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ShadowFlare Rapid-Deploy Tactical Tanto OTF Knife - Black ABS

Price:

16.99


Why So Serious Inscription Double-Action OTF Knife - Black Blade
Why So Serious Inscription Double-Action OTF Knife - Black Blade
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Stormhold Rubberized Grip OTF Knife - Two-Tone Black
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Midnight Breach Rapid-Deploy OTF Tactical Knife - Black ABS

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5372/image_1920?unique=ca20276

10 sold in last 24 hours

Long past midnight on a service road outside Lubbock, this OTF knife lives where your hand falls first. A side-slide switch snaps the 3.5-inch stainless American tanto blade into play, serrations ready for webbing, hose, or stubborn nylon. The matte black ABS handle rides light, glass breaker at the ready. For Texans who keep a tool in the console and a plan in their head, this is the tactical OTF that matches the pace.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB312LBKTS

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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
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  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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When Night Work Gets Serious, This OTF Knife Earns Its Place

Out past the last streetlight on a farm-to-market road, problems don’t wait for daylight. Fencing sags after a storm, a tie-down strap frays on the trailer, or a radiator hose lets go miles from town. That’s where a fast, reliable OTF knife belongs—close at hand, not buried in a glove box. This double-action tanto stays clipped, quiet, and ready until the moment you thumb the side switch and let the steel answer.

Why This OTF Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Texas doesn’t baby gear. Between August heat in a truck cab and cold, wet nights in a deer lease shack, a knife either holds up or it’s forgotten in a drawer. This OTF knife is built around a 3.5-inch stainless steel American tanto blade that shrugs off sweat, dust, and the grit that rides in on a West Texas wind. Partial serrations near the base chew through ranch rope, nylon webbing, and stubborn plastic, while the straight edge and sharp tip handle cleaner work—opening feed bags, scoring drywall, or cutting zip ties on a job site.

The matte black ABS handle keeps weight down without feeling hollow. Textured insets give your fingers reference even with sweat, oil, or rain in the mix. It’s the kind of handle that disappears against a black belt or the edge of a truck seat, but sits solid when you grip it hard and go to work.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence: Fast, Controlled, and Built for Real Emergencies

A true Texas OTF knife has to be more than a showpiece. The side-mounted sliding switch on this knife rides in a natural groove for your thumb, so one-handed deployment is easy from a pocket, duty belt, or truck visor. Push forward and the blade snaps out with a clean, mechanical certainty—no guesswork, no soft half-launch. Pull back and it retracts just as decisively, ready to ride concealed and secure until the next call.

For security staff working a Houston parking garage, or a volunteer firefighter answering a wreck on a rural county road, that quick, predictable action matters. The partial serrations near the handle will bite into seatbelts, web gear, or stubborn cordage, while the tanto tip gives you the strength to pry lightly or pierce heavy packaging without worrying about a delicate point snapping off.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Carry an OTF Knife

Most Texans don’t baby their blades with padded cases. This OTF knife is made to ride where it’s useful. The pocket clip anchors deep on a front pocket during a long day driving between job sites in Dallas–Fort Worth, or snaps over a belt for a late shift working security at a San Antonio venue. In a pickup, it rides equally well in the visor, console, or map pocket, always in the same place, always ready.

The 5.5-inch closed length hits a sweet spot: long enough to fill the hand when you draw and fire the blade, but compact enough that it doesn’t print loudly under a T-shirt or catch on the steering wheel. At 9 inches open, there’s enough reach for controlled cutting on the ranch or in a warehouse without the bulk of a huge fixed blade.

At the rear, a steel glass breaker sits at the pommel—small, pointed, and purpose-built. In a flood-prone low-water crossing outside Austin or a multi-car pileup along I-35, that breaker turns a clipped, quiet OTF into a real rescue tool. One solid strike at the bottom corner of a side window and you’ve opened an exit where there wasn’t one a moment before.

Texas Knife Law and This OTF: Knowing Where You Stand

Plenty of buyers still ask if a switchblade-style OTF knife is legal here. For Texas residents, the rules changed years ago. Under current state law, these automatic OTF and switchblade knives are legal to own and carry in most everyday situations. The state no longer draws a hard legal line just because a blade fires out the front instead of folding.

What does matter is where you carry and how long the blade is in certain sensitive locations. A 3.5-inch blade like this falls under the “ordinary” knife length that most Texans carry every day, but common sense still applies. Schools, secured government buildings, some courthouses, and certain private venues may have their own restrictions. Texas law doesn’t stop you from owning or carrying an OTF knife like this one in your truck, pocket, or at the lease, but you’re still expected to respect posted signs and local rules.

That’s why this design keeps a low, matte profile and rides clean under a shirt tail or inside the pocket. It gives you the speed and function of an automatic without the look-at-me shine. It’s built for people who want a serious tool that stays out of sight until there’s real work to do.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its ban on automatic and switchblade-style knives, including OTF knives, several years ago. You can legally buy, own, and carry an OTF knife like this across the state. The key limits now are location-based—schools, secured government buildings, some court facilities, and certain posted private properties can restrict all knives, not just automatics. For most Texans who keep an OTF knife in a pocket, on a belt, or in a truck, the law is on your side as long as you pay attention to posted rules.

Is this tactical OTF knife practical for ranch and lease use?

It is. The 3.5-inch stainless American tanto blade with partial serrations is well-suited to ranch chores and lease life. On a Panhandle cattle place, it’ll cut hay bale twine, slice poly rope, and open mineral bags cleanly. In South Texas brush, the strong tanto tip stands up to scraping and light prying while the serrations handle stubborn nylon straps and harness webbing. The ABS handle won’t swell, crack, or complain about being left in a hot truck all day.

How do I know this is the right OTF knife for my Texas carry?

If you want an OTF that fires fast, rides light, and doesn’t shout for attention, this profile fits. Think about where you live and work. If your days bounce between a work truck, job sites, late drives along county roads, or long shifts on private security, the combination of quick double-action deployment, partial serrations, and a glass breaker earns its keep. If you’re mostly opening boxes in an office, a simple folder might do—but if your nights stretch beyond the city lights, this is closer to what you’ll want in hand.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Belongs in Your Rotation

This isn’t a collector’s safe queen. It’s the kind of OTF knife a Texas hand tosses on the counter with keys and a billfold at the end of the day. Double-action deployment through a side switch, a 3.5-inch stainless tanto with serrations where they count, a glass breaker built into the pommel, and a matte black ABS handle that doesn’t mind sweat, dust, or spilled diesel.

Picture a late drive home on Highway 21 after a long shift, a storm line building in the rearview, or an early roll-out from San Angelo toward the lease in the dark. This OTF knife sits clipped in your pocket or parked in the console, not for show but for the small, ugly problems that show up between towns—frayed straps, torn hose, busted bags, and, when it goes bad, stuck doors and jammed windows. That’s when you’ll be glad you chose a knife that fires clean, cuts hard, and feels like it was made for the roads you actually drive.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Side switch
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes