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Aurora Surge Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Knife - Rainbow Chrome

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8.99


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Neon Skyline Quick-Deploy EDC Knife - Rainbow Chrome

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7246/image_1920?unique=1c48471

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You step out of a Houston garage after dark, heat still coming off the concrete. The Neon Skyline quick-deploy knife rides flat in your pocket until you need it—one finger on the flipper and the spring does the rest. Four inches of two-tone stainless steel make short work of straps, tape, and day-to-day city chores. Slim, steel, and rainbow-chromed just enough to stand out without shouting, it feels like the kind of blade a Texan carries when town is their terrain.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
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When the City Burns Hot After Dark

Walk out of a San Antonio parking garage in August and the heat still rolls off the concrete like a slow wave. That’s when a pocket knife either disappears into your jeans and mind, or it feels like a brick you’re hauling around. The Neon Skyline Quick-Deploy EDC Knife - Rainbow Chrome was built for the first kind of carry. Slim steel. Skeletonized handle. Spring-assisted snap that shows up when you need it and shuts up when you don’t.

This isn’t a ranch belt knife. This is the one that lives in the pocket of a guy threading Houston traffic, cutting zip-ties on job sites in Austin, or popping open packages on a Dallas loading dock before the sun is up.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Spring-Assisted Alternative

A lot of Texans come in looking for an OTF knife. Texas law opened the door to automatics, so the question hits the counter often enough. But some folks still want something that rides more like a traditional folder, opens fast, and keeps the mechanism simple. That’s where a quick spring-assisted knife like this earns its space in the same conversation as any OTF knife Texas buyers are eyeing.

The flipper tab on this blade takes almost no effort. You lean on it with your index finger and the spring does the rest, driving a four-inch clip point into lock-up with a clean, mechanical snap. It’s not a double-action OTF, but it answers the same need for fast, one-handed deployment when your off-hand is wrapped up in rope, boxes, or a stubborn length of paracord.

Urban Texas Carry, Built into the Steel

Every city in this state has its own rhythm. Dallas runs sharp and quick. Austin hums a little stranger and slower. Houston never really shuts down. This knife was shaped for that rhythm. Closed, it’s about four and a half inches—short enough to sit in a front pocket beside a phone without printing or digging into your leg when you slide behind the wheel.

The handle is steel, finished in chrome with rainbow iridescent accents at the pivot and along the spine. Long cutouts in the handle lighten the weight and give your fingers natural purchase when you torque down on a cut. It’s not a dress piece, but it doesn’t look out of place in a Fort Worth office when you’re cutting open a case of copy paper or trimming a loose thread on a suit sleeve before a meeting.

The pocket clip plants it low in the pocket where it won’t catch on a truck seat or bar stool. For the folks who keep a lanyard tied off for quicker retrieval in a crowded rodeo parking lot or at a night game in Arlington, the lanyard hole at the tail end is there, clean and simple.

Blade Work That Matches Texas Tasks

Most days, this knife won’t be asked to do anything heroic. It’ll slice open shrink wrap in a San Marcos warehouse, cut feed tags and twine in a feed store outside Waco, or break down boxes behind a strip mall in Lubbock. The two-tone clip point blade, ground from 3Cr13 stainless steel, is made for that kind of honest work.

The lower bevel is polished silver, the upper spine dark-coated, giving you a visual line where the cutting happens. Plain edge only—no serrations to snag on clothing or fray smaller cordage. Thumb ramp jimping on the spine lets you lean your thumb in for control when you’re shaving down a plastic shim, trimming hose, or carving a notch into wood for a quick camp rig out near Lake Travis.

3Cr13 isn’t exotic, but it does what a city knife needs: it sharpens easy on a pocket stone or countertop sharpener and shrugs off the sweat and humidity that comes with Houston summers and Corpus mornings.

OTF Knife Texas Laws, and Where This Fits

Knife law is one of the first things serious Texas buyers ask about. Since 2017, state law removed the old ban on switchblades and automatics, which is why "are OTF knives legal in Texas" now feels like a trick question. Yes—OTF knives are legal here, with the same basic length and location rules as other blades.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, an OTF falls under the broader definition of a knife. The key point now is length and where you carry it. For blades over 5.5 inches, you’re looking at "location-restricted" rules—no courthouses, schools, certain government buildings, and so on. A pocket-size OTF, or a spring-assisted folder like this Neon Skyline, falls well under that mark, which keeps everyday urban carry straightforward.

This spring-assisted knife isn’t technically an OTF, but it satisfies the same craving: one-handed speed, mechanical certainty, and a compact package. For anyone who likes the idea of an automatic yet prefers something that still feels like a familiar folder in the hand, this is a clean solution that stays on the comfortable side of Texas carry culture.

Why Texas Buyers Reach for Fast Deployment

Ask someone who works a night shift at a refinery near Baytown why they want something that opens fast, and they won’t talk tactics. They’ll talk gloves, dark corners, and not wanting to fumble when they’re cutting a stubborn strap ten hours into a shift. That’s the scenario this spring assists for.

The liner lock catches solid every time with a simple, audible seat. No rattle, no guesswork. Fold it back down with your thumb, and it slips back into pocket depth without fuss or sharp edges fighting your hand.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas lifted its ban on switchblades and automatics, including OTF knives. The main thing is blade length and location. Blades over 5.5 inches are restricted from certain places—schools, polling locations, courthouses, and a few others. A compact folder like this spring-assisted EDC knife rests comfortably under that limit, which keeps everyday carry around town, in the truck, or on the job simple for most Texans.

Will this spring-assisted knife hold up to Texas heat and sweat?

The 3Cr13 stainless blade and chromed steel handle are chosen for exactly that. Whether it’s riding in the pocket of work pants in a Midland yard or sitting on a truck console baking in an El Paso lot, the steel shrugs off sweat and humidity with regular wipe-downs. It’s not delicate—this is a tool meant for daily carry in a state where summer lasts half the year.

How does this compare to carrying a Texas OTF knife for EDC?

Functionally, both answer the same need: quick, one-handed access. A Texas OTF knife fires straight out the front with a button or slider. This Neon Skyline relies on a flipper tab and spring assist, but the result is similar speed in a slimmer, more familiar profile. For buyers who like fast action but prefer a knife that doesn’t scream "automatic" when they open a package in the office or at a coffee bar in East Austin, this design hits the right balance.

First Night Out with It in Your Pocket

Picture a Friday night in Houston, easing into a tight spot off Washington Avenue, trucks nose-to-tail under streetlights. You kill the engine, step out into that thick night air, and feel the slim weight of the Neon Skyline riding low in your pocket. Inside, someone hands you a bundle of zip-tied cables, a stubborn strap that needs cutting, a sealed box you need to open in a hurry.

One finger on the flipper, a clean spring-assisted snap, and the two-tone blade is working before the door even swings shut. No fanfare. No drama. Just a knife that fits the way Texans move through their cities—straightforward, capable, and ready when the moment calls for it.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Chrome
Handle Material Steel
Theme Rainbow
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock