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HexCamo Rapid-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Camo

Price:

17.99


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Harbor Beacon Long‑Range Emergency Strobe Light - Red
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HexCamo Quick-Draw Mini OTF Knife - Camo

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5356/image_1920?unique=bc4d5fb

11 sold in last 24 hours

West Texas pump jack yard, sun dropping, wind kicking dust under your collar. This mini OTF knife sits low in the pocket until the thumb slide snaps it awake. The black American tanto bites into zip ties, feed bags, and stubborn packaging. Light in the hand, steady in the hex-pattern camo grip, it disappears when you’re done. Quiet, quick, and built for folks who don’t need a big blade to get big work handled.

17.99 17.99 USD 17.99

SB7064CA1

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

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Mini OTF Confidence When the Workday Runs Long

End of shift in a Panhandle yard. Wind has got some grit in it, sky going that flat orange, and you still have straps to cut and boxes to break down before you head for the truck. This is where a small, honest out-the-front knife earns its keep. The HexCamo Quick-Draw Mini OTF Knife rides low, disappears in your pocket, and comes alive with one push of the thumb slide when you actually need steel in your hand.

At just under two inches, the black Ti-Ni American tanto blade doesn’t look loud, but it hits hard. It slips out of the handle in a clean line, locks firm, and goes straight to work on nylon, tape, plastic, and those tough, waxed feed sacks that laugh at cheap blades. When you’re done, a short pull on the slide and it’s gone again, back in the handle, back out of sight.

Why This Compact OTF Knife Belongs in Texas Pockets

Across this state, carry is about practicality. From Midland service trucks to Hill Country fence lines, nobody wants a brick dragging their pocket down. This is where a compact OTF knife fits the way folks here actually live. Closed, the HexCamo sits at about three and three-eighths inches, slim and light, buried on the seam of your jeans with a deep-carry clip that doesn’t flash hardware every time you step out of the cab.

Open, you’ve got just over five inches of total length to work with, enough reach to get into feed bags, heavy shrink wrap, irrigation line, and those knotted ropes that have seen too many wet summers and dry winters. The hex-pattern camo handle isn’t just for looks; its anodized finish and texture give your fingers something to bite into when your hands are sweaty from a Gulf Coast afternoon or numb from a cold front rolling down out of the Panhandle.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Built for Real-World Use, Not Drawer Duty

Ask around any small-town hardware store or feed shop and you’ll hear it: a knife that’s too big or too fussy ends up in a drawer. This mini OTF knife was built to dodge that fate. The double-action mechanism means the same thumb slide throws the blade out and pulls it back in. No two-handed dance, no flipping tricks, just a straightforward motion you can do in a Buc-ee’s parking lot or leaning into a stock trailer gate.

Because the blade is under two inches, it feels at home as a true everyday tool. You can crack open sealed parts crates in a Odessa oil yard, slice backing off adhesive strip in a San Antonio shop, or cut a length of paracord in a Hill Country campsite without feeling over-knifed for the job. The American tanto profile gives you a strong tip for piercing clamshell packaging and a straight edge for controlled push cuts along cardboard seams.

Texas OTF Knife Laws and How This Mini Blade Fits

Texas knife laws changed years back, and they changed in favor of the person who actually carries. Automatic blades and OTF knives, once frowned on, are now legal to own and carry for most adults. The main line you watch is blade length in certain places and around certain age limits. This knife, with its blade under two inches, fits comfortably below the lengths that cause concern for most restricted locations.

That makes it a smart choice for someone moving between different parts of daily life: jobsite, ranch supply store, school parking lots for pickup, or a late grocery stop in town. It remains on the practical side of the line, more tool than weapon in both form and perception—exactly what many Texans want from their OTF knife in mixed company.

Understanding Everyday OTF Carry Across the State

From Amarillo techs running service calls to Corpus crew leads climbing onto boats before sunrise, the same pattern shows up. They want fast one-handed deployment, a blade that doesn’t scare people in the checkout line, and a profile that won’t dig into a bucket seat. This compact OTF answers that with a slide that can be worked with gloves on, a muted camo handle that doesn’t glare, and a blade that does more work than its inches suggest.

Legal Peace of Mind Without Babying the Knife

Because this isn’t some oversized showpiece, you’re more likely to keep it on you, not in the console. And because Texas law now recognizes automatic and OTF knives as lawful tools for adults, this little blade can live where it belongs: clipped in a pocket, tucked in light work pants, or dropped inside a small organizer pouch in your truck. You don’t have to baby it or make a production out of using it.

HexCamo Design: Camo That Works in a Texas Day, Not a Display Case

The handle’s hex-pattern camo isn’t bright range-toy paint. It’s subdued greys and blacks, the kind of pattern that disappears against a dashboard, truck bed liner, or the dark fabric of a work jacket. The anodized finish shrugs off scrape and pocket wear, so the knife looks used, not abused, after months of rattling around between keys and change.

The hardware stays low and dark: black screws and a dark deep-carry clip that tuck in against denim or ripstop. Add the lanyard hole at the butt and you can tie it off to a vest, range bag, or inside-the-truck grab loop, so it doesn’t disappear between the seats somewhere between Lubbock and Abilene.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal for adults to own and carry. The main concern is blade length and location. Larger blades can be restricted in certain sensitive places or for younger carriers. With a blade under two inches, this mini OTF knife sits well on the safer side of most length-related restrictions. It’s still your job to know the rules where you live and where you work, but this format gives you more peace of mind than oversized tactical blades.

Will this mini OTF handle real Texas work, or is it just a gadget?

It’s built to work. The American tanto tip is stiff enough to punch through heavy plastic and banding, and the straight edge runs clean through tape, paracord, and thin hose. The double-action mechanism is simple and repeatable, and the camo-textured handle keeps your grip when your hands are dusty or slick. It’s not a brush knife or a field-dressing blade, but for everyday tasks from warehouse to ranch, it holds its own.

How do I choose this over a larger Texas OTF knife?

Pick this mini OTF if you spend most of your day in jeans, on the road, or around people who don’t need to see a big blade every time you open a box. The small footprint keeps it comfortable when you’re driving long stretches, climbing equipment, or sitting through a kid’s game after work. If your cutting jobs are mostly packaging, cordage, and light material, this gives you the speed of an automatic with none of the bulk you’ll talk yourself out of carrying.

From Gate to Glovebox: A First Day With This Knife

Picture a Friday running long in Central Texas. You’re at the back of the property, cutting baling twine and zip ties off a pallet that came wrapped tighter than it needed to be. One hand’s holding the gate, the other slides forward on the HexCamo handle, and the blade snaps into place with a solid click you feel more than you hear.

You clear the job, thumb the slide back, and the knife is gone again—no drama, no second thought. It rides flat as you drive into town, still clipped in your pocket when you’re standing under fluorescent lights cutting open a last-minute case in the store room. Same blade, same motion. By the time you pull back into the driveway in the dark, you know it’s earned a spot in your daily kit. Not because it’s flashy, but because it felt right at home in your Texas day.

Blade Length (inches) 1.999
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Ti-Ni
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Anodized
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme Camo
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes