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Azure Viper Single-Action OTF Knife - Blue Damascus

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27.99


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High Plains Viper Single-Action OTF Knife - Blue Damascus

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5196/image_1920?unique=d8307bc

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West of Wichita Falls, when the sky goes that deep cobalt before a storm, this single-action OTF knife makes sense in your pocket. The blue Damascus spear-point snaps out with one clean button press, then locks back in with purpose. A slim 9.25-inch stiletto profile, matte black metal handle, glass-breaker pommel, and deep-carry clip keep it ready in the truck, on the job, or under a sport coat. This is the OTF Texans carry when they want striking steel that still works for a living.

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SB229BLDM

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Blue Damascus OTF Knife Texas Buyers Actually Carry

North of Abilene, when the wind is up and red dirt works into every crease of a truck door, gear earns its keep fast. The High Plains Viper Single-Action OTF knife rides low in a front pocket, matte black handle vanishing against denim, blue Damascus blade waiting behind a single round button. It’s the kind of Texas OTF knife a ranch hand, oilfield tech, or off-duty deputy can carry without drawing eyes, until it’s time to cut twine, hose, or a stubborn zip tie in the dark beside a stock trailer.

This isn’t a fantasy showpiece. It’s a 3.5-inch spear-point blade in patterned blue Damascus finish, housed in a 5.5-inch metal handle that closes up clean to just over seven and a half ounces. Slim as a stiletto, solid as a truck-box tool, with a button fire that sends the blade out in one hard, decisive move.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Works From Panhandle to Gulf

Texas doesn’t offer one climate; it offers twenty. Blowing grit in Lubbock, salt air in Galveston, humid river bottoms outside Huntsville. A good OTF knife in Texas has to live in hot truck cabs, damp waistbands, and sweaty boot tops without complaining. The High Plains Viper was built with that in mind.

The matte black metal handle shrugs off dust and sweat; no shiny surface to telegraph carry under a T-shirt at a Buc-ee’s stop. The deep-carry clip tucks the knife low in your pocket when you’re walking into a Hill Country bar or downtown Austin office. That blue Damascus blade may catch your eye at the tailgate, but riding clipped inside a pocket, it stays quiet.

At 9.25 inches open, this Texas OTF knife gives you real reach for breaking down boxes in a Midland warehouse or cutting feed bags in San Angelo. Closed, it’s compact enough to live in the center console of a F-250 without rattling around like a cheap gas-station special. One press of the button drives the blade forward along its track; one firm retraction resets it, ready for the next job.

Single-Action OTF Built for Texas Carry Reality

Most talk about OTF knives centers on novelty. Texans think in terms of use. Here, the single-action mechanism matters. That button on the side is large enough to find with numb fingers at a cold West Texas lease gate, but low-profile enough not to snag on a seatbelt or jeans pocket.

Picture a night hog hunt outside Uvalde. One hand on a tailgate, the other wrapped around the High Plains Viper. Thumb hits the button, blue Damascus spear-point snaps out with a controlled, straight-line drive. You cut a length of rope, slice shrink wrap off a case of ammo, or punch into cardboard without the wobble you get from a loose folder. Then you lock it down, blade retracting with a deliberate stroke that tells you it’s seated and safe.

The stiletto-inspired profile is more than looks. That narrow spear-point slips clean between zip ties on feeder wire, under tape on a cooler lid, or through thick plastic wrap on pallets. For a Texas buyer, this isn’t just a tactical story — it’s daily work: ranch chores near Llano, plant runs in Pasadena, or roadside fixes off I-35.

Texas Knife Law and This OTF Knife’s Place In It

Understanding OTF Knives Under Texas Law

Texas used to draw hard lines on switchblades and automatic knives. That changed. As of the major revisions over the last decade, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry in Texas for adults, with the main restriction tied to blade length over 5.5 inches in certain locations. The High Plains Viper sits at 3.5 inches of blade, well under that key threshold.

That means this Texas OTF knife is legal for most everyday carry situations across the state for adults, whether you’re walking into a feed store in Comanche or gassing up in Katy. You still respect posted restrictions and sensitive locations, but as a general rule, you’re not fighting the law just by having it clipped inside your pocket.

Why Length, Profile, and Discretion Matter Here

That 3.5-inch spear-point does more than stay inside Texas knife law comfort zones. It also fits work. Long enough to open heavy feed sacks in East Texas pine country, but not so big that you hesitate to deploy it in a grocery parking lot when you need to cut baling twine off a slipped load. The black handle keeps the profile quiet. The blue Damascus finish gives you some pride when you lay it on a tailgate in front of friends who know the difference between a toy and a tool.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Trust in Work, Truck, and Town

The High Plains Viper feels at home in three places: at work, in the truck, and in town. On a construction site outside Frisco, the deep-carry clip keeps it secure on athletic shorts or work pants; that nearly eight-ounce weight lets you know it’s there without dragging. In a truck console somewhere between Houston and College Station, it rides like part of the kit — next to a flashlight, spare mags, and registration.

In town, sliding it under a sport coat or polo in San Antonio, the slim stiletto handle disappears against the seam of your pocket. When you do pull it, the blue Damascus blade makes a statement without screaming for attention. It looks like something you chose, not something you grabbed off a spinning rack at a big-box store.

The glass-breaker pommel isn’t a gimmick here either. Texas highways don’t forgive mistakes. If you come up on a wreck in the Hill Country, that hardened point at the butt can punch out glass when seconds matter. One hand runs the OTF button, the other clears a window. The same hard point doubles as a striking surface in a pinch.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Laws

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for adults, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry in Texas, as long as you respect the general 5.5-inch blade length threshold in restricted locations and stay clear of the specific prohibited places state law outlines. With a 3.5-inch blade, the High Plains Viper fits squarely inside what most Texas carriers consider a safe, legal everyday choice, whether it rides in your pocket, boot, or truck console.

Is this single-action OTF knife practical for Texas work, or just collectible?

It’s both. The blue Damascus spear-point and long, lean stiletto profile make it collectible, sure, but the build is pure Texas practicality. Steel blade, matte metal handle, deep-carry clip, and glass-breaker pommel mean it can live on a job site in Odessa, cut drip line in a San Marcos backyard, or ride months in a glovebox without babying it. The single-action button fire gives you fast, one-handed use when the other hand is on a gate, ladder, or steering wheel.

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

Ask three questions. First: do you want a blade that stays under the usual 5.5-inch concern line and doesn’t fight Texas carry reality? At 3.5 inches, this one does. Second: do you want something slim and discreet that still has some presence when open? The stiletto form and blue Damascus finish answer that. Third: do you need a knife that works in a truck, at work, and in town without swapping gear? If yes, the High Plains Viper belongs in your rotation.

Putting This Texas OTF Knife to Work on Day One

Picture an early fall morning outside Stephenville. Dew still on the grass, sun barely clearing the tree line. You’re at the back of the truck, breaking down boxes of mineral and feed. The High Plains Viper rides clipped in your pocket until you need it. One press, blue Damascus blade snaps forward, clean edge sliding through cardboard and woven plastic. When the work’s done, you thumb it closed, feel it lock home, and slip it back into your pocket before heading into town for coffee.

Later, standing in line at a small hardware store off the square, nobody notices the knife. That’s how it should be. Quiet in public, useful in private, always ready when Texas throws dust, rain, or bad luck your way. This is the OTF knife Texans carry when they want something with a little flash that still knows how to work.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 7.96
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Damascus
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Button
Theme Blue Damascus
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes