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Lone Star Legacy Tribute OTF Knife - Texas Flag ABS

Price:

16.99


Scarlet Vector Lightweight OTF Knife - Red Aluminum
Scarlet Vector Lightweight OTF Knife - Red Aluminum
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Pearl Milano Mini Stiletto OTF Knife - White Keychain
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Heritage Banner Auto OTF Knife - Texas Flag ABS

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9234/image_1920?unique=2a0b16a

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Hot tailgate, West Texas wind kicking dust across the lot, and you’ve got fence wire to cut before dark. This Texas OTF knife comes out of the pocket clean, side slide pushed forward, 3.75" spear-point steel snapping into place. Light in hand, flag-bright ABS handle, glass breaker ready at the butt. It rides easy on the pocket clip, feels at home in a truck console or back pocket. For folks who want their automatic to work and say something when it does.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB217TX

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Flag Bright in a Dusty Lot

The sun’s dropping behind a line of mesquite, pickup doors hanging open, cooler in the bed. You’re standing in gravel behind a small-town stadium, asked to cut a strip of rope, open a pack of sausage, crack ice out of a stubborn cooler lid. That’s when this automatic comes out of your pocket — handle bright red, white, and blue, lone star catching the last light — and the blade snaps straight out with a clean, sharp click.

This isn’t a drawer queen. It’s a Texas OTF knife built for truck beds, tailgates, feed store runs, and that gap between work and weekend.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Trust in the Real World

Folks looking to buy an OTF knife in Texas don’t want theory; they want to know what it does between the house and the lease. This single-action automatic runs off a side-mounted slide — thumb pushes forward, the polished spear-point blade drives straight out of the handle and locks up. No wrist flick, no drama, just a direct line from pocket to open blade.

The 3.75-inch steel blade is long enough to bite cleanly through feed bags, shrink wrap, heavy cardboard, and nylon rope, but still rides legal as an everyday sidekick. At 9.5 inches overall, it fills the hand without feeling clumsy. Closed at 5.5 inches and just 3 ounces, it disappears into a front pocket of a pair of Wranglers or rides easy on a beltline with the clip hooked to your pocket seam.

Texas OTF Knife That Carries Like a Pocket Habit

On a long day between job sites, this knife lives in a truck console, waits in the door pocket, or clips to your front pocket where you forget it’s even there. That ABS handle isn’t for show alone. It’s slick to the eye, but the shape and slight contour give you a sure grip when your hands are dusty, wet from cleaning fish down on the coast, or stiff from a cold Panhandle wind.

The pocket clip keeps it pinned in place when you drop into the seat of a lifted truck, slide across a cracked leather bench, or step in and out of a skid steer. The low weight matters after ten hours — the knife is there when you reach for it, but you’re not thinking about it all day.

Texas Carry Culture and Automatic Blades

There was a time you had to dance around the law to carry a switchblade in this state. That’s over. Modern Texas knife laws opened the door for automatics and OTF designs like this one. For most adults, a Texas OTF knife is legal to own and carry, as long as you’re not bringing it into the wrong kind of posted building or ignoring other weapons rules that still apply.

The straight spear-point profile keeps the look closer to a work knife than a fantasy piece, which matters when you open it around folks who don’t live on gun boards and knife forums. Slide, snap, use, close — that’s the rhythm. It feels like any other tool a Texan carries: purposeful, quick, and out of the way when it’s not needed.

Reading Texas Law in Plain Language

If you’ve ever typed “are OTF knives legal in Texas” into your phone, you’re not alone. The short version: Texas wiped out the old switchblade ban, and a blade that opens out the front is legal for most everyday carry situations, assuming you’re otherwise good to own a knife and you respect local rules on restricted locations. That’s the practical reality this automatic is built for — normal Texans, normal days, with a modern mechanism that the law finally caught up to.

Built for the Land, Not the Shelf

There’s pride in the handle, but the rest is all work. That polished plain-edge spear point makes short, honest cuts. Slice a length of poly rope on a Hill Country fence line, score shingles on a rooftop in Houston heat, or break down heavy shipping boxes behind a shop in Lubbock — the geometry stays useful, not gimmicky.

The glass breaker set into the butt cap isn’t there for decoration either. It’s for that rare bad second on a highway shoulder, when a truck door jams or a window needs to come out fast. Tucked in the console with a flashlight and a spare phone charger, this Texas OTF knife is the last thing you reach for in a hurry, but you’ll be glad it’s there when you do.

From Coast Air to High Plains Dust

ABS handle scales shrug off sweat, salt air, and inside-the-truck heat that bakes plastic and cooks leather all summer. The steel blade, kept wiped down and touched up on a stone or ceramic rod, stands up to the mix of sand, grit, and caliche dust that sneaks into everything from Corpus to Amarillo. This is a use-it, wipe-it, keep-going kind of automatic, not a safe-queen collectible.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF designs are legal for most adults to own and carry. The old switchblade ban is gone. What still matters are general weapons rules and restricted places — courthouses, some schools, secure government buildings, and any location properly posted under state law. Outside of that, carrying an automatic OTF knife in your pocket, on your belt, or in your truck is lawful for everyday use. If you’re unsure about a specific place, check local guidance or posted signage before you walk in.

Is this automatic OTF knife practical for daily Texas chores?

Yes. The 3.75-inch blade length and single-action slide make it a natural fit for daily work across the state — cutting baling twine in the Panhandle, trimming drip line in a Hill Country vineyard, opening feed bags outside a San Antonio barn, or breaking down boxes behind a suburban shop in Katy. It’s long enough to work, compact enough to carry, and fast enough to open one-handed when the other hand is full.

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

If you want an automatic that says something about where you’re from every time the blade snaps out, this fits. You’re the right buyer if you carry a knife daily, keep one in your truck more often than not, and prefer a clean spear-point profile over wild blade shapes. If you’re after a heavy steel showpiece, look elsewhere. If you want a light, dependable Texas OTF knife that rides easy and works hard, this one earns its place.

Texas OTF Knife in Its Natural Habitat

Picture a Friday night on a two-lane outside town. You’ve eased off onto the shoulder, tailgate down, cooler open. A buddy hands you a length of rope and nods. Your hand goes to the clipped handle at your pocket, flag colors worn just a little from a season of rides. Thumb on the side slide, blade jumps out clean, one cut and you’re done. The automatic disappears back into place before the next truck passes. No speech, no ceremony — just the quiet understanding that in this part of the world, a good knife belongs on you the way the keys and the billfold do.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 3
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Side slide
Theme Texas Flag
Double/Single Action Single action
Pocket Clip Yes