s blade is under four inches, which places it in the category that’s generally lawful to carry in most everyday Texas settings that allow knives at all. Certain places — schools, secure government buildings, some posted businesses, and other "location-restricted" areas — remain off-limits regardless of blade type. This isn’t legal advice, just the reality of how Texas knife laws sit today, so it’s wise to check current statutes and any local rules if you work around sensitive locations.

Will this OTF handle Texas heat, dust, and daily abuse?

It was built with that in mind. The aluminum handle doesn’t swell or crack in Gulf humidity or Panhandle cold snaps. The matte finish gives you traction when your hands are slick with sweat or oil, and the stonewash blade finish shrugs off scuffs from sand, caliche dust, and the inside of a steel toolbox. The internal track is designed for repeat slide-and-fire under real-world conditions — think days spent in a dusty truck cab on a lease road or clipped to shorts during hill country weekends on the lake — as long as you knock out grit now and then and don’t treat it like it’s disposable.

Is this the right Texas OTF knife for everyday carry or just weekends?

If you want a knife that can live in your pocket Monday through Friday and still look right when you’re standing around a tailgate in College Station on Saturday, this one fits. The blade length works for warehouse work, ranch chores, package duty, and roadside fixes without drawing extra attention. The Texas flag handle says who you are without needing an explanation. If your idea of "everyday" includes traffic on I-35, feed runs, and late-night stops at a gas station off 281, this OTF fits that rhythm better than a fancy safe queen.

Where This Texas OTF Knife Really Belongs

Picture an August evening, just outside a small town between Waco and Temple. Lights from the football field wash across the parking lot, kids weaving between trucks, dust hanging low. You’re leaned against the bed, cutting open a box of folding chairs someone forgot to prep, slide pushing that blade out in a clean, straight line. Serrations chew through nylon banding in one pass.

You close it, clip it back beside your pocket, and forget about it until the next time something needs cutting — a length of fuel hose in a dim garage, a stubborn length of baling twine out past the last working yard light, or tape on a shipment that showed up late at a small shop in San Antonio.

This isn’t a knife you baby. It’s the OTF you carry when your day covers backroads, job sites, and parking lots under stadium lights. Flag on the handle, work in the blade, and a feel in hand that tells anyone who picks it up exactly where it came from.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 8.52
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme Texas Flag
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes