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Obsidian Edge Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

Price:

9.99


Stars & Stripes Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - USA Aluminum
Stars & Stripes Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - USA Aluminum
10.99 10.99
Skullleaf Rapid Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade
Skullleaf Rapid Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade
5.99 5.99

Midnight Breach Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2453/image_1920?unique=3cb5996

13 sold in last 24 hours

Heat’s still hanging over the parking lot when you crack your truck door outside a San Angelo jobsite. The spring assisted knife in your pocket doesn’t shout; it’s just there. Matte-black aluminum handle, American tanto edge, one-handed snap that feels certain every time. It slices strapping, breaks down boxes, trims cord without drama. Rides low in the pocket, out of sight but ready. This is the blade a Texas hand carries when he wants speed, control, and no wasted motion.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

MTA2009BK

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When the Workday Runs Long and the Light Runs Out

The sun’s been off the Midland rigs for an hour, but the heat’s still in the wind. You’re leaning into the truck bed, cutting shrink wrap off a pallet that should’ve been unloaded before lunch. This is where a spring assisted knife earns its keep. The matte-black handle clears your pocket, flipper catches your finger, and the blade snaps open with one clean, mechanical note. No drama, no flash. Just a straight-line tool that does what you ask.

This isn’t a showpiece. It’s a quick-deploy assisted knife built for the kind of days Texas hands actually have—long, dusty, and full of things that need cutting right now, not after you fumble for two hands.

OTF Knife Texas Shoppers Compare Against Their Fast Folders

Across the state, folks hunting for an OTF knife in Texas usually want the same three things: speed, control, and pocket-ready carry. That’s where this spring assisted knife sits in the same conversation. The action is fast enough to stand shoulder to shoulder with an automatic, but it stays on the right side of simple—spring assist, flipper tab, liner lock. No extra switches, nothing to baby.

The 3.41-inch American tanto blade is built from 3Cr13 stainless steel, tempered for steady work instead of bragging rights. That tip geometry bites into plastic strapping and stubborn tape, while the long primary edge glides through feed sacks, hose, and cardboard. The satin blade finish carries just enough contrast against the matte black to show where the working edge begins, and where your grip ends.

Closed, it measures 4.85 inches and disappears along a jeans pocket seam or in a work shirt chest pocket. When Texas buyers ask for a blade that feels as quick in the hand as an OTF knife Texas law welcomes with open arms, this assisted folder often ends up in their palm.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers Weigh the Same Everyday Realities

Whether you’re driving a ranch road outside Kerrville or sitting in a Houston warehouse office, the everyday cutting jobs don’t change much. Zip ties. Pallet wrap. Nylon rope that’s seen better days. A good Texas OTF knife or a strong spring assisted folder both have to handle those with the same quiet reliability.

This knife is built for that rhythm. The flipper tab is pronounced enough to catch even if your fingers are slick from sweat or oil, and the spring takes over from there—smooth, direct, and surprisingly firm for a knife at this price. Once open, the liner lock sets in behind the tang with an audible click you can feel through the aluminum scales.

Jimping along the spine gives your thumb a place to land when you’re bearing down on stubborn rope or cutting into thick irrigation hose. Skeletonized cutouts toward the pommel take a touch of weight out without making it feel flimsy, so you get a balanced knife that points where you want it without fighting you.

Built for Texas Carry Culture, Not a Glass Case

Talk to anyone who’s carried a knife from the Panhandle to the Valley and they’ll tell you the same thing: a good blade doesn’t spend its life on a dresser. It rides in a pocket, a console, or clipped inside a pair of work pants, six days a week and sometimes on Sunday.

The matte-black aluminum handle on this assisted knife fits that reality. It’s light enough not to drag your pocket seam, with enough texture to hold onto when your hands are covered in gypsum dust, bar grease, or river water. The open-back design lets grit and sand shake free instead of packing into a closed frame—a small thing that matters when you’ve spent the day kicking through caliche.

The low-riding pocket clip keeps the knife tucked deep, out of sight when you’re in an office in Dallas or walking into a courthouse in Abilene. When you reach for it in the truck or at the tailgate, the draw is clean and consistent. No catching, no hot spots.

Knife Laws, Spring Assist, and What Texas Actually Allows

One of the most common questions that comes up in any Texas shop is how this kind of knife fits alongside a Texas OTF knife or a classic switchblade under state law. Since 2017, Texas removed the old switchblade ban, and later shifts to the law opened the door for most adults to carry automatics, OTFs, and folders with far fewer restrictions than before—so long as you mind location-specific rules like schools, certain government buildings, and other posted places.

This particular knife is a spring assisted folder with a liner lock and flipper, not a true automatic. The blade doesn’t deploy until you start it with your finger, and then the internal spring finishes the motion. For most Texas buyers, that gives them all the speed they want, with an extra layer of comfort in places where an OTF might draw the wrong kind of attention from someone who doesn’t know the law as well as you do.

The 3.41-inch blade length keeps it in a zone that feels reasonable—even to folks who don’t carry knives—while still being long enough to cut clean through heavy zip ties on oilfield gear, slash open feed bags in a barn outside Weatherford, or dress down cardboard at a San Antonio loading dock without reaching for a box cutter.

Practical Texas Use Cases From Field to Parking Lot

Out past Llano, this blade makes short work of hay bale twine and feed sacks, then wipes clean against your jeans without complaint. In a Fort Worth parking garage, it opens a package or trims a piece of nylon cord hanging off a duffel bag without causing a stir. In a Hill Country campground, it sharpens stakes, whittles kindling, and slices jerked meat in the half-light before sunrise.

It’s the knife that rides along in the center console on I-35, then shifts to a pocket when the road ends and the gate hinges begin.

Materials That Match Texas Weather Swings

From August heat in Laredo to a February front rolling through Amarillo, 3Cr13 stainless and aluminum don’t ask for much. The blade shrugs off sweat and humidity if you give it an occasional wipe and a touch of oil. The handle doesn’t swell or warp the way cheap composite can in a wet East Texas winter. Everything is fastened with Torx hardware, so if you’re the kind who likes to break a knife down on a workbench in Waco, you’ll find it straightforward.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for most adults they are. Texas removed the old switchblade and OTF prohibitions, and current law allows automatic and OTF knives to be owned and carried by adults in most day-to-day situations. There are still restrictions tied to certain locations and age limits, and anything that qualifies as a restricted “location-restricted knife” brings its own rules. For most working Texans heading to job sites, ranches, and everyday errands, carrying an automatic, OTF, or spring assisted folder like this one is lawful so long as you stay mindful of posted locations and specific prohibited places.

How does this spring assisted knife compare to an OTF for Texas everyday carry?

If you’re used to an OTF knife Texas roads have bounced around in your console for years, this assisted folder will feel familiar where it counts: one-handed speed and easy pocket carry. The difference is in the mechanism. Instead of a thumb slide, you run the flipper, feel the spring take over, and lock into a solid open position. It’s a quieter profile around people who don’t know blades, but it still has the speed and control you want when you’re cutting rope at a lease gate or slicing plastic off a pallet behind a feed store.

Is this the right knife if I already own a bigger fixed blade?

Most Texas hands already have a fixed blade riding in a truck, on a belt, or tucked in ranch gear. This knife doesn’t try to replace that. It fills the gap between chores that justify pulling a sheath knife and the hundred small cuts you make during a normal day. If your fixed blade is for fence line and heavy field work, this spring assisted folder is for store runs, shipping rooms, parking lots, and everything that happens between the gate and the house.

First Use: A Quiet Moment Beside a Texas Gate

Picture a two-track road outside Ballinger, dusk folding in over mesquite and fence line. You step out to fix a strip of loose wire, peel back a tangle of old tie, and realize the roll of fencing pliers is still in the barn. The knife in your pocket comes out, flips open with that fast, certain snap, and in three clean cuts the problem’s handled. You thumb the liner lock, close it one-handed, and tuck it back under the edge of your pocket.

No ceremony, no second thought. Just a matte-black spring assisted blade that fits the way you work and the way this state moves—fast when it needs to be, quiet the rest of the time.

Blade Length (inches) 3.41
Overall Length (inches) 8.26
Closed Length (inches) 4.85
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3Cr13 stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock