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Heritage Road Push-Button Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Marble

Price:

16.99


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Midnight Highway Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Marble

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1563/image_1920?unique=2ac728f

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West Texas blacktop after sundown. Gas stations spread thin, trucks running hard, and you’ve still got miles to cover. This stiletto automatic rides slim in the pocket, black marble handle against polished steel, ready with a clean push of the bolster. The bayonet-style blade snaps to attention, steady and straight. It’s the kind of automatic you keep on you for long hauls, small repairs, and the quiet comfort of knowing your gear will answer when called.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB198HDBK

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  • 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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Stiletto Automatic Knife Built for Long Texas Highways

There’s a stretch of two-lane between Abilene and San Angelo where the radio fades, the sky opens up, and the only light ahead is your own. That’s where a knife like this earns its keep. Slim in the pocket, solid in the hand, and ready with a single push when you’re parked on the shoulder, working by headlight.

This isn’t some glass-case collectible. It’s a rider’s stiletto automatic with a polished bayonet-style blade and black marble handle that looks right at home next to chrome and powder-coated steel. It feels like part of the bike, even when it’s riding in your jeans instead of your saddlebag.

Why This Stiletto Automatic Feels Right in Texas Carry

Driving across the Panhandle or rolling through Houston traffic, you don’t have time for fussy gear. The push-button bolster on this stiletto automatic knife fires the 3.875-inch polished blade fast and clean, one-handed, no wrist tricks, no drama. The safety on the spine locks it down when you’re climbing off the bike or sliding it back into a pocket before walking into a bar or gas station.

Closed, it’s right at 5 inches. Long enough to get a full, confident grip, slim enough to ride clipped inside your front pocket or sit quiet in a truck console. At about four and a half ounces, you feel it, but it doesn’t drag. That matters when you’re carrying all day—from a jobsite in Midland to a late run down I-35.

Texas Road Use Cases: From Bike to Tailgate

Picture a fuel stop outside Kerrville. You’re stretching your back, checking straps, and notice a loose tie-down on the trailer. This stiletto automatic comes out smooth from the pocket clip, blade snapping open in a straight line. Steel edge bites through nylon and stray tape without wandering because of that narrow stiletto profile.

At a Friday night high school game in a small town, you’re at the tailgate, cutting open a bag of charcoal, trimming stubborn plastic wrap off a cooler, or scoring thick cardboard for a makeshift cutting board. The polished blade wipes clean on a shop rag or paper towel, and the acrylic handle shrugs off sweat, dust, and a little grease.

Later, parked behind a diner in Lubbock, you’re using the tip to open mail from the glove box or slice a length of paracord for a quick fix. The action is repeatable and sure—press the bolster button, feel the spring drive the blade out with a distinct mechanical snap, close it with the same deliberate confidence.

Texas Knife Law Confidence: Automatic, Legal, and Straightforward

Folks still walk into shops asking if a switchblade or stiletto automatic is legal here. For years it was a gray area in people’s minds, but the law caught up. In Texas today, this style of automatic knife is legal to own and carry for most adults, so long as the blade falls under what the state calls a “location-restricted” length. This one, with its sub-4-inch blade, sits on the safe side of common concerns for everyday carry.

You still respect posted rules—courthouses, schools, and certain secured venues have their own bans—but from Amarillo feed stores to Austin bike nights, this automatic stiletto is built for lawful pocket carry. The safety switch on the spine isn’t just peace of mind in the jeans; it’s practical in a state where you might move from open fields to crowded barstools in a single evening.

How This Automatic Rides in Real Texas Life

In ranch country near Brownwood, it lives clipped inside work jeans, coming out for feed bags, hay-string, and stubborn packaging. In Dallas, it’s a discrete city companion, a polished blade hidden inside a black marble handle that doesn’t shout for attention until it’s needed. On the coast near Galveston, it’s a truck-console regular—ready for dock line, bait packaging, or quick fixes in salty air.

Build Details a Texas Knife Dealer Would Point Out

Start with the blade: a slim, polished steel stiletto, 3.875 inches from bolster to tip. It’s ground straight and true, meant for piercing and clean slicing, not prying or abuse. A longtime Texas knife dealer would tell you that up front—great for daily cutting, cord, plastic, light chores; not the tool you jam into a rusty bolt.

The handle is black acrylic, polished to a gloss that pairs with the chrome hardware and shield-style emblem. That acrylic doesn’t swell like bone or micarta in humidity, which matters if you spend August in San Antonio heat or December in a damp East Texas pine lot. It wipes dry, doesn’t care about sweat, and keeps its look after rides in dusty wind.

Bolsters and hardware are bright, not tactical matte. This is more highway chrome than blackout tactical. The exposed pivot and handle screws lend it a mechanical feel, like visible fasteners on a custom bike. The back-side pocket clip anchors it deep enough to stay put when you swing a leg over the seat or slide into a bench seat on an old Ford.

Action, Safety, and Everyday Texas Carry

The deployment is where this automatic earns loyal pockets. Press the bolster-area push button and the blade jumps to full lock with a crisp, unmistakable sound—easy to work even with gloves or cold hands during a Hill Country winter ride. Lock it down with the safety before tossing it into a tank bag, console, or vest pocket to keep it from firing under pressure.

At 8.875 inches overall when open, it gives you reach and control without feeling unwieldy at a tailgate or under a shop light. You can choke up just behind the bolster for fine work or grip further back for more leverage when you’re bearing down on thicker material.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Automatic Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

People often mix up OTF knives and automatics like this stiletto. In Texas, both switchblades and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry, as long as you respect blade-length rules and location restrictions. This stiletto automatic sits in that legal lane for everyday carry, but you still avoid restricted places like secured government buildings, certain events, and school grounds as required by Texas law.

Is this stiletto automatic a good everyday carry for Texas riders?

For riders, it fits the life. The slim handle and pocket clip ride steady in denim, and the push-button action works when you’re wearing gloves at a Hill Country overlook or sweating through a South Texas afternoon. It’s sharp and pointed enough for cable ties, straps, and quick roadside fixes, but still clean and polished enough to slip into a back pocket when you’re walking into a roadside diner.

How does this compare to a Texas OTF knife for daily use?

Compared to a Texas OTF knife, this stiletto automatic opens out of the side, not the front, but gives you similar one-handed speed and a locked blade. OTF fans like the double-action slide; stiletto carriers tend to prefer the classic push-button feel and slimmer profile. If your days move between work, road miles, and evenings out, this automatic rides more like a dressier, road-ready option while still giving you quick, reliable deployment.

Where This Knife Belongs in Your Texas Day

Picture yourself pulling off on a farm-to-market road as the sun drops behind mesquite and power lines. You crack the tailgate, reach into your pocket, and feel the familiar shape of the black marble handle. One press and the blade snaps open, catching the last light. You use it to cut cord, open a box, or slice a stubborn strap, then close it and slip it back into your jeans. No fuss, no show—just a reliable automatic that fits the roads you run and the way you live here.

Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 8.875
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.52
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Stiletto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Acrylic
Button Type Push
Theme Harley
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip Yes