Skip to Content
Hex-Grid Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Cobalt Blue Aluminum

Price:

9.99


Eclipse Edge Quick-Assist Dagger Knife - Gold Blade
Eclipse Edge Quick-Assist Dagger Knife - Gold Blade
9.99 9.99
Night Orbit Vented Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - Black Steel
Night Orbit Vented Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - Black Steel
11.99 11.99

Hex-Grid Field Response Spring Assisted Knife - Cobalt Blue Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7272/image_1920?unique=1175da0

9 sold in last 24 hours

Sun’s dropping behind a line of mesquites and you’re still loading the trailer. The Hex-Grid Field Response snaps open with a clean spring assist, locking a 3.5-inch matte black, partial-serrated blade into work mode. The cobalt blue aluminum handle’s hex pattern bites into your grip, wet or dusty. At 8 inches open and 3.8 ounces, it disappears in a pocket till it’s cutting rope, hose, or cardboard without a second thought.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

PWT398BL

Not Available For Sale

4 people are viewing this right now

  • 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
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

When Work Runs Past Sundown

The heat’s finally bleeding off a caliche lot outside Lubbock. You’re strapping down a last pallet before the drive home, one hand on the ratchet strap, the other on a knife you don’t have to think about. The Hex-Grid Field Response Spring Assisted Knife - Cobalt Blue Aluminum comes out of your pocket, index finger on the flipper, and with a fast, clean snap the blade is locked and working.

This isn’t a glass-case collectible. It’s a spring assisted knife built for Texans who spend as much time outside town limits as in them—hauling, cutting, fixing, and moving from jobsite to lease land without babying their gear.

Hex-Grid Control When Texas Hands Get Slick

Across the Panhandle, the Gulf Coast, or outside San Antonio in August, sweat and dust don’t ask if your handle has enough traction. The cobalt blue aluminum frame on this knife is cut in a deep hex-grid pattern that gives your fingers somewhere definite to lock in. No rubber, no soft inserts to peel off in the truck—just machined aluminum that stays where it should.

Near the pivot, a black textured inlay adds a second grip point, especially when you choke up for detail work. Jimping along the spine and at the finger choil gives thumb and index finger real purchase when you’re cutting banding off pipe, trimming drip line in a Hill Country vineyard, or working through nylon strap in the back of a hot bay.

Closed, the knife runs about four and a half inches. It rides light at 3.8 ounces, dropping into a front pocket, cargo pocket, or riding in a truck console organizer without banging around. The cobalt blue finish stands out just enough that you can spot it on a cluttered workbench, but not so loud it looks out of place clipped inside a pair of work jeans.

Blade Built for Texas Jobs, Not Just Cardboard

Out past Midland or on a shop floor in Dallas, the work changes by the hour. A 3.5-inch matte black drop point blade gives you a shape that can do most of it. The primary edge handles clean push cuts—feed sacks, shrink wrap, sausage casing at a tailgate cookout—while the partial serrations near the handle do the ugly work: old rope, braided cable sheathing, plastic hose, and stubborn strapping.

The matte black finish keeps reflections down under bright yard lights or sun off a tin roof. It also hides the scuffs that come with cutting on tailgates, concrete, or over steel grating. You’re not polishing this blade; you’re wiping it on your jeans and moving on.

Steel construction means you get a solid working edge that sharpens up with standard stones or a pocket pull-through. This isn’t a safe queen steel; it’s meant to see daily carry, take a field touch-up, and get right back to work without drama.

Texas OTF Knife and Assisted Folder Buyers Share the Same Priorities

In Houston, Amarillo, or out by Del Rio, a lot of folks who search for an OTF knife in Texas are really after the same thing this assisted folder gives them: fast, one-handed deployment and a knife that’s ready the split second they need it. A spring assisted knife like this answers that need without stepping into full automatic territory.

The flipper tab is shaped so you can hit it with the pad of your finger, gloved or bare. The spring assist takes over smoothly—no grinding, no hesitation—and the liner lock snaps into place with a solid, audible seat. You know it’s locked because you can feel it, not because a spec sheet told you.

For Texans comparing a Texas OTF knife to a spring assisted option, this knife sits in the sweet spot: that fast-deploy feel combined with the familiar structure of a folding pocket knife. It drops into the same carry habits you’ve had for years while still scratching that quick-draw itch.

Texas Knife Law Confidence: Assisted, Practical, Everyday

One thing Texas buyers weigh as heavily as steel and handle material is the law. The state’s knife laws opened up in 2017 and 2019, clearing the way for carrying switchblades, automatics, and OTF knives in most everyday situations, with extra rules only for certain "location-restricted" areas. A spring assisted folding knife like this sits even more comfortably inside that already permissive framework.

Why That Matters From Amarillo to Brownsville

Whether you’re walking into a feed store in Abilene or grabbing breakfast tacos in Austin on your way to a job, you want a blade that feels normal in the pocket and in the hand. This assisted knife looks and carries like the pocket knives Texans have had clipped inside their jeans for decades, just with faster deployment.

The pocket clip is mounted for tip-down carry at the butt of the handle, keeping the flipper tab tucked in your pocket and the blade secure. The exposed liner and reliable liner lock keep everything where it should be until you decide otherwise. A lanyard hole at the handle end gives you the option of adding a short pull cord if you like to keep a knife tied off inside a work vest or hanging in the truck.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers and Everyday Carry Culture

Ask around a jobsite outside Fort Worth or a refinery on the Gulf Coast and you’ll hear the same thing: a good everyday blade is as much a part of getting dressed as boots. Some reach for an OTF knife; others lean on a spring assisted folder that does all the same work on rope, hose, and plastic wrap without drawing extra attention.

When Speed Matters More Than Style

You’re up a ladder cutting zip ties off conduit on a San Antonio remodel, or leaning into the engine bay of a ranch truck somewhere between Uvalde and Eagle Pass. One hand is busy, the other needs to open a blade without shifting your footing. You thumb the flipper on this Hex-Grid knife, feel the assist engage, and the blade is ready before your eyes even track it.

The combination of drop point tip and partial serration means you’re not switching knives to go from clean slicing to rough cutting. For Texans who grew up with traditional slipjoints, this brings that same pocketable size with a noticeable bump in responsiveness.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About an OTF Knife Texas Alternative

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives, switchblades, and other automatic knives are legal for adults to own and carry in most places. The main restriction is on blade length—anything over 5.5 inches is considered a "location-restricted" knife, which limits carry in specific sensitive locations like schools, certain government buildings, and similar areas. This spring assisted knife has a 3.5-inch blade, so it stays well under that line and fits comfortably within typical Texas everyday carry norms. Always confirm current statutes or talk to a local attorney if you have edge-case questions.

How does this spring assisted knife compare to a Texas OTF knife for daily carry?

If you like the idea of a Texas OTF knife for its speed, this Hex-Grid assisted folder gives you that same quick, one-handed deployment with a more familiar pocket knife profile. It’s easier on the eyes in small-town hardware stores, less likely to raise eyebrows in an office in Houston, and still fast enough for any realistic work—from cutting hay twine outside Stephenville to breaking down boxes in a Plano warehouse.

Is this a good first serious knife for a Texas everyday carry?

For a Texan buying their first serious everyday blade, this is a strong starting point. The 8-inch open length is useful without being intimidating, the 3.5-inch blade covers most ranch, shop, and city tasks, and the hex-grid cobalt handle gives positive control without feeling bulky. It’s a knife you can clip on in Lubbock for work, keep in a glove box outside Kerrville for roadside fixes, or drop into gym shorts on a Sunday run to the store without overthinking it.

Ready When the Day Runs Long

Picture a warm front rolling through Brazos country, wind kicking dust down a gravel drive. You’ve still got fence wire to cut off old posts and feed bags to slice before dark. You reach down, feel the cobalt blue hex-grid handle clipped inside your pocket, and the blade is open with one easy press, already earning its keep.

This spring assisted knife doesn’t ask for a spotlight. It just waits quietly at 4.5 inches closed, light, flat, and ready. The first time you reach for it—on a barbed-wire tangle, a stubborn length of nylon, or a stack of boxes in a hot warehouse—you’ll know why Texans keep a good blade on them, and why this one fits the way we actually live and work.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 3.8
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Cobalt Strike
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock