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Carbon Shadow Rapid-Deploy Tactical Assisted Knife - Carbon Fiber

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8.99


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Midnight Carbon Spring-Assisted Tactical Knife - Black CF

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Late run back from the deer lease, you’re tossing gear in the truck bed, cutting rope and busted zip ties in the dark. This spring-assisted tactical knife snaps open with a thumb nudge, the black drop point biting clean through cord, hose, and feed bags. Carbon fiber-pattern scales stay grippy when your hands are slick, and the deep pocket clip keeps it low and out of sight. This is the kind of knife Texans leave clipped in the pocket, day in, day out.

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KS1972CB

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Midnight Carbon Spring-Assisted Tactical Knife Built For Real Texas Use

Long after the sun is gone behind a mesquite line, you’re still out by the pens, cutting hay string and feed sacks by truck light. That’s where this spring-assisted tactical knife earns its keep. One nudge on the tab and the black drop point blade snaps open, steady and sure, ready for whatever the day left unfinished.

It’s a modern folder that feels at home in a truck console, on a ranch gate, or riding quiet in the front pocket of jeans that see more dust than office carpet.

Why This Knife Works As An Everyday Carry Across Texas

Texas days swing from office air-conditioning to caliche dust in a single afternoon. This knife is built to cross that line without fuss. Closed, it sits at about four and three-quarter inches, riding low on a pocket with a black clip that doesn’t shine or shout. At a little under five ounces, it has enough weight to feel solid but not so much that it drags on light shorts or work pants.

The spring-assisted action matters when you’re juggling feed buckets, cables, or a stubborn package on the loading dock. You don’t have to fight it open; the blade clears the handle cleanly with one thumb, and the liner lock drops back into place just as easily when you’re done. That kind of no-drama deployment is exactly what people expect from a reliable pocket knife in this state.

Blade Built For Texas Materials, Not Just Cardboard

The black matte drop point isn’t about looks alone. That profile handles the kinds of cutting Texans actually do: slicing poly rope around a stock trailer, trimming irrigation hose, popping banding off a pallet in a warehouse, or breaking down heavy cardboard boxes behind a feed store.

At about three and a quarter inches, the plain edge gives you enough working length without feeling unwieldy in tighter spots, like cutting plastic under a sink or trimming tie-down straps inside a truck bed. The spine has jimping for your thumb, so when you bear down on a stubborn cut, the blade doesn’t wander. It’s the sort of detail you don’t notice until you need it and then wonder why every knife doesn’t have it.

Handle And Grip That Make Sense In Texas Conditions

From August heat in a Houston parking lot to a cold Panhandle wind off an empty field, grip changes fast when sweat, dust, or light rain hit your hands. The carbon fiber-pattern handle scales are textured so the knife doesn’t feel slick when your palms are wet, or when you’re wearing thin work gloves.

The deep finger groove locks your hand against the frame during tougher cuts, like stripping wire on a deer feeder or carving down a broken PVC stub in a backyard repair. The contour keeps the knife from twisting if you’re cutting down feed bags in a barn aisle or working with greasy hands in a shop on the I-35 corridor.

Carrying A Spring-Assisted Tactical Knife Under Texas Law

Texas knife law is more straightforward now than it used to be. Spring-assisted folders like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults across the state. Switchblades and assisted openers were cleared years ago, as long as you’re not carrying somewhere restricted.

Where you have to pay attention is location and blade length. This blade sits under four inches, which keeps it practical for everyday carry in many workplaces that set their own rules. State law treats a knife like this as a common pocket knife, not a prohibited weapon, but schools, certain government buildings, and some private properties can still post stricter limits.

Texas Carry Culture And How This Knife Fits

Most Texans don’t advertise what they’re carrying. The black pocket clip keeps this knife low and quiet on the seam of a pair of jeans, whether you’re in a small-town hardware store, a Hill Country brewery, or walking into an office in Dallas. It comes out fast when needed and disappears just as quickly when the job is done.

In gloveboxes from El Paso to Beaumont, people keep a simple rule: flashlight, registration, and a knife that actually cuts. This one fits that role well, holding its edge through a week of small jobs without becoming another rattle in the door pocket.

Where A Spring-Assisted Tactical Knife Sees Real Use Here

On a lease road outside of Sonora, it cuts baling twine off a load of square bales in a stiff wind. In a San Antonio backyard, it breaks down moving boxes and trims landscape fabric around fresh laid rock. On the coast, it opens bait bags and strips line without worrying about a slick grip. Out in West Texas, it rides clipped in your pocket on long drives between job sites, there when a quick cut saves ten minutes of wrestling with stubborn plastic or strapping.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Tactical Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

OTF and other automatic knives are legal for most adults to own and carry in Texas, as long as you stay within state law and avoid restricted places like certain government buildings and schools. This particular knife is spring-assisted, not an OTF, so it falls into the common folding knife category that Texans routinely carry. Still, private businesses and local rules can set tighter standards, so it’s worth knowing the policies where you work or frequent.

Is this spring-assisted knife a good everyday carry for Texas work and ranch tasks?

For most people working in Texas conditions, yes. The blade length is right for daily tasks, the drop point profile handles rope, hose, and boxes without drama, and the textured carbon fiber-pattern handle keeps it grounded in sweaty or dusty hands. It’s the kind of knife you’ll use to cut open mineral sacks in a barn, trim tape off wiring under a dash, or slice through stubborn nylon straps in a hot parking lot.

How does this compare to carrying a larger tactical knife in Texas?

Larger tactical folders have their place, but they draw more attention in town and feel bulky in lighter clothes during the long warm season. This knife stays compact closed, opens fast when you need it, and rides low enough that you forget it’s there until a job appears. For many Texans who move between job sites, city errands, and weekends on the water or the lease, that balance matters more than sheer size.

A Knife Ready For Your Next Texas Day

Picture an early start, before the heat gets serious. You’re loading coolers and gear into the truck, cutting tape, trimming rope, tightening things down. The knife is clipped in your pocket, easy to forget until it’s needed. Later, you’re in town opening packages, cutting strapping in a warehouse, or dealing with a stubborn cable tie in a parking lot. Same knife, same smooth spring-assisted snap, same steady grip.

From long county roads to tight city lots, this spring-assisted tactical folder doesn’t try to be a showpiece. It just opens fast, cuts clean, and disappears back into your pocket when the work is done.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock