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Carbon Surge Double-Action Tanto OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber

Price:

36.99


Stealth Weave Quick-Index OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black
Stealth Weave Quick-Index OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black
36.99 36.99
Crimson Weave Dual-Action OTF Knife - Red Carbon Fiber
Crimson Weave Dual-Action OTF Knife - Red Carbon Fiber
36.99 36.99

Midnight Spur Tactical OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/733/image_1920?unique=ff549ff

6 sold in last 24 hours

South of Abilene, a fence job runs past dark. This Texas OTF knife rides deep in your pocket until the light’s gone and you still have wire to cut and tarp to trim. One thumb on the slide, the black tanto snaps out clean and certain. Blue carbon fiber settles into your grip, glass breaker waiting if a rollover goes bad on a caliche road home. Quiet in the truck, ready on the hip—this is the OTF Texans actually carry.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB291LBLCF

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip
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The sun’s dropped behind a mesquite windbreak outside San Angelo, but the work around the pens isn’t done. Gloves stay on, wire still needs cutting, and you’re balanced on a cattle guard with no room to fumble. One thumb finds the slide on your pocketed OTF and the blade jumps straight out front, locked and ready. No drama. No searching for a flipper tab. Just that clean, mechanical snap and a black tanto edge that feels at home in your hand.

Texas OTF knife confidence when you’re working past dark

Out here, an OTF knife earns its keep in seconds. This one runs a double-action drive you can cycle without thinking—push forward for deployment, pull back to retract, all in a straight line. At 5.625 inches closed, it disappears under a deep-carry clip in jeans or work pants, but the 3.75-inch American tanto blade gives you full-size reach for strap, hose, or feed-bag duty. The blue alloy frame with carbon fiber inlays settles into your grip whether you’re sweating through August in Laredo or breaking ice in a Panhandle cold snap.

Built for Texas hands, Texas work

The slide isn’t loose, and it isn’t a fight. It tracks with a firm, deliberate stroke that feels right even when your fingers are stiff from a Hill Country winter front. That repeatable action matters when you’re on a ladder trimming shade cloth, leaning across a trailer rail, or kneeling in caliche trying to reach a stuck strap hook.

American tanto geometry for real Texas materials

The American tanto tip carries extra meat at the point, which pays off when you’re punching into heavy plastic, carpet in a work truck, or stubborn nylon straps. The long, straight edge chews through cardboard, feed bags, and tape from warehouse jobs in Dallas to oilfield yards in Midland. The glossy black coating cuts glare under high sun and shrugs off the scuffs that come with daily carry in dust, sweat, and road grit.

Why this OTF knife belongs in a Texas pocket, console, or kit

Most knives look good on a counter. This one makes more sense in a glovebox, on a belt, or clipped inside a pair of work pants. At 8.17 ounces, it has enough weight to feel honest in the hand without dragging your waistband. The deep-carry clip tucks it low, so it doesn’t print when you’re walking into a Houston office or a courthouse in Amarillo where you’d rather keep your gear quiet until you’re back at the truck.

The carbon fiber inlays aren’t just for show. That textured weave adds traction when sweat, oil, or rain hit your palms—conditions anyone who’s worked a jobsite in Corpus or a lease road in East Texas knows too well. And when you don’t want it in your pocket, the included nylon sheath rides clean on a belt, out of the way of seatbelts and tool pouches.

Texas OTF knife law: where this switchblade fits in your rights

For years, Texans had to dance around automatic knives and switchblade rules. That changed. As of current Texas law, OTF knives—switchblades, autos, and other spring-driven blades—are legal to own and carry for adults in most places, as long as you’re not in a restricted location like schools, certain government buildings, or other posted areas. State law now focuses more on where and how you carry than on the fact that it’s an automatic.

Understanding OTF knives under Texas law

This OTF knife is a true double-action automatic: the blade springs out and back by thumb slide. In Texas, that mechanism is no longer the issue it once was. The main concern is being mindful of location restrictions and using any blade responsibly. If you’re carrying into a courthouse, school, or secured facility, that’s where you’ll run into trouble—regardless of whether it’s an OTF, folder, or fixed blade.

Why Texans reach for an OTF instead of a folder

With the legal handcuffs off for most adults, the question shifts from “Can I carry this?” to “Does this make sense for how I live?” For ranch hands outside Kerrville, linemen in the Valley, or night-shift security around Houston warehouses, the one-handed, straight-line deployment of an OTF knife means fewer dropped tools and fewer misses in tight spaces. That’s the advantage the law now lets you actually use.

OTF knife Texas performance: from Hill Country rock to Gulf humidity

Texas is hard on gear. Dust in West Texas eats cheap pivots, coastal air around Galveston attacks weak finishes, and the constant in-and-out of a knife from your pocket on job after job will expose flimsy builds fast. This OTF knife’s steel blade, black-coated for corrosion resistance, holds up against sweat and humidity when you’re working bayside, then cleans up with a quick wipe and a drop of oil. The exposed hardware and frame construction make it easier to blow out grit from a South Plains dust storm with a shot of compressed air or a rinse, then get back to work.

The blade vents lighten the look and reduce drag when cutting thick cardboard or layered plastic wrap in warehouse work from Fort Worth to El Paso. They also give dust and grime fewer places to hide along the spine. Paired with the strong tanto tip, this design handles the mixed chores of a Texas day: rope in the morning, pallets at midday, seatbelt or window glass in the rare emergency when a rollover on a farm-to-market road turns bad.

Glass breaker, deep carry, and sheath: Texas carry options that make sense

Not every day in Texas ends with sirens, but when it does, you’re glad you planned ahead. The integrated glass breaker on the pommel is a hardened point meant for tempered vehicle windows—exactly the kind you’ll meet on a rural highway accident or a flooded low-water crossing near Wimberley. It rides quiet until needed, and it doesn’t snag on pockets or gloves.

When clipped, the knife sits low and secure in standard denim or heavier canvas work pants. Riding passenger in a company truck in Odessa? Drop it into the center console, slide still easy to find without looking. Heading into a place you’d rather leave it behind? It slides clean into the nylon sheath and can stay in the truck, tucked out of sight but within reach when the day’s done and you’re back on your own time.

Questions Texas buyers ask about OTF knife Texas carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for most adult Texans, OTF knives—switchblades and other automatics—are legal to own and carry. Texas removed the old switchblade ban, so the mechanism itself is no longer the problem. The key is where you take it: schools, courthouses, some government buildings, and secure facilities are either off-limits or tightly controlled. Outside those restricted locations, an OTF like this can be part of your everyday carry, whether that’s ranch work outside Abilene or night shifts in a San Antonio warehouse. Always check current local rules and posted signs before you walk in anywhere questionable.

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

At 5.625 inches closed and 8.17 ounces, it’s a full-sized tool, but the deep-carry clip keeps it riding low and steady in jeans, work pants, or shorts. Around town in Austin or Lubbock, it disappears under a shirt tail. On the job, the weight feels like a benefit—enough mass to be sure of your grip when you’re hanging off a ladder, reaching under a stock trailer, or working around heavy equipment.

Should I choose this OTF over a regular folder for Texas use?

If your days are mostly desks and light boxes, a simple folder might be enough. If you spend time on fences, trailers, rigs, patrol, or late-night drives on two-lane roads, the one-handed, straight-line deployment and instant retraction of this OTF knife is worth it. Under gloves, in rain, or in a cramped vehicle cab, you don’t have to hunt for a thumb stud or worry about closing a blade near your knuckles. For Texans who measure gear by how it behaves when things go sideways, this design makes more sense than a basic folder.

Picture the first real night you carry it. You’re parked on a gravel lot outside a feed store, last light fading over a windmill and a line of power poles. You’ve got one hand on a load strap, the other finds the slide without looking. The blade kicks out, clean and certain, and the job gets done in one motion. No fumbling. No second try. Just a blue carbon fiber handle, a black tanto edge, and a Texas evening that asks for a knife you can trust without thinking about it.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.625
Weight (oz.) 8.17
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath