Skip to Content
RapidStrike Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Crimson Red G10

Price:

47.99


Field Vector Precision Automatic Knife - Green Aluminum
Field Vector Precision Automatic Knife - Green Aluminum
7.99 7.99
Sprinkle Strike Mini California Legal Automatic Knife - Blue Cupcake
Sprinkle Strike Mini California Legal Automatic Knife - Blue Cupcake
12.99 12.99

Gate Check RapidStrike OTF Blade - Crimson Red G10

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5951/image_1920?unique=37f1857

10 sold in last 24 hours

West of town, last light hanging over a barbed‑wire gate, this OTF knife earns its keep. The spear point D2 blade snaps out on command, clean and decisive, from a crimson red G10 grip that locks into a dusty hand. Double‑action slide runs smooth, then disappears back into your pocket or MOLLE rig. Glass breaker rides the tail for when a roadside moment turns serious. This is what you carry when “just in case” actually means something.

47.99 47.99 USD 47.99

SB291RDG10

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

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

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

When an OTF Knife Belongs at the Gate

End of a long caliche road, dust still hanging in the beams, and the only thing between you and home is a stubborn wire gate. This is where a fast, reliable OTF knife earns its place. The Gate Check RapidStrike rides quiet in your pocket until your thumb finds the slide. One clean push, and that 4-inch spear point D2 blade is out front, ready to cut hay string, scrape off mud-caked tags, or trim a frayed lead rope before it turns into a problem.

The crimson red frame doesn’t shout; it just stands out enough that you can spot it in the truck console at midnight outside a Hill Country dance hall or on the floorboard of a dusty half-ton after a week on lease roads. The black G10 inlays bite into your grip even when your hands are slick with sweat or diesel. No drama. Just a knife that does what you ask, fast.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Built for the Way We Actually Use Blades

In this part of the world, an OTF knife lives a harder life. It rides in ranch trucks that never see a car wash. It sits clipped inside jeans at a refinery turnaround, along the Trinity on a hog hunt, or in the center console crossing the High Plains before dawn. A Texas OTF knife has to handle more than opening boxes in an office park.

This RapidStrike OTF blade carries a full-size, 4-inch D2 spear point that holds an edge through rope, nylon strap, and feed sacks without constant touch-ups. The matte finish keeps reflections down when you’re working off a spotlight or leaning over a trailer hitch on the side of a farm-to-market road. At 5.75 inches closed, it fills the hand but still disappears along a pocket seam, riding deep on a dark clip that doesn’t catch the eye in a gas station line at 2 a.m.

The double-action slide switch is tuned for real-world use. Gloved up in a Panhandle winter, or bare-handed in August heat outside Laredo, the action stays the same: forward to fire, back to retract. No fumbling with liners or flippers when your mind is on cattle, cables, or the storm rolling in across the prairie.

From Truck Console to MOLLE Rig

Some days this OTF knife lives clipped inside your pocket, easy to grab when you’re walking fence or cutting zip ties in a shop in Baytown. Other days it rides in the included MOLLE nylon sheath, mounted on a plate carrier or pack when you’re running drills on a range outside San Antonio or pushing into thick brush after blood trail. However you carry it, the footprint and hardware are built for that fluid Texas mix of truck, field, and town.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Works Across the State

Across Texas, you learn quick which gear stays and which gets tossed in a coffee can under the bench. A Texas OTF knife has to cross lines—ranch to jobsite, jobsite to Friday night—without feeling out of place. The RapidStrike pulls that off with simple, honest hardware.

D2 steel takes the work. It shrugs off a week of cutting feed bags in the Panhandle wind, trimming irrigation hose in the Valley, or slicing old baling wire sleeves out near Fort Stockton. You don’t baby it. You sharpen it when it needs it, and the rest of the time you trust it to bite and keep biting.

The zinc alloy frame under that crimson red finish gives you solid heft without turning your belt into an anchor. It’s enough weight that when the spear point snaps into place, the whole knife settles in your hand instead of jumping. The G10 inlays keep your fingers locked in when sweat, rain, or hydraulic fluid enter the picture. That matte hardware doesn’t glare under work lights or patrol car LEDs.

Everyday Tasks, Texas-Scale

Cutting into shrink wrap at a Houston dock, scoring carpet on a San Antonio remodel, slicing drip tape in a Central Texas pecan orchard—this isn’t a drawer queen. The plain edge makes straight, predictable cuts without snag, and the spear point tip gets into tight spots when you’re working around insulation, cable, or fabric. This is EDC tuned to a state where “everyday” is rarely small.

OTF Knife Texas Laws: Carrying the RapidStrike the Right Way

A lot of buyers still walk in asking if a switchblade or OTF knife is legal here. The short answer: yes. Texas knife law changed years back. Automatic knives, including OTF designs like this one, are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not a prohibited person and you respect location restrictions like schools, secure government buildings, and certain venues.

Blade length matters in some situations. With its 4-inch blade and overall length under ten inches, this RapidStrike fits cleanly into what most Texans think of as a practical work and defense tool. It’s not a novelty piece, and it doesn’t push into “show-off” territory that draws the wrong kind of attention. Clipped in a pocket on a job site in Midland or riding sheath-mounted on a pack along the Guadalupe, it reads as what it is: a working OTF knife Texas carriers choose because it just gets more done with less motion.

Are OTF Knives Legal to Carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old switchblade ban is gone. What you still have to watch are restricted locations—courthouses, secure areas, some school settings, and other flagged zones. Common sense and a little respect go a long way. This RapidStrike is built for the everyday spots Texans actually live and work, not for testing the limits of posted signs.

Glass Breaker for Texas Roads and Rivers

The glass breaker on the butt isn’t decoration. Think of a truck nosed a little too deep into a low-water crossing west of Kerrville, or a rollover outside Abilene where the doors won’t budge. That hardened point gives you a last-resort option on side glass without fumbling for a separate tool. In a state where water, speed, and long distances can stack up into trouble fast, that’s not a gimmick—it’s insurance.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas law now allows automatic and OTF knives for regular adult carry, with the usual exceptions for certain secured or sensitive locations. That means this RapidStrike can ride in your pocket, on your belt, or in your truck across most of the state. If you’re stepping into a courthouse, school event, or other clearly restricted area, leave it locked in the vehicle. The law gives you room; it still expects judgment.

Will this OTF knife hold up to ranch and lease work here?

Yes. The 4-inch D2 blade, matte spear point profile, and G10 inlays were built with rough work in mind. Cutting woven wire near Sonora, trimming lariat ends in the Panhandle wind, or opening mineral sacks in East Texas humidity—this is the kind of workload D2 was made for. You’ll need to sharpen it eventually, but not every night. The double-action mechanism is simple and stout enough for dust, grit, and the occasional rainstorm.

How do I decide between this and a folding knife for Texas carry?

If you want the fastest one-handed deployment you can trust, this OTF is the move. A folder will do the job, but it takes more motion and more fine motor work. The RapidStrike gives you blade-out or blade-away with a single thumb stroke, whether you’re wearing gloves on a West Texas pad site or fishing it out of your pocket in a crowded parking lot. If speed, simplicity, and straight-line deployment matter to you, this is the better tool.

First Use: Out Where the Pavement Ends

Picture the first time you carry it. You’re a few miles past the last mailbox, road turning from chip seal to gravel, live oaks closing in around a narrow, rattling gate. You kill the engine, step out into that country quiet, and feel the weight of the RapidStrike clipped inside your pocket. The wire’s twisted tight; your fingers are cold. Thumb finds the slide, the spear point snaps out, and the metal parts clean with a single pull. No fuss. No second try. Just a knife that feels like it was always meant to be there, riding with you wherever the road, the work, or the night decides to go in this state.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.75
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material D2 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Zinc Alloy with G10
Button Type Slide Switch
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster MOLLE Nylon Sheath