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Stealth Linear Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

16.99


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Midnight Vector Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5368/image_1920?unique=abe3fcd

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Hot cab of a half-ton, glovebox rattling on washboard caliche. This OTF knife sits flat in the console, disappears in a pocket, and snaps to life with a clean thumb stroke. The 3.5-inch stainless clip point handles feed sacks, hose, and stubborn packaging without complaint. At 9 inches open, matte black and all business, it feels like the tool you meant to bring. For Texans who keep their gear quiet but ready, this is the blade that matches the mindset.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB312LBKCP

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Quiet Readiness in a Texas Parking Lot

The asphalt’s throwing heat back at you in a grocery lot off I-35. You’ve got a busted pallet in the truck bed, feed bags tied in plastic that doesn’t want to tear, and not much shade. Your hand goes to your pocket and finds a slim, matte shape you forget is there until you need it. Thumb rides that side-mounted slide, blade jumps straight out, and the job stops being a fight.

That’s where a low-profile out-the-front knife earns its keep here: not on a display case, but in small, hot moments when you want a tool that just works and then disappears again.

Why This OTF Knife Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

Everyday carry in this state is a mix of heat, dust, and long days between towns. A knife that’s too heavy ends up in the glovebox. Too flashy and it never leaves the house. This slim OTF knife hits the middle ground Texans actually use.

Closed, it sits at 5.5 inches, straight and flat. The matte black ABS handle doesn’t glare in the sun, doesn’t chew up your jeans, and doesn’t shout for attention at a gas station counter in Luling or Lubbock. When you thumb that linear slide, the 3.5-inch stainless clip point drives out clean, double-action, and locks in place with a solid, mechanical certainty you can feel even with dry, work-stiff hands.

Overall at 9 inches open, you get real leverage for breaking down boxes behind a strip mall shop in Houston or cutting nylon rope in a Hill Country pasture. Then a pull on the slide brings the blade straight back into the handle, sealed and safe before it rides back into your pocket or onto your belt.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence: Law, Logic, and Everyday Use

People still walk into shops and ask if a switchblade is trouble here. Used to be. Not anymore. Under current Texas knife law, automatic and out-the-front knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, so long as you’re not taking them into the few restricted places the law still names out. That means this OTF knife can ride with you from Amarillo to Brownsville without you wondering if the mechanism itself is a problem.

What matters more now is how you carry it and how you use it. The deep-carry clip keeps it seated low in the pocket of work pants or pressed slacks when you’re headed into an office in Dallas. For those who prefer belt or bag carry, the nylon sheath offers another option—easy to stage in a truck console, on a pack strap, or on a ranch hand’s belt where dust, sweat, and movement are part of the day.

Are OTF Knives Legal to Carry in Texas?

Yes. Switchblades and OTF knives are legal to own and carry in Texas for most adults, thanks to changes in state law several years back. The main limits now fall on location, not the mechanism. You still need to respect posted restrictions and specific prohibited places the law calls out, but carrying an automatic OTF knife like this one in your pocket, on your belt, or in your truck is legal across most of the state. This gives Texas buyers room to choose the tool that fits their work and lifestyle without worrying that the thumb slide makes it off-limits.

Built for the Land and the Work, Not the Display Case

Texas is hard on tools. Stainless steel on this blade isn’t a buzzword; it’s the difference between wiping dust and grit off after a windblown day on the lease outside Abilene and worrying about orange spots showing up by the weekend. The matte finish shrugs off glare when you’re working along a fence line at noon, and the plain edge cuts clean through cardboard, feed sacks, irrigation tubing, and nylon straps without tearing.

The long, straight handle gives you leverage without hot spots. Textured grip panels on both sides keep the knife seated even when your hands are slick with sweat, motor oil in a driveway in San Angelo, or river water on a Guadalupe float. Those small torx screws along the handle aren’t decoration; they mean the knife can be serviced, tightened, and kept running instead of thrown away when it’s seen a season or two of real use.

At the end of the handle sits a glass-breaker tip—small, pointed, and there when the day goes sideways. On two-lane blacktop between small towns, that’s not a gimmick. It’s one more way to get out of a rolled truck window, pop a stuck door, or help someone else when the nearest trooper is still twenty minutes out.

Texas Use Cases: From Shop Floor to Lease Road

In a Houston warehouse, the quick-deploy blade turns shrink wrap and cardboard into seconds’ work instead of minutes with a dull box cutter. On a lease road outside Midland, that same blade slices stubborn fuel line and zip ties while the wind drives dust under your hat brim. On a dock at Lake Conroe, it cuts rope and line clean without fraying, then snaps back into the handle before it ever meets the water.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Can Actually Carry Every Day

A lot of knives marketed as tactical end up being too thick, too heavy, or too aggressive-looking for real daily carry. This one was built to vanish until it’s needed. The matte black handle slides in and out of a pocket without catching. The pocket clip buries the knife deep enough that it doesn’t print loud against denim or work pants, whether you’re at a feed store in Stephenville or walking into a conference room in Austin.

The double-action mechanism gives Texas buyers something important: predictable one-hand use. That matters when you’re on a ladder cutting banding off lumber, holding a lead rope with one hand, or bracing a piece of conduit. Thumb forward—blade out. Thumb back—blade in. No flipping, no fumbling, just a straight-line motion you can repeat without thinking about it.

How This OTF Knife Fits Texas Knife Culture

Texans have long carried knives that balance work and self-reliance. The out-the-front mechanism doesn’t replace that tradition; it updates it. Instead of a worn stockman or lockback, you’ve got a modern, blacked-out tool that does the same jobs faster, stays safer when closed, and rides cleaner in modern clothing. It feels at home beside a leather belt and boots, but it doesn’t look out of place clipped to the pocket of a tech worker in Plano or a medic’s cargo pants in El Paso.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas law now allows automatic and OTF knives for most adults, including this style of double-action out-the-front blade. The key is knowing where you are, not what you’re carrying. Certain locations remain restricted by statute or posted policy, so it’s on you to respect those boundaries. But for day-to-day life—running errands in Corpus Christi, working a job site in Waco, or hauling across the Panhandle—carrying this OTF knife in your pocket, on your belt, or in your truck is legal and common.

Does the quick-deploy action make sense for Texas work?

It does when seconds and control matter. The thumb slide gives you instant, one-hand deployment when the other hand is busy holding a gate, steadying a board, or gripping a steering wheel on a rough lease road. In Texas heat, where sweat and dust make fine motor work harder, that straight-line action is faster and safer than digging for a nail nick or two-handed folder.

Is this better as a truck knife or true everyday carry?

Both. At 5.5 inches closed with a deep-carry clip, it disappears in a pocket all week long. On the weekend, it moves into the truck console, staged in its nylon sheath so it doesn’t rattle and is easy to grab. A lot of Texans keep a bigger fixed blade in the truck and a smaller folder in the pocket; this OTF knife takes the pocket role and stretches it—strong enough for real work, slim enough you don’t notice it until you need it.

First Use: A Texas Moment You’ll Recognize

Think about a late summer evening, wind laying down over a pasture outside Weatherford. You’re leaning on the tailgate, dog in the dirt, last light catching dust in the air. There’s fencing to patch and feed to cut open, and that familiar tug in the pocket reminds you the tool is already there. Thumb forward, blade out with that clean, mechanical snap. A few cuts, clean and straight, then the edge disappears back into matte black. No fuss, no show. Just a knife that fits the land, the work, and the way you move through both.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Thumb Slide
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath