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Stealth KRISS Deployment OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

Price:

36.99


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Midnight KRISS Covert OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9247/image_1920?unique=3446243

4 sold in last 24 hours

Highway’s empty, just mesquite and headlight glow. This Texas OTF knife rides flat in your pocket or console, all-black and quiet until you thumb the slide. The KRISS-style dagger blade snaps out clean, double-action, ready for seatbelt webbing, nylon, or a busted latch. Solid aluminum in the hand, glass-breaker at the tail. Not a showpiece. A tool you keep close when the road gets long and the night gets strange.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB929KBK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Double/Single Action
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OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For After Dark

The highway west of Ozona goes long and empty after sunset. Wind buffets the truck, radio fades, and it’s just you, the dark, and what you chose to keep within reach. In the console, this all-black OTF knife waits flat and silent, KRISS blade tucked inside aluminum, until your thumb drives the slide and the steel answers.

This isn’t a show knife. It’s built for how Texans actually carry: in a truck, in a boot, on a belt, or clipped inside a pocket while the heat’s still coming off the caliche. When someone searches for an OTF knife in Texas, they’re not chasing gadgetry. They’re looking for a fast, sure tool that doesn’t argue when it’s time to work.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Belongs In Your Console

The first thing you notice is the weight. A little under eight ounces, solid in the palm, no rattle. The all-black aluminum handle is long enough at five and a half inches to fill a gloved hand, but flat enough to disappear between seat and console or behind a truck visor without printing through.

The double-action mechanism runs off a side-mounted slide. Forward and the 3.625-inch KRISS-style dagger blade punches out of the front with a straight, mechanical snap. Back and it vanishes again, just as clean. No wrist flick, no drama — one motion, either way. That plain-edged steel is built for cutting nylon tie-downs, stubborn shrink-wrap, paracord, or seatbelt webbing without hanging up on serrations.

For Texans who work long miles from town — pipeline runs outside Midland, lease roads in the Panhandle, ranch work south of San Angelo — this kind of OTF knife turns into a quiet, constant partner. You don’t think about it until the moment your hand moves without asking.

Carried Quiet, Used Hard: A Texas OTF Knife In The Field

Step out of the truck near a pumpjack with the wind driving dust across the lease road. The knife rides clipped inside your front pocket, matte-black clip facing out, metal against denim. No bright logos, no shine — just a slim, rectangular handle with chamfered edges that doesn’t bite into your thigh when you sit or crawl under a trailer.

That KRISS dagger profile isn’t decoration. The wavy geometry and dual edges give you a narrow, thrust-ready point with meat behind it, while keeping enough straight edge to slice tape, hose, feed sacks, or thick plastic out behind the barn. In a Houston parking lot or a Waco walk back to the truck late at night, it carries like a defensive tool — fast, indexed, and ready from either pocket.

The glass-breaker tip on the pommel is more than a selling line. Think about low-water crossings after a Hill Country storm, or a roadside rollover on 281 where a stranger’s car has gone into a fence. That hardened point at the tail of the handle will take a side window in one hard hit. The nylon sheath that comes with it gives you options: clip carry when you’re in town, sheath it horizontal on a ranch belt when you’re working fence or running the line.

Texas OTF Knife Law: How This Blade Fits The Rules

Texas used to be touchy about automatic knives and switchblades. That changed years back. Under current Texas law, an automatic OTF knife like this is legal to own and carry openly or concealed for most adults, statewide. The key number in the statute is blade length.

With a 3.625-inch blade, this knife comes in under the five-and-a-half-inch threshold that defines a "location-restricted knife." That means it avoids the special limitations placed on longer blades. You still can’t carry it into the usual restricted places — schools, certain government buildings, and a few other carved-out locations — but for day-to-day Texas carry, it’s within legal limits for size and type.

So when someone asks if an OTF knife is legal in Texas, the short answer now is yes, for adults, so long as you respect restricted locations and understand that anything under about five and a half inches gives you more freedom of movement. This particular build was designed to live inside that legal window while still giving you a full, working-length blade.

How Texas Knife Culture Meets Modern OTF Design

Old-timers might still run a slipjoint or a lockback they bought in a Fort Worth feed store in the eighties, but even they’ll admit: a double-action out-the-front is faster when seconds count. This knife bridges that gap. Traditional steel in a modern body, with a deployment that doesn’t care if your hands are cold, wet from a Trinity River cast, or slick with oil on a rig floor north of Odessa.

Built For Texas Conditions, Not Glass Cases

The steel dagger blade wears a matte black finish to cut glare on open country drives and keep a low profile in town. At just over nine inches overall when open, it feels full-sized in the hand, but still tucks away easily in a truck door pocket or center console.

Aluminum handles take the heat better than some plastics when your truck’s been baking in a West Texas lot all afternoon. The screws along the body keep the internals tight under dust, sweat, and vibration. The slide button tracks along a straight channel, giving you clear feedback under the thumb — you feel it lock on extension and retraction. No guessing.

Out by a stock tank near Abilene, it’ll slice hay-bale twine and cut small rope without drama. In a Dallas warehouse, it chews through box straps and packing without bogging down. On a night shift security run in Laredo, it serves as a compact, quickly accessed defensive option that doesn’t scream for attention.

Texas Use Cases: From Panhandle Wind To Gulf Humidity

In Amarillo wind, your hands go numb faster than you think. The rectangular handle gives you a clear, repeatable grip even through work gloves, and the positive slide means you don’t have to fight a tiny button. Down on the Gulf Coast, where humidity lives in your clothes, the matte finish and simple construction make maintenance straightforward: wipe, oil, back on the belt.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF switchblades are legal for adults to own and carry, both openly and concealed. The main concern is blade length. Knives with blades over 5.5 inches are classified as "location-restricted" and can’t be carried in certain places like schools, some government buildings, and a handful of other protected locations. With a blade under that limit, this knife avoids those added restrictions, though you still have to follow the general location rules for any knife.

Is this KRISS OTF knife practical for everyday Texas carry?

It is, if your everyday looks anything like real Texas life. The 3.625-inch dagger blade handles daily cutting — boxes in a Houston warehouse, nylon straps in a San Antonio yard, feed bags in the Hill Country — while the all-black build and pocket clip keep it low-profile in jeans or work pants. For those who split time between city errands and ranch work, it rides easy yet stays ready for harder moments, from roadside glass-breaking to quick defensive deployment in a dark parking lot.

Should I keep this Texas OTF knife on me or in the truck?

Most Texans will do both, depending on the day. Clipped in the pocket, it’s a fast, one-handed tool you forget about until you need it. In the truck console or door pocket, it turns into a dedicated emergency blade for wrecks, flash floods, or late-night trouble at a rest stop. The nylon sheath lets you run it on a belt when you’re working land outside town, then shift it back to pocket carry when you head into the city.

First Use: A Night On A Texas Two-Lane

You’re coming back from a lease road outside Jacksboro, dust dry on the tailgate, sky gone to ink. A pair of brake lights blink on the shoulder ahead, hazard flashers dead, car sitting crooked against the bar ditch. You pull over because that’s what people here still do.

Door open, boots hit gravel. You feel the weight of the knife where you clipped it inside your pocket an hour ago without thinking. One motion and the blade is out, matte-black steel catching just enough starlight to show its edge. A stuck seatbelt gives way in a single cut. A side window gives under the glass-breaker with one hard strike.

When the dust settles and the trooper finally rolls up, the knife goes back into your pocket, quiet as it came out. No drama. Just a Texas OTF knife that did exactly what you carried it for — ready for the next long stretch of road.

Blade Length (inches) 3.625
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 7.78
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath