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Lone Star Rescue Quick-Deploy Assisted Tactical Knife - Texas Flag

Price:

14.99


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Highway Sentinel Assisted Rescue Knife - Texas Flag

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/6479/image_1920?unique=68fad41

10 sold in last 24 hours

West of Weatherford, a truck rolls up on fresh skid marks and steam. This assisted rescue knife comes out of the console fast, flipper tab snapping the 3.5-inch American tanto blade into lockup. The partial serration chews through a jammed belt while the glass breaker and seatbelt cutter finish the job. Matte steel, Texas flag handle, deep-carry clip. Quiet tool for the person who doesn’t drive past trouble.

14.99 14.99 USD 14.99

PWT443TX

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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When the Shoulder Becomes the Job Site

Late summer on 281, heat wobbling off the pavement, and traffic slowing for no good reason. By the time you ease onto the shoulder, you see it—truck nosed into the cable barrier, airbags blown, driver dazed and seatbelt jammed. This is when a rescue knife either earns the ride in your truck, or it doesn’t.

This assisted rescue knife was built for those Texas road miles. A flipper tab kicks the spring assist into gear, snapping the 3.5-inch American tanto blade into place with a clean, mechanical certainty. The liner lock bites down, solid. No drama, no flex. Just a knife that does what you ask the first time, when you don’t have time for a second try.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Assisted Alternative

Plenty of Texans search for an OTF knife Texas style—fast, one-handed, and ready on the draw. This assisted rescue blade speaks to that same instinct, but in a folding format that slides easier into a pocket, boot, or truck console. You still get that quick, one-hand deployment that Texas OTF knife owners chase, only here the flipper tab and spring assist do the work instead of a sliding button on the spine.

In a glove, in the dark, or leaning into a crushed door frame along I-10, you don’t think about the mechanism name. You think about whether the knife will open, lock, and cut. This one does, in the same spirit that leads folks to buy OTF knife Texas wide—fast action that keeps up with the pace of real life out here.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Cut

The blade isn’t a showpiece. It’s matte-finished steel, shaped into an American tanto profile that likes hard jobs—poking through plastic, prying a little when you have to, and taking the abuse of daily carry. The front tanto point gives you control when you’re working close to skin or webbing. Behind it, the partial serration is where the real Texas work happens.

That serrated section is made for what you actually see around here: frayed tow straps, sun-hardened nylon, old baling twine, and seatbelts that don’t want to give. It bites in quick instead of skating. The straight edge ahead of it handles cleaner cuts on cardboard, feed bags, hoses, and the random jobs that stack up between the ranch, the refinery gate, or the warehouse dock.

Jimping along the spine and handle gives your thumb and fingers something to lock into when sweat, dust, or motor oil get involved. It’s the sort of detail you only miss once—on a hot day south of Abilene when your grip starts to slide and the work doesn’t stop.

Carry That Fits Texas Life

This isn’t a safe queen. It’s meant to live on you—or within easy reach. Closed, it runs about five inches, which means it disappears in a front pocket of a pair of jeans, rides clean on the inside of a duty belt, or nests in the door pocket of a half-ton or a work truck that’s seen a few caliche roads.

The deep-carry pocket clip buries the knife low, keeping it out of sight but easy to hook with thumb and finger when you need it. For folks used to an OTF knife Texas carry style—flat along the pocket seam, easy draw—this assisted blade will feel familiar. You don’t baby it. You grab it, flip it, let the spring do the rest.

The Texas flag handle isn’t just paint. It’s a quick visual reference in a cluttered console or crowded gear bag. Red, white, blue, and a single star—easy to spot, easy to claim as yours when everyone else is carrying something plain black.

Texas Knife Law, Rescue Reality, and Everyday Carry

Folks ask about legality as often as edge retention. They’re not wrong. After 2017, Texas law opened the door for automatics and what most people call switchblades, and later changes eased up restrictions on blade length and so-called "illegal knives." Today, the big line in the sand is location: some government buildings, schools, and certain posted spots are still off-limits for larger blades no matter how they open.

Where Assisted Knives Fit in Texas Carry Culture

An assisted opener like this isn’t treated differently from a manual folder under current Texas law; it’s not singled out the way older statutes used to treat switchblades. It’s a practical choice if you move between small towns, job sites, and the occasional courthouse or campus-adjacent errand where you’re already thinking about where and how you carry. As always, knowing local rules and posted signs matters as much as state law.

For Texans who like the speed of an automatic or an OTF but want the simple, low-profile reality of a folder, an assisted rescue knife hits the middle ground: one-hand opening, positive lockup, and fewer questions from people who only recognize the word "switchblade" from TV.

Rescue Tools for Texas Roads

Out on 45 between Houston and Dallas, or running 20 through Midland and Odessa, wrecks look the same: twisted doors, deployed airbags, people tangled in fabric and plastic. That’s where the built-in tools matter more than any color scheme.

Seatbelt Cutter That Doesn’t Quit

At the back of the handle sits a recessed seatbelt cutter. You slide it over webbing and pull—no need to open the blade at all. On a flipped truck in a ditch near San Marcos, that means you can keep one hand braced on the frame while the other frees a trapped shoulder. No wide arcs, no exposed edge near bare skin.

Glass Breaker for Real-World Impact

The glass breaker rides at the very end of the handle, a hardened point meant for side windows, not windshields. Short, sharp strike at the corner of the glass, and the pane gives. From flooded low-water crossings in the Hill Country to high-speed spinouts on wet Houston overpasses, you don’t get many chances to make that hit count. This tool is built for that one clean shot.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted and OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, OTF and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, with blade length and restricted locations being the main concerns—not the opening mechanism itself. Places like schools, certain government buildings, and some posted venues still limit what you can bring inside, especially larger blades. If you’re comparing an OTF knife Texas style to an assisted opener like this, know that both are broadly legal statewide for everyday adults, but you’re still responsible for minding local rules and clearly marked restricted areas.

Will this assisted rescue knife handle Texas heat, dust, and road grime?

The matte steel blade and steel handle are built for exactly that. Tossed in a truck door in West Texas, clipped to work pants in the Valley, or run daily on a belt in Dallas traffic, it shrugs off sweat and grit with basic upkeep—wipe it down, hit the pivot with a little oil when needed, and it keeps snapping open. The spring assist is simple and robust, tuned for repeat use, not just the first week out of the box.

How do I choose between an OTF knife and this assisted rescue knife?

If you want pure novelty and vertical deployment, an OTF makes sense. If you care more about rescue tools and low-profile carry on Texas roads, this assisted rescue knife wins. You get one-hand opening, a strong locking folder, seatbelt cutter, and glass breaker in a package that rides easier in jeans and draws less attention at the gas station or feed store. For many Texans, that balance of speed, function, and quiet carry decides the question.

A Knife That Belongs in a Texas Truck

Picture a late storm rolling across the Panhandle, sideways rain hammering the highway as you ease past a fresh tangle of taillights and hazard flashers. You pull over because that’s what you do. The door opens, boots hit wet asphalt, and your hand finds this knife clipped where it always rides. One thumb on the flipper, blade snaps open, and the rest is just work—cutting, breaking, freeing. No speeches, no show. Just a rescue knife that belongs in a Texas truck, doing a Texas job.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Steel
Theme Texas Flag
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock