Skip to Content
Micro Grid Quick-Flip Keychain Butterfly Knife - Black

Price:

4.99


Harvest Bone Field-Pro Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bovine
Harvest Bone Field-Pro Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bovine
23.99 23.99
Skeleton Grip Balanced Butterfly Knife - Matte Steel
Skeleton Grip Balanced Butterfly Knife - Matte Steel
10.99 10.99

Micro Grid Tactical Butterfly Keychain Knife - Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5992/image_1920?unique=8306197

4 sold in last 24 hours

Gas station stop outside Abilene, one hand on the pump, the other flicks your keychain and this micro butterfly snaps open. The satin drop point gives you just enough blade to cut twine, tape, or a stubborn tag, while the black grid handles lock into your grip. It rides quiet on your keys, flips clean off the T-latch, and disappears when the job’s done. Not a toy—just a small, sharp answer when you don’t want a full-size blade on you.

4.99 4.99 USD 4.99

BF105XSNBK

Not Available For Sale

2 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
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

Micro Control on a Texas Key Ring

At the ranch gate, in a gravel lot behind a feed store, or parked outside a Buc-ee’s on I-35, this little butterfly knife sits buried in your keys until you need it. The Micro Grid Tactical Butterfly Keychain Knife - Black doesn’t look like much hanging off a ring, but the second the T-latch drops and those handles swing open, you’re holding a real blade with real control.

Short satin drop point, just over an inch and a half. Black stainless handles cut with a raised micro grid that bites into your fingers even when they’re slick with sweat or dust. In a state where folks carry plenty of steel already, this one earns its place by being the knife you actually have on you when your bigger blade is back in the truck.

Why a Butterfly Keychain Knife Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

Most days in this state, you’re juggling keys—gate keys, shop keys, mailbox keys, apartment fob, truck fob. Making a small butterfly knife part of that routine carry just makes sense. It turns dead weight into something useful. Instead of digging past a full-size folder at the bottom of a bag, this knife hangs ready off a short chain and ring, opening with that familiar balisong snap.

This isn’t about showing off tricks. It’s about working clean in small spaces. Cutting twine off a hay bale in the Hill Country without fishing around for a bigger blade. Opening feed bags in a Panhandle barn without pulling a long knife in close quarters. Popping tape and blister packs in a Houston warehouse break room without laying a full tactical folder on the table.

The steel blade comes out centered and solid, the pivots tuned for smooth flipping, not loose waggle. At just 3.75 inches open and about 2 inches closed, it gives you enough edge to do the work but stays small enough that it doesn’t scare anyone when you’re standing in line at a corner store in Dallas or Austin.

Texas OTF Knife and Butterfly Carry Expectations, Plain and Simple

In this state, people talk a lot about switchblades, autos, and what’s legal to carry. OTF knife Texas questions pull folks into rabbit holes about blade length, opening methods, and where you can bring what. A clean little butterfly on a key ring like this fits right into that everyday Texas knife culture: compact, useful, and easy to live with.

A Texas OTF knife often rides deeper in a pocket or truck console as the primary, while something like this micro butterfly fills the gap for quick, low-key cuts. When you’re used to carrying more serious steel, a tiny balisong gives you an option that doesn’t feel like overkill for simple jobs—cutting zip ties on an extension cord in a San Antonio garage, trimming loose thread on a work shirt in a Midland parking lot, or slicing a wrapper at the gas pump outside Amarillo.

OTF knife Texas buyers looking for a backup or companion blade will find this piece fits naturally into that rotation. Where a double-action Texas OTF knife gives you instant, one-handed deployment with authority, this keychain butterfly gives you a slower, more deliberate motion that looks and feels less aggressive in public spaces but still delivers a sharp, capable edge.

Built Small, Built Tough Enough for Texas Use

The specs tell the rest of the story. A 1.625-inch satin-finished drop point blade in plain edge steel gives you a simple, predictable cutter. No serrations to hang up on cardboard or cord. Just a straight, workable edge you can touch up quick on a pocket sharpener in the cab.

The handles are stainless steel, finished black and cut with that tight micro grid pattern. It isn’t just for looks. That texture matters when you’re sweating through August in Brownsville or working in a cold drizzle outside Lubbock. It gives your fingers something to lock into so the knife doesn’t twist on light cuts.

Weighing only about 1.28 ounces, it won’t drag your keys down or bang into your leg all day. The short metal chain gives a little reach so you can flip it open away from your truck paint or dashboard, then folds back into the cluster once you’re done. Torx pivots and all-black hardware keep things modern and tight. The T-latch closes the handles securely so it doesn’t work itself open in your pocket or cup holder.

Texas Knife Law Reality: Where This Butterfly Fits

How Butterfly and OTF Knives Sit in Texas Law

Folks who research Texas OTF knife laws usually discover something that surprises them: under current state law, most of the old restrictions on switchblades and automatics are gone. The state treats many blade types—OTF, autos, and butterfly knives—more by size than by opening style. The key question now is whether a knife qualifies as a “location-restricted” knife, mainly based on blade length.

With a blade under two inches, this micro butterfly stays well below the thresholds that cause trouble in most everyday settings. It’s compact, non-threatening, and built more like a utility cutter than a combat piece. That makes it an easy choice for someone who wants a balisong-style tool on them without drawing the kind of attention a full-size tactical butterfly or large Texas OTF knife might get, especially in city limits or around mixed company.

Everyday Texas Carry Spots Where This Knife Makes Sense

Think about where you actually go: gas stations from Waco to Weatherford, grocery runs in Corpus, coffee stops in Denton, late-night convenience stores in El Paso. You don’t always want to pull a big blade out at the counter. This compact butterfly lives on your keys, comes out quick, does the job, and folds back before anyone really notices.

It’s just as at home clipped to a spare set of ranch keys hanging in the mudroom, ready to cut baling twine, feed bags, and plastic wrap in the barn, as it is sitting on a city apartment key ring used for packages, tags, and daily chores. Legal realities always change by location, but in practical, everyday Texas life, a sub-two-inch utility butterfly like this tends to blend in, not stand out.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas and Butterfly Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF (out-the-front) knives and other switchblades are generally legal to own and carry. The main concern now is blade length, not how the blade opens. Knives with blades over a certain length can be considered “location-restricted” in some places like schools, certain government buildings, and a few other protected locations. For most adults going about normal life—work, errands, land, and home—carrying an OTF or butterfly knife is legal as long as you respect posted rules and local restrictions. Laws can change, so it’s always smart to check the latest state and local guidance.

Is this micro butterfly knife a good backup to a Texas OTF knife?

It’s built for exactly that kind of role. If you already carry a full-size Texas OTF knife as your main blade, this micro butterfly gives you a second option that rides light on your keys. You pull the OTF when you need speed, reach, and authority—a bigger cut, heavy packaging, tougher material. You pull the keychain butterfly for quick, quiet jobs where you don’t want to flash a large automatic: cutting shipping tape at the office in Plano, trimming a stray zip tie in a parking garage in Fort Worth, or opening a snack wrapper on the road between San Angelo and Junction.

How do I decide between a Texas OTF knife and a butterfly keychain knife?

Decide based on how and where you cut. If you’re working in gloves, handling bigger tasks, or want true one-handed, instant deployment, a Texas OTF knife makes sense as your main carry. If you’re in tighter spaces, around people who may be nervous about bigger blades, or just want something that lives on your keys all the time, this micro butterfly is the better fit. Many Texans carry both: an OTF in the pocket or console, and this little keychain balisong as the blade that’s always with them, even when they leave the bigger knife at home.

First Use: A Small Blade in a Big State

Picture an early morning stop at a roadside station outside Kerrville. You’re leaning against the bed of the truck, the Hill Country still cool, cutting the plastic wrap off a case of water before you load it. You don’t reach into your pocket. You just lift your keys, pop the T-latch, and feel the black micro-grid handles roll into your fingers as the blade comes out clean.

One cut, plastic falls away, and the knife folds and disappears back into the ring. No show, no drama, no digging for anything bigger. Just a small, sharp tool that earns its keep a few seconds at a time. In a state where people still carry steel as a matter of habit, this is the blade that rides with you when everything else gets left behind.

Blade Length (inches) 1.625
Overall Length (inches) 3.75
Closed Length (inches) 2
Weight (oz.) 1.28
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Satin
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Latch Type T-Latch
Is Trainer No