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Raptor Strike Double-Edge OTF Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

41.99


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Midnight Raptor Double-Edge OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9390/image_1920?unique=6dc4e75

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West of Abilene on a two-lane at midnight, this Raptor OTF knife sits clipped in your pocket, double-edge blade ready under your thumb. The 3.375-inch dagger pops from the black aluminum handle with a hard, certain snap, then slides back just as clean. At 9 inches overall with a glassbreaker and USA-marked clip, it rides heavy, steady, and built for Texans who’d rather be over-prepared than caught short.

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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
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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When The Road Goes Quiet, The Raptor OTF Knife Doesn’t

Out past Sonora, where the interstate thins and the pump jacks blink red in the dark, a knife like this Raptor OTF knife feels less like gear and more like policy. It rides on your pocket, black aluminum against denim, double-edge dagger sitting in the handle until your thumb says otherwise. No drama. Just a hard, mechanical snap and 3.375 inches of steel pointed in both directions.

This isn’t a dress knife. At 9 inches overall and 8.9 ounces, it’s built for the truck console, the duty belt, the ranch gate at midnight when a shape in the mesquite doesn’t look right. The USA-marked clip and glassbreaker say what they need to without raising their voice.

Texas OTF Knife Reach With Street-Level Control

Texans who carry an OTF knife want reach and control in one motion. This Raptor gives you both. Closed, it measures 5.5 inches, filling the hand like a solid tool, not a toy. The side-mounted thumb slide lies where your thumb naturally tracks along the handle spine, so you’re not hunting for it under stress or with cold fingers on a Panhandle wind.

Push forward and the double-action mechanism sends the black dagger blade straight out the front with authority. No wrist flick, no extra motion. Pull back and it locks home just as firm. On a dark roadside between Burnet and Lampasas, that kind of predictable deployment beats any flashy gimmick. When you need steel, you need it now and you need it the same way every time.

How A Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Keep

A double-edge dagger blade is honest about what it is. It’s not for whittling peach wood under a Blanco shade tree. It’s for when things go wrong — a stubborn seat belt after a rollover outside Lubbock, heavy strap on a stock trailer in the rain, plastic, cord, and stubborn nylon you can’t afford to wrestle with. Both edges bite clean and quick.

The black matte finish shrugs off glare, useful when you’re working around live traffic or under parking lot lights in San Antonio and don’t need to draw extra eyes. Vent holes along the fuller keep weight centered, so even at 8.9 ounces the balance sits in the hand instead of dragging at the point. The aggressively textured aluminum handle doesn’t care if your palms are sweaty from August heat or numb from a Hill Country cold front. The grooves bite back just enough.

From Truck Console To West Texas Wind

Most Texas OTF knives live a simple pattern: truck console at sunrise, pocket by noon, back to the console after dark. This Raptor fits that rhythm. The clip holds firm on starched jeans in Fort Worth or ripstop duty pants in Houston, then anchors just as steady on a visor or MOLLE strap when you’re rolling between job sites outside Midland.

Out on a lease road or behind a strip mall at closing, the glassbreaker at the pommel earns its few extra ounces. One hard swing at tempered glass, and you’re through – out of a cab, into a cab, or helping someone who wasn’t ready for Texas black ice on an overpass.

Texas Knife Laws, OTF Knives, And Where This One Stands

In Texas, the law finally caught up to how people actually use their knives. Switchblades and OTF knives are legal to own and carry here. The main line that matters now is blade length and location. With its 3.375-inch blade, this Raptor OTF knife sits well under the 5.5-inch threshold that separates ordinary knives from what Texas calls "location-restricted" knives.

For most Texans, that means this OTF can ride in your pocket from Amarillo to Brownsville without running afoul of state law, whether you’re on the ranch, in your shop, or headed into town. Local rules can always shift, and courthouses, schools, and certain secured areas follow tighter standards, but as a day-to-day tool across the state, this Texas OTF knife is on the right side of the line.

Are OTF Knives Legal To Carry In Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF and switchblade knives are legal to own and carry. The key is blade length and where you bring it. With a blade under 5.5 inches, the Raptor stays in the "ordinary" category, so a Texan can legally carry it in most public places where knives are allowed. Certain locations still ban all knives, and private property rules apply, so common sense and local awareness still matter.

Why A Double-Edge Dagger Blade Works In Texas

On a ranch outside Giddings or at a late shift in Dallas, a double-edge blade changes how you think about space. You don’t always get room to set up a cut. This Raptor lets you work in close – one edge driving forward, the other edge working on the pull. That matters if you’re cutting a cinched-down tie-down strap in a stockyard alley or freeing gear in the cramped back of a service van. Every direction cuts, and every motion counts.

Built For Texas Carry Culture, Not A Glass Case

This isn’t the knife you buy to sit in foam. The USA-stamped pocket clip is made for real carry – clipped to the edge of an oilfield jacket in Odessa, tucked inside a boot on a deer lease near Junction, or riding inside waistband on a quiet walk through your neighborhood after dark. The knife’s weight reminds you it’s there, but the slim profile and flat clip keep it from printing loud.

The torx screws and solid aluminum frame speak to a simple truth a Texas knife dealer knows well: moving parts only matter if the frame can hold them for years. The double-action internals mean nothing without a body that can take grit, sweat, and the fine caliche dust that shows up in every truck floorboard from Uvalde to Utopia.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed its old switchblade ban, and OTF knives fall under that change. The important piece is blade length and place. At 3.375 inches, this Raptor stays under the 5.5-inch mark, so it’s treated as an ordinary knife under state law and is legal for everyday carry in most places where knives are allowed. Always watch for the usual off-limits locations like schools, certain government buildings, and secure facilities.

Is this Raptor OTF knife too big for everyday Texas carry?

It’s a large OTF, no way around that. At 5.5 inches closed and 8.9 ounces, it fills a pocket and a hand. For a Houston office job, it may live better in a truck console or bag. For someone running fence near Stephenville, working late shifts in Austin, or driving I-35 at odd hours, the size feels about right – substantial, sure-footed, and easy to find without looking.

Why choose this OTF knife over a folding knife in Texas?

Speed and certainty. A folding knife still needs you to swing the blade out and lock it. With this Raptor OTF knife, you get the same motion every time – thumb forward, blade out, double edge ready. On a windy job site in Lubbock, in a dark parking lot in El Paso, or when you’re on the ground working in the weeds along a fence line, that straight, predictable deployment can be the difference between fumbling and finishing.

A First Night Out With The Raptor, Somewhere Between Towns

You leave San Angelo late, headed toward Brady, two-lane blacktop running through open pasture. The Raptor rides clipped to your pocket, weight you can feel but don’t mind. When a tarp starts to flap in the mirror, you pull over on the shoulder, hazard lights throwing amber across the trailer. The blade snaps out clean into the cool air, double edge cutting slack and line without a second thought. Trucks thunder by, wind tugging at your jacket, but the knife stays steady in your grip. When you slide it closed and climb back in the cab, you don’t think about the steel or the mechanism. You just know, next time Texas throws you something in the dark, you’re not empty-handed.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 8.9
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes