Skip to Content
Aero-Purple Quick-Launch Automatic Knife - Purple Aluminum

Price:

20.99


Ghostline CNC Precision Automatic Knife - Stonewash Gray Aluminum
Ghostline CNC Precision Automatic Knife - Stonewash Gray Aluminum
20.99 20.99
Spectrum Curve Impact Belt Buckle Brass Knuckles - Rainbow Titanium Nitrate
Spectrum Curve Impact Belt Buckle Brass Knuckles - Rainbow Titanium Nitrate
7.99 7.99

High Plains Quick-Launch Automatic Knife - Purple Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2039/image_1920?unique=9d98cff

10 sold in last 24 hours

Late run down 281, glovebox open, you reach past invoices and toll receipts and close on purple aluminum. One press and the stonewashed blade snaps out clean. At just over three inches of clip point and barely over three ounces, this automatic rides light, cuts heavy, and vanishes back into pocket or console. For Texans who like color in their gear but no nonsense in their mechanics, it’s the quiet, fast answer when something needs cutting now.

20.99 20.99 USD 20.99

SB10983CPE

Not Available For Sale

5 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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

High Plains Quick-Launch Automatic Knife for Real Texas Carry

The sun’s dropping behind a wind farm outside Sweetwater when you finally pull off the highway. Tailgate down, feed bag to cut, plastic banding cinched too tight. You don’t dig in the truck for a box cutter. Thumb finds the purple handle in your pocket, presses the button, and the stonewashed clip point is just there. No fuss, no show. Just an automatic knife that does what it’s supposed to do, every time.

This isn’t a drawer queen. The High Plains Quick-Launch Automatic Knife was built to live in Texas pockets, truck consoles, and work bags. Slim purple aluminum scales keep it light at about 3.2 ounces, so it disappears until you need it. The 3.25-inch clip point blade comes out fast and locks solid, ready for feed sacks, zip ties, nylon strap, or that stubborn shrink wrap on a pallet when the dock crew is already behind.

Why This Automatic Knife Works for Texas Days and Nights

Most days here, your blade sees more cardboard than coyotes. This automatic knife is set up for that kind of rhythm. The stonewashed steel holds up to dust, sweat, and the hard water residue that shows up on anything left in a barn sink. The clip point profile gives you a fine tip for detail cuts and enough belly to glide through thicker material without wrestling it.

The purple aluminum handle isn’t for show; it’s easy to spot on a tailgate or workbench cluttered with tools and receipts. Contoured sides and angled grooves give you a sure grip whether you’re in dry Panhandle wind or cutting baling twine with fingers still damp from a tank check. The deep-carry clip tucks the knife low in pocket—front, back, or inside the waistband—so it doesn’t print when you’re in pressed jeans and boots headed into a Hill Country tasting room or a Harris County office.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Compare: Why Choose This Auto Instead?

When folks search for an OTF knife in Texas, what they’re really chasing is fast, one-handed deployment that doesn’t quit. This quick-launch automatic knife gives you that same instant readiness without the bulk or maintenance of a double-action OTF. Button press, blade out. Button press and tension off, blade closed. Simple, direct, familiar to anyone who’s carried autos since before the laws caught up.

If you’ve been looking for an OTF knife Texas legal resources won’t make you second-guess, this side-opening automatic fills the role for most real-world chores. Short overall length, sub-3.5-inch blade, and a pocket clip that keeps it riding low mean it fits into Texas carry life cleanly—office, ranch, refinery gate, or Friday night under stadium lights. It’s the kind of knife you actually carry instead of just talking about.

Texas Knife Law Confidence: Carrying Automatics the Right Way

There was a time when a switchblade in your pocket meant trouble in this state. That’s changed. Texas law now treats automatic knives—what folks call switchblades—like any other blade, with one big anchor: location-restricted places still matter. You can own and carry an automatic or OTF knife almost anywhere in the state, but you still respect the lines around schools, secure government buildings, and other posted spots.

Practical Texas Carry Context

For most Texans, that means this automatic knife rides legal in your pocket at the feed store, clipped inside your waistband at the plant, or laid in the center console next to registration and insurance. Where you’ll pause is walking into a courthouse, passing a metal detector at a controlled entry, or stepping into certain school facilities. That’s where you leave it in the truck, same as you would any other serious blade.

This knife’s compact profile and straightforward button lock make it easy to stow quickly if you need to leave it behind. It slips into a hat band in the truck, a console tray, or an organizer pouch in a range bag without taking up real estate.

Texas OTF Knife Alternatives: Everyday Performance in a Slim Frame

Search for a Texas OTF knife and you’ll find big, aggressive profiles built more for show than for breaking down a tower of Amazon boxes in a Dallas high-rise break room. The High Plains keeps its ego in check. Overall length sits under eight inches open, with a closed length under five inches, so it fits fine in the front pocket of starched Wranglers or slim chinos without feeling like a brick.

The automatic action is crisp but controlled. That black button fires the blade with a firm, confident snap—not the kind of wild kick that jumps in your hand. A small secondary safety near the main button gives you peace of mind when you’re tossing it into a bag or pocket with keys and loose change before a run down I-45 or 35. You’re not babysitting it; you’re just carrying it.

Built for Real Texas Material

Steel meets everything from brittle farm-plastic to thick tow straps. The stonewashed finish shrugs off the scuffs from caliche dust, limestone, and the odd drop onto concrete at a Buc-ee’s fuel lane. The plain edge sharpens up quick on a basic stone or pull-through sharpener in a West Texas motel room, so you don’t need a bench system and an afternoon to get it back in shape.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, both OTF and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old switchblade ban is gone. The key limits now are location-restricted places—schools, certain government buildings, secured areas, and anywhere posted or controlled by federal rules. Outside of those spots, carrying an automatic or OTF knife is treated much like carrying any other knife. It’s still on you to stay current on local rules and any updates to state law.

Is this automatic knife a good fit for Texas work and ranch use?

For most ranch, plant, and oilfield support work, this knife fits right in. The 3.25-inch clip point blade is long enough for feed bags, rope, plastic banding, and hose but short enough to stay manageable when you’re working in tight spaces under a truck or inside a pump house. The purple aluminum handle is easy to spot in bed liner or dry grass, and the deep-carry clip holds firm when you’re climbing gates or in and out of equipment all day.

How does this compare to a larger OTF knife for Texas everyday carry?

A big OTF knife gives you presence and bulk, but that same bulk can keep it in the drawer. This quick-launch automatic slides into daily Texas carry without complaint—riding flat against your pocket during a Houston commute, tucked in a belt line under an untucked shirt in San Antonio, or clipped inside shorts on a hot August evening in Lubbock. If you want something you’ll actually have on you when the hay string or packaging tape fights back, this size and style win most days.

Pictured in Your Pocket on a Texas Evening

End of the day, eastbound lane humming, stadium lights fading in the rearview. You stop at a small-town station, grab a bag of ice and a cold drink. Back at the truck, plastic on the ice bag refuses to tear. The purple handle is already in your hand before you think about it. Button, snap, clean cut, blade away. No drama, no second guesses—just a reliable automatic knife that fits how you live in this state.

Whether your weeks are spent crossing counties with samples and invoices or working the same stretch of fence season after season, this is the kind of blade that earns its spot. Light, quick, and easy to carry, it feels like something a neighbor handed you years ago and you just never stopped using. That’s the measure that matters here.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 7.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.688
Weight (oz.) 3.2
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewashed
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Titanium
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Button
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes