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Smooth Operator Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Red Handle

Price:

36.99


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Smooth Operator Clip-Point Serrated OTF Knife - Midnight Black
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High-Vis Rescue Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Red Handle

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5378/image_1920?unique=a96c159

15 sold in last 24 hours

Late night on 35, shoulder’s narrow, traffic still flying. This OTF knife sits bright in the console—high-vis red handle easy to grab, black clip point blade snapping out with a clean, one-handed slide. Glass-breaker pommel, pocket clip, nylon sheath. In a truck door, work bag, or ranch rig, it’s the blade you reach for when seconds matter.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB929CRP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

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High-Vis Control When The Lights Are Off

Picture a stalled pickup on a two-lane outside Abilene. Hazard lights blinking, nothing but fence line, bar ditch, and a long stretch of dark. In the console tray, this high-vis red OTF knife waits where you left it. You don't fumble for it because you can see it. You don't wrestle it open because the slide runs straight and sure. Blade out, task done, blade back in. No drama. Just a tool that acts like it belongs there.

This is a full-size out-the-front knife with a 3.625-inch black clip point blade riding inside a 5.5-inch handle. Overall, a little over nine inches in the hand when deployed. Enough reach to cut stubborn seatbelt webbing, slice heavy feed sacks, or work through thick plastic without feeling flimsy or oversized.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For First

Across the state, folks who know their gear lean toward an OTF knife when they need clean, one-handed deployment in cramped spaces: wedged in a cab, half under a trailer tongue, on a ladder against hot metal in August. A Texas OTF knife earns its keep when you can't spare the other hand.

The slider on this knife rides the side of the red handle, right where your thumb finds it without looking. Forward to fire, back to retract. The action is positive, with enough resistance that it won’t jump on accident when it’s clipped inside a truck visor, cargo pocket, or the thin denim of a pair of work jeans. You get the speed of an OTF with the kind of control that matters when you're bouncing around on caliche roads or crawling through mesquite.

Built For Texas Roads, Rigs, And Job Sites

Texas roads are hard on gear. Heat in the summer, cold snaps that surprise you, dust that finds its way into everything. This OTF knife is built with a smooth-finished red handle that wipes clean when it picks up grime from a job site or red dirt from a Panhandle lease road. Torx screw construction lets you tighten hardware if it ever loosens after months riding in a truck door pocket.

The black clip point blade carries a plain edge and a smooth finish, with vented cutouts that trim weight and give the knife a balanced feel in hand. That blade shape bites quick into rope, nylon straps, and cardboard, and the tip finds its way into tight seams when you’re opening feed, cutting hose, or scoring gasket material. Jimping along the handle edges gives your grip a little bite when your hands are slick with sweat or rain rolling in off the Gulf.

A metal pocket clip rides deep against the pocket seam or on a belt, and when you don't want anything on your waistband, the nylon sheath drops clean into a door panel, console, or center seat organizer. For a Texas buyer who moves between job site, lease, and city commute, that flexibility keeps the same knife close without overthinking how to carry it.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence: Legal, Visible, Ready

There was a time when a switchblade or OTF knife drew side-eye under Texas law. That time has passed. Today, this kind of OTF knife sits squarely in legal everyday carry territory for most Texans, as long as you respect location limits and posted signs.

Under current Texas law, an automatic or OTF-style knife like this is legal to own and carry for adults. The law shifted to treat these blades like other common carry knives, so long as you’re not bringing them into restricted places—think certain schools, courthouses, secure government facilities, or any location that posts proper notice. That gives a Texas buyer room to carry an OTF knife in the truck, at the ranch, on the job, or in town without wondering if the law has something to say about it.

What this red-handled OTF does is add visibility and purpose. High-vis color makes it easy to locate in a messy work truck, dim barn, or cluttered toolbox. The glass-breaker style pommel adds a clear emergency role—breaking automotive glass when doors are jammed, or giving you a hardened strike point when you need it. That’s the kind of feature a Texas peace officer, volunteer firefighter, or roadside wrecker driver actually uses, not just talks about.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Belongs In Your Truck

Every Texas truck has a story in the glove box. Insurance cards, a faded map, maybe an old pocketknife that’s more memory than tool now. This OTF knife earns its spot by doing work in the present tense. It sits flat, thanks to its 5.5-inch closed length, and doesn’t rattle when tucked into a nylon sheath or clipped to a visor. The red handle stands out against dark interiors and dust-covered dashboards.

On a drilling pad outside Midland, it opens plastic-wrapped pallets and heavy shrink film without slowing down. On a deer lease in the Hill Country, it slices cord, tarps, and food packaging at camp, while your dedicated hunting blade stays sharp for game. In Houston traffic, it’s the tool you reach for when you roll up on a fender-bender and need to free a stuck seatbelt before first responders arrive.

This is not a velvet-lined drawer piece. It’s meant to get dusty, ride along dirt roads, and live within reach in the same places Texans keep flashlights, tie-down straps, and a worn pair of gloves.

Everyday Texas Uses, From Barn To Beltline

On a Panhandle farm, this OTF knife makes short work of baling twine, stretch wrap, and stubborn plastic feed sacks. The clip point edge runs long cuts without binding, and the OTF deployment means you can keep your other hand steady on the load. In DFW, it rides in a backpack or briefcase, handling warehouse tape, deliveries, and jobsite meetings without looking out of place when you set it down on a conference table.

From refinery catwalks in Baytown to a fence line outside Kerrville, this knife fits the rhythm of Texas work—tools close, moves simple, nothing fancy but everything proven.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives are legal for adults to own and carry, treated much like other common knives. The main limits come from specific locations: certain schools, secured government buildings, and other posted or restricted areas can still bar knives altogether. For most everyday Texas carry—truck, ranch, job site, or around town—an OTF knife like this red-handled model is lawful to carry, as long as you respect posted signs and local rules.

Is this red OTF knife practical for Texas emergency use?

It is. The high-visibility red handle stands out in a dark cab or under-seat storage, making it easy to lay hands on in a hurry. The one-handed slide deployment gives you fast access to the 3.625-inch blade when you’re cutting seatbelts, straps, or clothing in a roadside emergency. The glass-breaker pommel is built for punching through side glass when doors are jammed, which is why it belongs in a medic bag, volunteer firefighter rig, or any truck that racks up highway miles.

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

Think about where your knife actually lives. If you want something bright enough to see in a dusty truck, big enough to work—over nine inches open—but still flat in the pocket, this one fits. If one-handed deployment matters more to you than fancy steel names, and you like having a dedicated glass-breaker on hand without carrying extra tools, this OTF makes sense. For many Texas buyers, that balance—price, size, and real-world features—beats a heavier, more expensive blade that never leaves the nightstand.

First Use, Somewhere On A Texas Road

Sun is dropping over open pasture, the sky throwing that hard orange light you only see on long drives between small towns. You pull onto the shoulder to help at a minor wreck—airbags out, nerves high, nothing catastrophic but tense enough. You reach straight to the console and your hand closes on bright red. Thumb forward, the blade snaps out clean. Nylon gives, webbing parts, and the moment breaks. No fumbling, no second-guessing the law, no wondering if your knife can handle it. Just a Texas driver with the right tool, in the right place, when it counts.

Blade Length (inches) 3.625
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Smooth
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Smooth
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon