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Prismatic Arc Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Rainbow Tinite

Price:

15.99


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Neon Mirage Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Rainbow Tinite

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1835/image_1920?unique=3f3f038

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Late summer, two-lane blacktop cooling after a Hill Country storm. The Neon Mirage rides deep in your pocket, rainbow tinite muted until you thumb the safety off and hit the button. The 3.375" drop point snaps out clean, steel frame solid in your hand. Cutting hose, opening feed bags, breaking down boxes in the shop lot—fast, simple, repeatable. When the light hits that rainbow finish, it doesn’t whisper. It says this isn’t borrowed gear. It’s yours.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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Quick-Deploy Automatic Built for Long Days and Late Texas Light

The sun’s dropping behind a wind farm outside Abilene. Truck bed open, cooler strapped, last tie-down giving you trouble. The Neon Mirage Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife sits in your front pocket, all-metal weight you forget until you need it. Thumb rolls the safety forward, finger hits the button, and that 3.375-inch drop point is locked out before the strap even bounces twice.

This isn’t a desk toy. It’s a steel-frame automatic knife with a full rainbow tinite finish that earns its place cutting cord, nylon, and tape in the same afternoon. You carry it for the action, but you keep it for the work.

Why This Automatic Knife Fits Texas Everyday Carry

On a weekday run from Katy into Houston, this automatic knife disappears in jeans or work pants, 4.5 inches closed and riding on a pocket clip that doesn’t print loud under a shirt. At 5.7 ounces, it has enough weight to feel real in the hand, not like something that came out of a gas station bin.

The button sits where your thumb finds it without hunting, and the safety slide rides just above it. That matters in a truck cab on I-35 or in a feed aisle in Lubbock, where you want an automatic you can index and fire one-handed without looking down. Rounded handle contours and a finger groove let you choke up for tight cuts on baling twine or zip ties. Spine jimping gives your thumb traction when your hands are dusty, sweaty, or both.

Rainbow Tinite That Works as Hard as It Shines

The full rainbow tinite coating is more than flash. On the blade and handle, it shrugs off pocket wear from keys, grit from a ranch road outside Uvalde, and the constant scrape of climbing in and out of a truck. The colors throw purple, gold, green, and blue when the sun hits, but underneath it’s still solid steel doing the cutting.

The drop point profile gives you a strong belly for slicing and a tip that’ll start a cut in heavy plastic, banding, or shrink wrap without feeling delicate. On a Saturday at a Fort Worth swap meet, it’s the knife that draws a second look when you clip it to your pocket. On a jobsite in Midland, it’s the one you reach for to strip back hose or score drywall because the edge bites and the handle doesn’t fight you.

Texas Knife Laws and Carrying an Automatic with Confidence

Knife laws here changed a few years back, and it matters for anyone running an automatic. In Texas, switchblades and automatic knives like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not in a restricted place and you’re following the general location rules that apply to larger blades.

This automatic is built with that reality in mind. The safety switch above the button keeps it from firing in your pocket when you’re sliding into a booth in San Antonio or climbing into a deer blind in the Panhandle before first light. You decide when it opens. One quick thumb move, one press, and the blade is out. Slide the safety back before you re-pocket, and it rides closed and quiet until the next job.

Texas Carry Culture Meets Quick-Action Steel

From Dallas office garages to Odessa yards, Texans carry blades because it’s simpler than hunting for a tool every time something needs cutting. An automatic like this fits that rhythm: legal under current state law for everyday carry, fast to deploy when your other hand is full, and straightforward enough that you don’t have to think through some complicated opening trick.

Everyday Tasks from Houston Warehouses to Hill Country Weekends

In a Houston warehouse, this knife earns its keep breaking down pallets, slicing shrink wrap, and trimming banding before it ever sees the outdoors. The smooth tinite handle wipes clean at the end of a shift, and the all-metal build doesn’t flinch when it’s tossed into a work bag with tape measures and bits.

Head west for a weekend place outside Kerrville and it shifts roles without complaint. Cutting paracord for a tarp line, trimming line for a trotline, opening feed bags, or sharpening a stake edge—this automatic knife handles the small, constant cuts that pile up over a day outside. The lanyard hole at the butt lets you tie on a short cord if you want a more secure grip over water on the Guadalupe or out of a jon boat on Falcon Lake.

Texas Use Cases That Make an Automatic Make Sense

When your off-hand is steadying a gate, holding a ladder, or gripping a hay bale, a one-handed automatic turns a hassle into a quick motion. Hit the button, make the cut, close it against your leg, and you’re done. That’s the value here—not a trick, just speed when you’re juggling too many things at once.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades, including OTF and side-opening autos like this one, are legal to own and carry for most adults. The key is where you bring them. Certain locations—like schools, secured government buildings, and a few other restricted spots—still have tighter rules. For everyday in-state carry on the road, on the ranch, or in town, an automatic knife is lawful gear for most Texans, but it’s always wise to check for any local rules or special circumstances that apply to your situation.

Will this automatic knife hold up to Texas heat and grit?

Texas summers are rough on gear. The Neon Mirage runs an all-metal steel frame and blade under that rainbow tinite, so it doesn’t wilt in a glove box in August or crumble when it sees dust. The coating helps resist surface wear, and the simple button-and-safety setup means there aren’t fragile pieces waiting to fail the first time West Texas grit gets in the works. Wipe it down, give it a touch of oil now and then, and it’s ready for another long season.

Is this the right automatic knife for my first Texas auto?

If you’re stepping into automatics for the first time, this is a clean start. The price point keeps it from feeling precious, but the 8-inch overall length, solid weight, and bright tinite finish give you a serious piece of kit. The action is straightforward, the safety is obvious under the thumb, and the blade shape suits the kind of cutting Texans actually do—boxes, cord, hose, light field chores. If you decide later you want to go bigger, this still holds its place in the truck or on the workbench.

First Cut: A Texas Moment with the Neon Mirage

Picture a Friday night in San Marcos, tailgate down, cooler still strapped, string of lights running off a small battery pack. Someone hands you a coil of rope to shorten, and a few eyes drift your way. You thumb off the safety, press the button, and the rainbow blade snaps open against the glow. Quick cut, clean slice, blade closed and clipped back before the conversation moves on.

That’s how this automatic knife fits here—not as a show you put on, but as a piece of steel that does the work and still looks like it belongs in a state where people notice what you carry.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 5.7
Blade Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Tinite
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Tinite
Handle Material Steel
Button Type Button
Theme Rainbow
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip Yes