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Prism Surge Double-Action OTF Knife - Rainbow Damascus

Price:

36.99


Auric Vector Slide-Action OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Gold
Auric Vector Slide-Action OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Gold
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In-and-Out Rapid-Return OTF Automatic Knife - Silver Double Edge
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Neon Frontline Double-Action OTF Knife - Rainbow Damascus

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5466/image_1920?unique=9da6ff0

14 sold in last 24 hours

Friday night on Washington Avenue, trucks stacked two deep at every light. This OTF knife rides quiet in your pocket until it’s needed. Thumb hits the switch, double-action snaps that rainbow Damascus blade out clean and fast. Non-slip grip, glass breaker, solid heft. A showpiece that still feels right at home in a Texas truck, bar, or jobsite.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB956RBDP

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When the Lights Go Down on a Texas Street

You’ve seen that stretch of road in every Texas city. In Houston it’s Washington, in Dallas it’s Lower Greenville, in San Antonio it’s the Strip. Neon off chrome bumpers, music leaking out of open doors, everybody shoulder to shoulder on the sidewalk. That’s where this double-action OTF belongs. Not in a glass case. In your front pocket when the night gets loud and unpredictable.

The handle sits flat against your jeans, matte panels against your palm, iridescent frame catching just enough light when you draw. Thumb finds the side switch without hunting. One push and that rainbow Damascus-etched dagger blade drives straight out the front, locked and ready. Another pull and it disappears just as fast. No flourish. Just a clean, decisive action that suits a Texas street at midnight.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence in One Thumb Stroke

In this state, you don’t carry an OTF knife for show, even when it looks like this. You carry it because when you’re cutting zip-ties in the back of a San Antonio taco truck, breaking down boxes at a Houston warehouse, or clearing rope out by a Hill Country stock tank, you want that blade now, not after a two-handed fumble.

This double-action Texas OTF knife runs on a side-mounted switch that snaps the 3.25-inch blade out and back with the same motion. No wrist flick, no awkward angle. Just a straight-line deployment that works whether you’re standing in a crowded Austin parking lot or wedged between toolboxes in a truck bed off Highway 6. At 8.5 inches overall, it gives you reach without feeling clumsy in tight quarters.

The weight—just under six ounces—lands right in that Texas sweet spot: heavy enough to feel like a real tool when your hands are slick with sweat, light enough to clip in your pocket all day through a shift in Odessa or a night bouncing at a bar in Lubbock.

Rainbow Damascus That Belongs in a Texas Night

The first thing you notice is the blade. That rainbow Damascus etch throws bands of color under station lights at a Buc-ee’s stop or under LEDs in a Houston club. It catches eyes, sure. But under the pattern is a straight steel dagger profile with twin plain edges, ground for real cutting, not just pictures.

Out behind a shop in Corpus, it bites clean through nylon strapping and shrink wrap. In a San Angelo garage, it opens feed bags and hose packaging without tearing everything in sight. The double-edge design gives you choice: one side you keep a little finer for detailed cuts, the other you don’t mind roughing up on cardboard, tape, and the plastic that always shows up on a jobsite.

The matte metal handle offsets the flash. Black inlaid grip panels give your fingers something to lock into when you’re standing in August heat, palms slick, sweat tracking down your forearm. The frame’s iridescent finish is the kind of thing you see reflected off a truck window on a Dallas flyover at dusk—colorful, but built over metal that doesn’t baby out when it meets concrete, steel, or the edge of a tailgate.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: What the Law Actually Says

A lot of buyers still walk in asking if a switchblade is legal here. That used to be a fair question. It isn’t anymore. Texas law changed years back. Automatic knives and OTF blades like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not a prohibited person and you respect the few remaining location limits—schools, certain government buildings, and places posted accordingly. The state doesn’t care if it’s out-the-front, side-opening, or assisted; it’s the person and the place that matter now.

What this means on the ground: you can clip this double-action OTF in your pocket in Houston, toss it in your truck console in Amarillo, or carry it on your belt at a Hill Country cookout without looking over your shoulder. You still use common sense. If you’re walking into a courthouse, a secured facility, or a stadium with metal detectors, you leave it in the vehicle. But for regular Texas daily carry—work, errands, nights out—this knife fits inside what the law now allows.

Why That Matters Across Texas

In a state where a drive from Midland to Austin burns most of a day, you don’t want to swap knives at every stop. A legal Texas OTF knife that can live in your pocket from jobsite to barstool saves you from glovebox gymnastics. You carry one tool, you learn its switch, its weight, its draw, and it’s there the same way every time.

Built for Pocket, Truck Console, and Back Road

Your gear earns its place in Texas. This knife does it three ways. First is the pocket clip riding along the handle spine. Slide it onto your front pocket for fast draw when you’re walking downtown in Fort Worth, or bury it in a back pocket when you’re bent over working cattle panels. The flat-sided handle doesn’t print much, even with that glass breaker riding the tail.

Second is the glass breaker itself. That hardened point at the butt isn’t just decoration. On a flooded frontage road outside Houston or a rollover on I-20, that tip against a side window gives you a way out or a way in. It’s the kind of detail Texans remember after one bad storm season.

Third is console duty. Closed at 5.25 inches, it fits clean in the tray of a Silverado, Ram, or F-150 without tangling around coins and receipts. The double-action switch means you can grab it, thumb it, and have a blade in play while your other hand wrestles with a stubborn strap, hay twine, or a knotted phone cable.

How It Handles Texas Heat and Hard Use

Steel blade, metal frame, matte grip panels—none of it is precious. This isn’t a safe queen. It shrugs off the kind of abuse that comes with West Texas dust, Gulf Coast humidity, and central Texas temperature swings in a single day. Wipe it down after salt air in Galveston, blow the grit out of the OTF track after a day on lease roads, and it’ll stay honest.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas knife laws, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry. The law no longer bans switchblades by mechanism. Instead, you watch where you carry—schools, secure government buildings, and other restricted locations are off-limits regardless of the knife type. For everyday carry on Texas streets, in your truck, or at work, an OTF like this is lawful for most people.

Is this double-action OTF practical for Texas work, or just for show?

The rainbow Damascus finish draws eyes, but the function is pure work. The 3.25-inch double-edge blade handles real Texas chores: cutting nylon straps on oilfield pallets near Midland, slicing hose and packaging in a San Antonio shop, or trimming cord and tape during an outdoor show in Austin. The non-slip grip panels and solid 5.89-ounce weight make it stable when your hands are sweaty or gloved.

How does this compare to a more traditional Texas pocket knife?

A traditional slipjoint or lockback is slower and usually takes two hands. This OTF knife Texas buyers reach for when they want one-handed, instant deployment, especially in tight spaces or around vehicles. You trade a little old-time charm for straight-line speed and modern features: pocket clip, glass breaker, double-action switch. For many Texans, the right setup is both—a classic in one pocket, this OTF riding in the other or in the truck.

Where This Knife Makes Sense in Your Texas Day

Picture a humid evening in San Marcos. River’s behind you, boots are still damp, sun bleeding out behind a line of oaks. You’re leaning against the truck, door open, tailgate down, trying to cut stubborn rope off a cooler handle in the half-dark. You don’t set anything down, you don’t ask for a hand. You reach into your pocket, feel that iridescent frame, thumb the switch, and the blade is just there in the space between one breath and the next.

Later that week it’s in your console headed up 35, riding with you to a job north of Waco. Same knife, same switch, same feel. Whether your Texas is bar lights on concrete, dust trails in the Panhandle, or waking up to fog over a stock pond, this double-action OTF settles into your routine the way good gear should—quiet, ready, and exactly where your hand expects it.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Weight (oz.) 5.89
Blade Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Etch
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Switch
Theme Rainbow Damascus
Double/Single Action Double
Pocket Clip Yes