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Covert Grip Quick‑Deploy OTF Knife - Matte Black

Price:

32.99


Stealth Fiber Quick-Deploy OTF Automatic Knife - Black
Stealth Fiber Quick-Deploy OTF Automatic Knife - Black
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Midnight Hold Quick‑Deploy OTF Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4902/image_1920?unique=b96aae1

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August heat hasn’t broken, and you’re easing a truck down a caliche lease road when a gate wire snaps. This OTF knife rides low in your pocket, rubber grip locked in even when your hands are slick. The double‑action thumb slide snaps the matte black clip‑point out clean for hose, wrap, or rope. Legal to carry from Amarillo to Brownsville, it stays unseen until it’s time to cut, pry, or punch out glass. Quiet tool. Fast answer.

32.99 32.99 USD 32.99

SB112SBKCP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
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  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
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When a Knife Needs to Stay Invisible Until It Doesn’t

Late summer, two‑lane blacktop outside San Angelo, storm pushing a wall of dust ahead of it. You’re loading feed, sweat and grit on your hands, when the tie‑down strap gives up. This knife has been riding deep in your front pocket all day, matte black against dark denim, forgotten until your fingers find the rubber grip and the silver thumb slide. One push, the blade jumps out straight, and the problem gets smaller.

This is a double‑action out‑the‑front made for the way people here actually carry. It doesn’t shout. It doesn’t flash. It waits flat and quiet until there’s cable, hose, or heavy plastic that needs to be cut now, not after you dig around for a folding blade.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For When Grip Matters

South of Victoria in a foggy pre‑dawn, or running fence east of Lubbock in a north wind, your hands aren’t always dry and clean. The rubber handle on this OTF knife sinks into your palm and stays put. No slick anodized aluminum, no pretty inlays — just a flat, rectangular handle with textured panels that bite through sweat, rain, or hydraulic oil.

At a hair over four inches closed and seven inches open, it fills the hand without printing loud in jeans or work pants. The deep‑carry clip tucks the handle down where a shirt hem covers it. You can climb into a dually, sit behind a desk in Dallas, or walk through a Hill Country brewery and it never announces itself.

The clip‑point blade runs just over two and a half inches. That’s long enough to work through nylon strap, feed sacks, taped boxes, or radiator hose, without turning the knife into a pocket anchor. The matte black finish cuts glare when you’re out under sun‑faded tin or a truck hood at noon.

How This Texas OTF Knife Handles Real Work

Blade slots near the spine keep the weight down and give you a little bite if you need to pinch and guide. The plain edge handles clean cuts — opening shrink wrap on pallets in a Fort Worth warehouse, trimming a fuel line in a Panhandle wind, or breaking down cardboard in a Houston back room. There’s no serration to hang up in rope when you need a smooth push cut.

The thumb slide sits where your hand expects it: side‑mounted, bright enough to find by touch, with enough resistance that it won’t fire by accident against a truck console or inside a work bag. Double‑action means you run the same slide to send the blade back home. No two‑hand fuss, no hunting for a liner lock. One motion out, one motion in.

At about 4.4 ounces, you feel it, but it doesn’t drag. That extra weight is the body, the internals, and the glassbreaker at the tail — not some oversized showpiece blade you never use. It feels like a tool, not jewelry.

OTF Knife Texas Law and Everyday Carry

For people who live here, the law isn’t background noise. It decides what goes in your pocket when you leave the house. In this state, automatic knives — including out‑the‑front switchblades — are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old ban on switchblades is gone. What matters now is how the law treats blades by location and, for certain people, by status.

What Texas Law Means For Carrying This Knife

With a blade under three inches, this out‑the‑front sits comfortably inside the general length that avoids trouble in most everyday situations, including places that restrict longer knives. As always, specific locations — schools, some government buildings, certain posted businesses — can have their own rules, and anyone with prior felony issues has extra ground to cover before they clip any knife into a pocket.

But for the ranch hand rolling into town, the electrician running calls across San Antonio, or the nurse keeping a tool in the console for seatbelt and gauze, this double‑action automatic fits current Texas law and real‑world carry. It gives you the speed of an automatic without demanding you dress around it.

Tucked in a Texas Pocket, Ready for Bad Roads and Worse Days

Most days, a knife like this just trims a zip tie behind a feed store in Abilene or opens a shipment in a Midland service yard. Some days, it becomes more than that. The glassbreaker on the butt isn’t decoration. In a Central Expressway pileup or a flooded low crossing in the Hill Country, that hardened tip turns a side window from barrier into exit. Small detail, big difference when seconds stretch out.

Texas Use Cases This Knife Was Built For

In a bass boat on Rayburn, you’ve got braided line, stubborn knots, and the occasional buried hook. On the job in a refinery shadow on the Gulf Coast, you’re cutting heavy plastic, woven sacks, and flex conduit. In the dark cab of an old one‑ton north of Amarillo, you’re freeing up frozen straps before dawn. The same motion — thumb forward, blade out — handles all of it.

The matte black finish keeps reflection down when you’re working around livestock at night or easing a cut in a crowded place. No bright mirror flash, no attention. Just a clean edge doing its job and disappearing again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including out‑the‑front switchblades, are legal for most adults to own and carry. The old switchblade ban was repealed. You still have to respect restricted locations — schools, secure government areas, some posted private properties — and anyone with specific legal restrictions on weapons needs to follow those. But for the average Texan, an automatic like this is lawful everyday carry.

Will this OTF work with gloves in Texas heat and cold?

Across a South Texas jobsite in August or a Panhandle lease in January, you’re often in gloves. The side thumb slide is raised and firm enough to find and drive with leather or work gloves on, and the rubber handle texture keeps the knife from twisting when your grip isn’t perfect. Hot, cold, or slick, the action stays the same: straight out, straight back.

Is this the right OTF if I only want to carry one knife?

If you’re looking for a single knife to ride with you from job to grocery run to Friday‑night drive, this is built for that lane. Compact enough to vanish against your pocket, stout enough to handle real work, and straightforward to run under stress. You give up fancy finishes and showpiece length, but you gain a tool that feels natural slipping into a pair of jeans in Waco or work pants in Odessa and doesn’t come out until it has something to do.

A Knife That Makes Sense on Texas Roads

Picture a long day finally easing to a stop off I‑10 outside Kerrville. The sun’s low, the truck’s ticking, and you remember the bale string you swore you’d cut earlier. Your hand drops to your pocket without thinking. Rubber, metal, one push. The blade snaps out, string parts, and the day moves on. No drama. No fuss.

This out‑the‑front isn’t for showing off on a glass counter. It’s for the center console of a work truck in Corpus, the front pocket of a tech walking into a tower outside Sweetwater, or the bedside table in a small house on the edge of town. Quiet, fast, legal, and ready. The kind of knife people here carry because it works, not because anyone told them to.

Blade Length (inches) 2.625
Overall Length (inches) 7
Closed Length (inches) 4.125
Weight (oz.) 4.4
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Rubber
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes