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Neon Jester Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Aluminum

Price:

7.99


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Neon Jester Fast-Flip Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1919/image_1920?unique=2f0ca44

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You’re parked on the shoulder outside Luling, hood up, wind kicking dust across the blacktop. One hand’s on the coolant hose, the other finds your Neon Jester. The spring-assisted blade snaps out clean, that neon spear point biting through rubber and tape without wandering. Purple aluminum rides light in the pocket, liner lock steady under your thumb. It’s not a showpiece. It’s the knife you forget you’re carrying until the moment you need something fast, sharp, and sure.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

457BS

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
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Neon Edge in a Roadside Moment

The sun’s burning down on a two-lane outside Seguin when the tarp in the truck bed starts to go. Wind gets under it, hay starts wanting to bail out on its own. You reach back, one hand on the bed rail, the other on the Neon Jester in your pocket. A flip of the tab and that neon green spear point snaps open, one clean motion. No fumbling, no two-handed dance over hot metal.

This spring-assisted opening knife was built for those in-between miles—too far from town to turn around, too close to quit. The purple aluminum handle rides light, but it doesn’t feel like a toy. Grooved scales lock into your grip, even when your palms are slick from heat or work. The blade isn’t shy about standing out, but the way it cuts is dead serious.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Works for Texas Carry

Across the state—Panhandle wheat, Hill Country rock, or the concrete sprawl around Houston—carry needs stay the same. You want a knife you can get to quickly, open with one hand, and put away just as fast. The Neon Jester runs a flipper tab with spring assist, so the blade comes out with a confident snap and settles into a solid liner lock. No guessing, no halfway deploy.

Closed, it sits just under five inches, long enough to fill the hand, short enough to disappear in a front pocket or ride clipped inside gym shorts. Stainless steel keeps the neon spear point from babying rust when the humidity comes in off the Gulf or you forget it on the dash of a hot truck. The plain edge makes straight, easy cuts through feed bags, plastic wrap, paracord, or old hose without snagging on serrations.

Texas Knife Culture and a Fast-Assisted Folder

In this state, a pocket knife is more tool than statement. But the truth is, folks still notice what you pull out at a tailgate, jobsite, or lease. The Neon Jester walks that narrow line. The blade’s etched with JOKER, neon green against purple aluminum, but the profile stays slim and work-focused. It opens like a knife meant for use, not for show-and-tell.

At a midnight stop off I-35, when you’re cutting the shrink wrap off a pallet or trimming loose strap off a ratchet, the spring-assisted action means less time fighting the hinge and more time getting back behind the wheel. In the stands under Friday night lights, breaking down a snack or trimming a loose thread, you can thumb that flipper, let the blade pop, and close it one-handed without worrying about gimmicks or fragile hardware.

Are Assisted Knives Like This Legal to Carry in Texas?

Folks still ask if a fast-opening knife like this Neon Jester is legal here. The law changed years back. Switchblades and assisted-opening knives are no longer banned just because they open quick. What matters most now is blade length and location, not the spring assist itself.

With a blade around three and three-eighths inches, this knife sits comfortably under the five-and-a-half-inch threshold that defines what you can carry in most everyday spots. It stays on the legal side for common carry, whether you’re grabbing lunch in town or stopping at a feed store on the way home. You still need to know where you’re headed—schools, certain government buildings, and a few posted places have their own rules—but for regular day-to-day Texas carry, an assisted folding knife in this size class is built with the law in mind.

Texas Use: From Shop Floor to Pasture Gate

In a metal shop outside San Angelo, the Neon Jester lives clipped inside a work shirt, ready to slice tape off inbound boxes and trim tubing gaskets. The neon blade stands out enough that you don’t misplace it on a cluttered bench. Out past the city limits, it ends up opening mineral sacks, scoring plastic drums, and cleaning up stray cord on a makeshift fence repair.

Down near the coast, where the air and salt work on everything, the stainless steel blade holds up a little better to sweat and sea air than carbon that wants babying. Wipe it down, close it, clip it, and it’s ready to ride again tomorrow.

Why This Size Folder Suits Texas Pockets

In jeans, work pants, or gym shorts walking the greenbelt, a heavy, oversized folder rides like an anchor. The Neon Jester hits the middle ground—just over eight inches open, yet still slim and easy to disappear when closed. The deep pocket clip keeps it from printing; the lanyard hole at the tail lets you tie in a short pull cord for gloved work in a North Texas winter.

It’s the kind of knife you carry into a feed store, a Buc-ee’s stop, or a late-night diner without making anyone nervous. You know it’s there. It doesn’t have to announce itself until it’s working.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Out-the-front knives and switchblades used to sit in a gray, mostly banned space here. That changed. Under current Texas law, automatic and OTF knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you respect the blade length rules and restricted locations. The state doesn’t treat a quick, one-handed opening—spring-assisted, automatic, or OTF—as the problem anymore; it focuses on where and how big. You still need to keep an eye on local rules, posted signs, and special places like schools and secure government buildings, but a modern automatic or OTF blade is no longer off-limits just because it fires fast.

Is this Neon Jester a good assisted knife for Texas everyday carry?

For someone who wants one knife to ride every day—from oil change runs in Midland to late errands in Katy—this size and setup make sense. The spring assist gives you quick, repeatable openings when your other hand is busy. The blade length stays within common legal comfort zones. The handle is aluminum, so it won’t swell or warp with sweat and heat the way some cheaper materials do. And the bright blade means you can find it in a dark truck cab or under a workbench without hunting.

How does this compare to carrying a Texas OTF knife?

A Texas OTF knife gives you straight-line deployment out the front of the handle—fast, dramatic, and easy to cycle in and out. This Neon Jester runs as a side-opening, spring-assisted folder. It’s quieter in the pocket, looks more familiar in town, and usually draws less attention in places where people still side-eye anything that feels too tactical. If you want the speed and one-handed use without the full attitude of an OTF, an assisted folder like this hits the middle ground.

Why Texas OTF Knife Buyers Still Respect a Good Assisted Folder

Plenty of folks who own a Texas OTF knife for the ranch house or the truck console choose a simpler assisted opener for daily carry into town. The Neon Jester fills that role cleanly. Same kind of speed, less bulk, and a profile that passes as a regular pocket knife until the neon blade snaps into view.

If your main OTF lives on the visor or in the center console, this one can ride your pocket when you step into a feed store in Kerrville or a hardware run in Amarillo. You keep your OTF for the heavy days and hard tasks, while this assisted knife handles the tape, cord, cardboard, and quick cuts that stack up between big jobs.

First Cut, Somewhere Between Towns

Picture a late drive back from a job outside Waco. The sky’s gone purple, the cab smells like dust and coffee, and you remember the pallet of supplies in the bed still wrapped tight. You pull off near a darkened gas station, drop the tailgate, and reach for the clip on your pocket. The Neon Jester comes out thin and familiar. One push on the flipper and the neon spear point jumps to life.

The plastic gives way in one long stroke. No sawing, no struggle. You fold the blade, feel the liner lock click out of the way, and slide it back into your pocket. No drama, no spotlight—just a tool that does its work in the quiet stretches between Texas towns, riding with you day after day.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 8.125
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Green
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Joker
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock