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Patriot Slide Micro-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Purple Camo

Price:

26.99


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Ranger Ribbed Quick-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - OD Green
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Overpass Ready Micro-Deploy OTF Knife - Purple Camo

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/725/image_1920?unique=fefab78

8 sold in last 24 hours

Southbound on 35, truck console full, this OTF knife waits beside the toll tag. One thumb on the side slide and the satin drop-point is working tape, hose, or stubborn clamshell plastic before the light turns green. The purple camo handle is easy to spot, the deep-carry clip vanishes on jeans, and the glass breaker sits quietly at the ready. Small, fast, legal to carry in Texas—built for the way Texans actually live and drive.

26.99 26.99 USD 26.99

SB237PECP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Double/Single Action
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Micro OTF knife built for Texas overpasses and parking lots

End of a long workday on 410, traffic stacked under the flyover, sun dropping behind a line of billboards. You reach into the truck console for a knife that doesn’t fuss. Thumb hits the side slide, blade snaps out clean, cuts the poly rope off a ladder or opens a box you meant to deal with at the shop. That’s where this micro-deploy OTF knife belongs—between the cup holders, in a front pocket, or clipped inside a work vest as you move from San Antonio traffic to a hardware run in Seguin.

The blade doesn’t try to be big. At just under two inches, this satin drop-point gives enough edge to slice cord, plastic strapping, or shrink wrap without drawing attention. The handle stays compact at three and a half inches closed, but the purple camo finish makes it easy to spot in a dark cab or on a tailgate. It’s a practical out-the-front tool shaped for real Texas carry, not a display case.

Why this Texas OTF knife feels natural in daily carry

Once you run the slide a few times, the motion stays with you. The dual-action mechanism on this Texas OTF knife sends the blade straight out and straight back, so your grip never changes. That matters when you’re cutting feed sacks in a dim barn outside Brenham or breaking down boxes behind a strip-mall shop in Midland. No flipping arcs, no wrist tricks—just linear deployment that keeps your hand where it needs to be.

The ribbed grooves milled into the matte aluminum handle give you bite when your hands are dusty, oily, or wet from a Gulf thunderstorm rolling through a refinery lot. At 3.91 ounces, the knife feels anchored but not heavy, whether it’s clipped inside starched jeans, riding in gym shorts at a Houston high-rise, or tucked into the organizer on a DPS officer’s duty bag.

OTF knife Texas buyers can carry without second-guessing the law

For years, folks asked whether a switchblade-style OTF knife was trouble in this state. The law changed. In 2017, Texas removed the switchblade ban, and automatic OTF knives like this one became legal to own and carry for most adults. The line now sits at “location-restricted” knives—those with blades over 5.5 inches—banned in certain places like schools, polling locations, and secure government buildings.

This blade is nowhere near that mark. At about 1.875 inches, it stays well under the 5.5-inch threshold that Texas law calls out. That gives you a clear path to pocket carry in most day-to-day settings across the state: hardware store runs in Lubbock, late-night food truck stops in Austin, or warehouse shifts outside Dallas. As always, certain locations have their own rules, but by size and design, this micro OTF knife is built to slide into Texas carry culture without picking a legal fight.

Texas knife law in plain language

Under current Texas law, adults can own and carry an automatic OTF knife like this. Because the blade is under 5.5 inches, it is not considered a location-restricted knife. That means it can be carried into most everyday places where knives are allowed in Texas, though private property and posted venues can always set tighter rules. This tool is sized and shaped with those realities in mind.

Compact OTF performance from ranch gate to city stairwell

Texas is big, but pockets aren’t. This micro OTF knife rides small without feeling fragile. Closed, it’s just 3.5 inches. Overall, a lean 5.5 inches with the blade out. That means it disappears clipped to the inside seam of your jeans at a Hill Country winery, drops into the watch pocket of FR pants on a West Texas rig, or rides deep in basketball shorts when you’re walking the dog along White Rock Lake after dark.

The satin drop-point is shaped for control. It’s the kind of blade you use to slice zip ties off irrigation lines, shave a stubborn sticker off a trailer plate, or cut nylon cord when you’re tying down a load of hay outside Weatherford. The fuller down the blade takes a little weight out and gives the profile a clean, modern line. Maintenance stays simple—plain edge, easy to touch up on a small stone tossed in the same truck door pocket.

Deep-carry clip built for Texas movement

The black deep-carry clip tucks this OTF knife low in the pocket, where it won’t catch climbing into a lifted truck or snag on a seatbelt latch. The USA flag etch speaks to service-minded design, the kind that appeals to a Houston firefighter walking into shift or a vet running errands in Killeen. It’s there when you need it, quiet when you don’t.

Texas OTF knife advantages over small folders

A lot of Texans grew up with a simple slipjoint or lockback. Those still work. But this Texas OTF knife changes the rhythm of the cut. Instead of fishing for a nail nick or flipping a tab, you keep the handle anchored, thumb hits the side slide, and the blade appears where your hand already is. That’s an advantage when you’re in a tight truck cab, wedged in a deer blind, or working in the cramped back room of a strip-center storefront in El Paso.

Closing is just as clean. No reaching near the edge, no folding arc to manage in the dark. You pull the slide back; the blade retracts inside the handle. In a state where a lot of cutting happens in the cab light, under a carport, or beside a trailer at dawn, that straight-line motion matters more than any showroom trick.

Emergency details for real Texas moments

The pointed glass breaker on the pommel isn’t decoration. It’s there for the worst morning on Highway 6 when a truck noses into a flooded ditch, or during a pileup in a Hill Country fog bank when a passerby has to move fast. One strike at the corner of a side window and tempered glass gives way. For the rest of the year, it just rides along, adding almost no bulk.

Purple camo on the handle might read urban at first glance, but there’s practical sense to it. You can find it in the gravel beside a lease road, spot it in the grass behind the house in New Braunfels, or pick it out quickly in a crowded center console full of black plastic and loose change. Function first, color second—but the color helps you get back to the function.

Texas-specific use cases in one small OTF knife

Picture this tool on the sun-bleached dash of a Galveston work truck, used to cut nylon rope off old crab traps. Or clipped inside the waistband of a rideshare driver in Dallas, opening snack boxes and cutting loose zip ties on cargo in the trunk. Same knife, same slide action, built to carry from Gulf humidity to Panhandle dust.

Questions Texas buyers ask about OTF knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic and OTF knives are legal to own and carry for most adults. The key legal line is blade length. Knives with blades over 5.5 inches are considered location-restricted and can’t be carried into certain places like schools, polling locations, or secure government buildings. This micro OTF knife has a blade under 2 inches, well below that limit, making it suitable for everyday pocket carry in most Texas settings, subject to posted signs and private property rules.

Is this small OTF knife enough for Texas work days?

For most daily tasks, yes. The 1.875-inch satin drop-point handles boxes, plastic banding, fuel line, and cord without issue. It’s not a field-dressing blade for a big South Texas hog, but for city routes, shop work, warehouse duty, and around-the-house jobs in suburbs from Katy to Frisco, this size is often more convenient and less intrusive than a larger knife.

Why choose this Texas OTF knife over a traditional pocketknife?

If you want fast, one-handed deployment in tight spaces and a blade that stays out of the way until needed, this design makes sense. The slide action is intuitive even with gloves, the deep-carry clip keeps it discreet, and the short blade respects Texas length limits while still doing real work. Many Texans carry a larger blade in the truck and this micro OTF in the pocket—one for heavy jobs, one for everything else.

First carry: a Texas scene where this knife fits

Picture a Friday night outside a high school stadium in Central Texas. Trucks lined up along the fence, coolers in the bed, folding chairs leaning against tailgates. You reach for this micro OTF knife to slice open a bag of charcoal, cut the plastic ring off a case of sodas, or trim paracord on a quick shade. The slide clicks, the satin blade does its work, and it disappears back into the purple camo handle before anyone really notices. It rides deep, stays legal by length, and works the way Texans expect a tool to work—quietly, cleanly, every single time.

Theme None or Camo
Blade Length (inches) 1.875
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.5
Weight (oz.) 3.91
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Double/Single Action Dual
Pocket Clip Yes