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Scarlet Vector Lightweight OTF Knife - Red Aluminum

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16.99


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High-Vis Backup Precision OTF Knife - Red Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9233/image_1920?unique=972ca72

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West of San Angelo, when the wind kicks dust through a barbed-wire gate, you don’t need a big knife. You need one you can find fast. This compact double-action OTF rides light at barely over an ounce, with a 1.99" black tanto blade that snaps out clean from the red aluminum handle. No clip, no bulk — just a high-vis backup that disappears in a pocket yet shows up quick when cord, tape, or loose hose needs cutting.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB7064RD

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  • 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
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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High-Vis Backup for Real Texas Carry

On a July afternoon outside Lubbock, the kind where the wind never stops and the truck door feels hot to the touch, you don't want extra weight on your belt. You want something light, sharp, and easy to find in a hurry. This compact double-action OTF rides in a front pocket, purse, or truck console and all but disappears until that moment the job shows up.

The black 1.99-inch tanto blade snaps cleanly out of the slim red aluminum handle, then tucks back in just as fast. No clip to hang up on a seatbelt, no bulk printing through your jeans. Just a high-visibility backup blade that stays out of the way until it's needed.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Works in Heat, Dust, and Daily Carry

Across the Panhandle, in Hill Country cedar breaks, or running errands between H‑E‑B and the feed store, the same truth holds: gear that’s too heavy gets left at home. This OTF weighs about 1.2 ounces. That’s lighter than most keychains, which means it actually gets carried.

The 5.25-inch overall length gives you enough handle to get a secure three-finger grip, even with dry, cracked hands or light gloves. The textured grooves along the sides of the red anodized aluminum handle keep it stable when sweat, dust, or a sudden summer shower slicks things up. The top-mounted ridged slider runs the full action — blade out, blade in — with a firm, positive feel. It's the kind of deployment you can manage one-handed while the other hand holds a gate, rope, or feed sack.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Trust in Tight Spaces

Not every blade in this state needs to be a ranch knife or a big fixed blade. Around Dallas–Fort Worth, Austin, or Houston, a compact OTF knife Texas buyers can slip into a pocket without drawing attention has its own place. This one fills that gap.

The American tanto profile on the 1.99-inch blade gives you a strong tip and a defined secondary edge — ideal for breaking down boxes in a warehouse off I‑10, cutting strapping in a San Antonio garage, or trimming zip ties under the dash when you're laid out in a driveway in Beaumont. The matte black finish plays down glare under parking-lot lights, while the bold red handle makes it easy to spot when it slides between seats or drops into gravel.

Because the overall footprint is small and the blade stays under two inches, this Texas OTF knife feels at home in suburban pockets and downtown offices as much as it does in a glovebox on a caliche road.

Built for Texas Conditions, Not a Display Case

This isn’t a safe queen. The steel blade keeps a working edge for everyday tasks — nylon rope, pallet wrap, light plastics, banding, and cord — the kind of cutting Texans actually do. The plain edge is easy to touch up on a pocket stone after a day cutting tape and cardboard behind a strip-center shop in Katy or Killeen.

The anodized red aluminum handle shrugs off pocket carry, bouncing around in a center console, or living in the bottom of a backpack on a lease outside Junction. Black Torx fasteners along the frame keep the construction tight, and the lanyard hole at the butt lets you run paracord or a small fob so you can snag it fast from the bottom of a work bag or range bag.

Double-action mechanics mean the same top slider fires the blade forward and pulls it back. The action is snappy but controlled, with enough spring to deploy decisively without feeling wild or unpredictable — important when you’re opening it in the cab of a truck on a washboard road.

Texas OTF Knife Law, Blade Length, and Everyday Peace of Mind

Texas knife laws changed for the better several years back. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal to own and carry for most adults. The main dividing line now is blade length: knives with blades over 5.5 inches are treated as “location-restricted” in certain sensitive areas, while blades at or under that length fall into everyday carry territory for most situations.

With a 1.99-inch blade, this OTF sits well under that 5.5-inch threshold. That means for the average adult Texan, from Brownsville to Amarillo, it slots cleanly into the kind of everyday pocket carry the law allows. You still need to respect posted rules in courthouses and similar secure locations — the same places that don’t allow firearms — but you aren’t wrestling with a big, borderline blade length here.

Reading Texas Knife Laws in the Real World

On the ground, that legal comfort shows up as quiet confidence. When you roll into Buc-ee’s outside Temple, step into a small-town bank in the Big Country, or walk into a hardware store in Midland, this compact blade doesn’t feel like you’re pushing a limit. It feels like what it is: a practical tool that just happens to deploy faster than a folder.

Why This Small Blade Makes Sense for Texas City Carry

In Austin offices, Houston refineries off shift, or Fort Worth stockyards, a big fixed blade can be more statement than tool. This tiny OTF keeps the automatic convenience without the drama. It opens envelopes, trims frayed boot laces, cuts twine on feed sacks, and slices through stubborn plastic packaging, then disappears back into a pocket without a second look.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal for most adults to own and carry. The key factor is blade length. Blades longer than 5.5 inches are restricted in certain locations like schools and some government buildings. This knife’s blade is 1.99 inches, well under that limit, which makes it a practical everyday carry choice across the state. As always, check any local rules and posted signs at specific buildings or events.

Is this compact enough for pocket or boot carry in Texas heat?

At 3.375 inches closed and about 1.2 ounces, this OTF slips into jeans, scrubs, gym shorts, or a boot top without dragging. In South Texas heat, where nobody wants extra weight on them, it rides light in a front pocket or clipped to a lanyard in a work bag. The red handle is easy to spot on a truck seat or in the dust at a lease, which matters when you set things down in a hurry and drive off.

Should I choose this mini OTF or a larger Texas OTF knife?

It depends on what your days look like. If you’re on a ranch, in oilfield work, or hunting most weekends, a larger Texas OTF knife with more blade might serve as your primary tool. This piece shines as a backup — a light, legal-feeling, always-there cutter for cords, tape, and boxes. Many Texans keep a bigger blade on the belt or in the truck and this smaller OTF as the one that actually lives in their pocket.

A First Cut You’ll Remember on a Texas Day

Picture late light over mesquite outside Abilene, or sodium lamps washing a warehouse lot off I‑35. You slide a hand into your pocket, thumb finds the ridged slider on the red handle, and the blade jumps into place with that clean, mechanical click you only get from a true double-action OTF. One cut — feed sack, nylon rope, stubborn pallet wrap — and it’s done. Blade back in, knife gone from sight.

No drama. No weight you regret carrying all day. Just a small, sharp piece of kit that fits the way Texans actually live: long drives, hot trucks, hard edges, and small jobs that appear out of nowhere. This is the kind of OTF knife that quietly becomes the one you reach for first, whether your day starts in a downtown garage or off a caliche road miles from the nearest highway.

Blade Length (inches) 1.99
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Weight (oz.) 1.2
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slider
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip No