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Prism Surge Double-Action OTF Knife - Rainbow Titanium

Price:

32.99


Flagborne Stonewash Dagger OTF Knife - Black
Flagborne Stonewash Dagger OTF Knife - Black
39.99 39.99
Frontline Precision Clip Point OTF Knife - Green Handle
Frontline Precision Clip Point OTF Knife - Green Handle
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Neon Faultline Double-Action OTF Knife - Titanium Rainbow

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4918/image_1920?unique=796840f

3 sold in last 24 hours

West Texas parking lot. Sodium lights on wet pavement. This compact OTF knife comes out clean with a thumb on the slide and a rainbow blade that doesn’t hide. The 2.5-inch clip point handles boxes, hose, and nylon strap without drama, while the steel handle and glass-breaker pommel earn its pocket space. For the Texan who wants an automatic that works hard and looks like nothing else in the room.

32.99 32.99 USD 32.99

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When a Compact OTF Belongs in a Texas Night

Rain lifting off hot asphalt outside a Hill Country dancehall, truck doors thudding shut, somebody wrestling a band case out of the bed. You’re the one they look at when the ratchet strap knots up. Thumb hits the side slide, the double-action OTF blade snaps out, rainbow titanium catching the parking lot lights just once before you go to work on nylon. No show. Just a compact automatic that does what it’s supposed to do.

This knife earns its place in a Texas pocket by being two things at once: small enough to disappear in jeans, stout enough to matter when you ask it to cut. The titanium nitride rainbow finish may turn heads, but under it is plain steel, a 2.5-inch clip point, and a handle that feels solid when your hands are dusty, sweaty, or cold.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Built for Real Pockets, Not Display Cases

In this state, pockets see work. Driver side truck doors slam all day in Midland lots. Oilfield badges and key cards ride next to knives in Houston refineries. An OTF knife in Texas has to ride flat, draw quick, and not chew up your pocket lining by Wednesday.

Closed, this one runs about 4.25 inches, with a squared steel handle that sits straight against the seam of a pair of Wranglers or lightweight fishing shorts. The pocket clip holds it low, tip-down, tight enough that it doesn’t walk out when you’re climbing in and out of a lifted F-250 or stepping over a cattle guard.

At roughly 5 ounces, it feels present but not heavy. You know it’s there when you need it at a San Antonio jobsite, but it doesn’t drag when you’re walking a long gravel drive in East Texas. The actuator rides the side of the handle where your thumb or gloved thumb naturally falls. Pulling that slide forward throws the blade out in a straight line; dragging it back pulls the blade back in. Simple, repeatable, one-handed, even when your other hand is hanging onto baling wire or a coiled garden hose.

Steel, Edge, and the Jobs a Texas OTF Knife Actually Sees

Most days, an OTF knife in this state doesn’t see a tactical fantasy. It sees Amazon boxes stacked by a front door in Katy, sand-filled feed bags out near Lubbock, shrink wrap over pallets in a San Marcos warehouse, and the stubborn plastic straps around a new ice chest in Rockport.

The 2.5-inch clip point blade on this one is plain edged steel with enough belly to bite into cardboard and rope, and a fine point that settles neatly into zip ties and plastic banding. The titanium nitride rainbow finish isn’t just for looks; it shrugs off pocket rub and that fine red grit that gets into everything west of Abilene. Wipe it down on a jeans leg and the color is still there, still slick, still catching light like a refinery stack at dusk.

That short blade length matters in Texas carry. It’s long enough to cut clean through heavy tape and paracord, but compact enough for tight work in a truck cab, behind an equipment rack, or under a bar where some stubborn cable tie is keeping a cable where it shouldn’t be.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence: Double-Action, Glass Breaker, No Drama

A Texas OTF knife lives in strange places. Glove boxes sliding open on FM roads, center consoles in work trucks, backpacks tossed in college parking garages in Austin. When something goes wrong, you don’t want to wonder if the action will stick or if the tool will fold under pressure.

This compact OTF runs a double-action system: same slide to fire and to retract. That means no hunting for a second control and no two-handed closing when you’re on a jobsite ladder outside a Plano warehouse. The slide has just enough resistance to keep it from firing in your pocket, but not so stiff that a tired thumb can’t run it after ten hours in the heat.

At the end of the handle, a pointed pommel gives you a glass-break option you hope you never use. But anyone who’s driven into one of those sudden Central Texas flash floods on a low water crossing understands why it’s there. Door jammed, belt stuck, water climbing—this is the sort of tool you’re glad lives in the console instead of a novelty piece sitting in a drawer.

OTF Knife Texas Law: What This Design Means for Carry

About a decade ago, you had to explain to people why they couldn’t carry a switchblade in this state. Now the conversation is simpler. Texas law changed to remove the old ban on switchblades and automatic knives, and later cleared the way for almost any blade length to be carried by most adults in most places.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Out-the-front knives and other automatics are legal for adults to own and carry in Texas, including in-your-pocket everyday carry, as long as you stay clear of certain restricted locations set out in the Penal Code—schools, secure areas of airports, and a short list of other sensitive spots where blades of any kind are limited. Blade length rules once mattered; now, for most adults outside those places, a compact 2.5-inch automatic like this falls well within what Texans legally carry every day.

That small blade and compact profile also make this knife a quieter choice in mixed company. Pull this in a H-E-B parking lot to cut twine on a plant, and it looks like a working tool, not a problem looking for a headline.

Everyday Texas Use: From Truck Beds to Riverbanks

Picture an early morning on the Guadalupe. Cool air, cheap lawn chair, spinning rod leaned against the rail. That rainbow blade catches the first light as you nip tag ends off knots, cut open a bag of ice, or trim line when somebody birds-nests a reel. The titanium nitride sheen stands out enough that you don’t lose it in a pile of gear, but not so bright it feels like a toy.

Same knife, different side of the state. Afternoon heat building over a Dallas warehouse, pallets rolled to the back of a trailer. One thumb on the actuator, blade out, plastic cut, straps gone, blade back in. No wrist flicks, no flashy tricks—just a compact automatic doing back-to-back cuts until the job’s finished.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas law allows adults to carry automatic knives, including OTF designs, in most everyday settings—pockets, belts, truck consoles, and tackle bags. The main limits aren’t about the mechanism anymore; they’re about specific locations like schools and secured government or airport areas where almost any blade can be a problem. For regular daily life—work, ranch, shop runs, nights out—this compact automatic is a lawful tool, not contraband.

Will this compact OTF hold up to Texas heat and grit?

The steel blade and handle, both finished in titanium nitride, are built for the kind of dust, sweat, and temperature swings this state throws at pocket gear. That finish helps resist scratches from coins and keys, and the all-metal build shrugs off days spent in a hot truck or grit from caliche roads. Wipe it down once in a while, maybe hit the pivot with a drop of oil, and it’ll stay ready.

Is this the right OTF knife if I already carry a larger folder?

For a lot of Texans, this compact OTF doesn’t replace the big workhorse knife; it rides alongside it. The folder handles heavy prying and rough work. This one comes out when you need fast, one-handed, clean cuts—seatbelt in a wreck, feed bag in the rain, zip ties in a dark garage. If your main blade feels like too much knife in town, this compact automatic fills the gap.

Texas OTF Knife, First Use: Where It Really Starts to Belong

End of a long day, traffic rolling slow on Loop 410, sky fading out behind billboards. You pull into the driveway, tailgate drops, and you start cutting straps on a stack of new fence panels. The slide moves, the rainbow blade snaps out, edge bites, plastic parts. A few minutes later, you’re inside, opening a box of parts, trimming tape, breaking down cardboard for the bin.

Nothing dramatic. No big story. Just a compact double-action OTF that handled the list without complaint, rode your pocket without getting in the way, and earned the small habit of your thumb finding that slide without looking. That’s how a knife like this becomes your Texas automatic: not by being loud, but by being there, ready, every time you reach for it.

Blade Length (inches) 2.5
Overall Length (inches) 7
Closed Length (inches) 4.25
Weight (oz.) 5.07
Blade Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Titanium Nitride
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Titanium Nitride
Handle Material Steel
Theme Rainbow
Pocket Clip Yes