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God Bless America Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade

Price:

9.99


Liberty Fist Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - USA Flag
Liberty Fist Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - USA Flag
9.99 9.99
Patriot Rally Commemorative Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black
Patriot Rally Commemorative Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black
9.99 9.99

Patriot Rally Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Black Blade

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2425/image_1920?unique=12b584d

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Out on a Hill Country backroad or standing in line at the polls, this assisted opening knife fits the mood. The matte black 3.75" clip-point blade snaps out fast with a push on the flipper, while the full-color flag handle and campaign art say exactly where you stand. Light in the pocket, secure with a liner lock and clip, it rides easy in jeans or a truck console. A working man’s statement piece that still cuts cord, boxes, and feed bags without drama.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

JK6418T7

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Patriot Steel in a Texas Parking Lot

Tailgate down after a long shift in Midland, somebody hands you a bundle of banded boxes. You don't put them in the truck until they're cut down to size. This is where a spring-assisted knife that matches your politics and your pace earns its keep. One push on the flipper, the black blade is working before the conversation even pauses.

This isn't a glass-case collectible. It's an assisted opening knife built to ride in a pocket all week, sit in the truck console on Sunday, and still be sharp enough to break down cardboard, cut feed bag twine, or open up shrink-wrapped pallets behind a San Antonio shop.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

Texas is a knife-on-you state. Gas station in Lubbock, Buc-ee's off I-35, high school football parking lot in Allen—someone is always asking, "Got a knife?" With a 4.75-inch closed length, this assisted opening knife sits deep in a front pocket without printing like a brick. The pocket clip keeps it anchored whether you're sliding into a truck seat or stepping out onto caliche.

The spring-assisted action is tuned for one-handed use. You catch the flipper with the pad of your index finger and the 3.75-inch matte black clip-point blade snaps out fast and clean. No wrist theatrics, no fumbling. Just a solid, predictable open you can count on when you're holding a bundle of hay string in the other hand.

Patriotic Art That Fits a Texas Crowd

In a Panhandle coffee shop or a Hill Country gun show, this knife isn't subtle. The glossy handle wears a full USA flag graphic with bold "God Bless America" text and a 2024 campaign motif that leaves no doubt where you land. The blade itself carries big, high-contrast campaign lettering over the matte black finish, turning a working tool into a walking billboard.

But under the art there's still a tool. The plastic scales keep weight down so it doesn't drag your shorts pocket in August heat. The liner lock engages with a clean, audible click, the kind an old-timer in a Weatherford pawn shop will listen for before he nods and says, "Yeah, that'll hold." Stainless steel in the blade means it shrugs off a little sweat, console heat, and the occasional forgotten night in a tackle box.

Texas Knife Laws and Spring-Assisted Carry

Plenty of Texans still remember when anything that looked like a switchblade was a problem. Those days are gone. Under current Texas law, assisted opening knives like this are treated as ordinary folding knives, not prohibited weapons. The blade length falls into everyday use territory, and the spring assist only kicks in after you start the motion by hand.

That means you can drop this assisted opening knife into your jeans pocket for a run into a Tyler feed store, or clip it inside your waistband before you drive into Austin. It's still on you to watch posted signs and special locations, but as a general everyday folder, this design fits cleanly into modern Texas carry culture.

Everyday Tasks from Houston Warehouses to West Texas Ranches

In a Dallas-area warehouse, the matte black edge bites through strapping without slipping across smooth plastic bands. Out on a place near Brady, the same blade shape rides the curve of a feed bag and opens it without showering you in pellets. The clip point gives you control at the tip for blister packs, while the belly of the edge handles longer draws through rope and fabric.

The glossy handle is more than just a picture frame. Its smooth contours keep hot spots down when you're twisting in heavy plastic or cutting through multiple layers of tape. It's the sort of knife you hand to the neighbor at a barbecue and they flick it open once and say, "That's not bad," before noticing the art and grinning.

Riding in a Texas Truck, Pocket, or Range Bag

Most Texans carry more than one blade. This assisted opener makes sense as the loud one—the knife that lives clipped to your pocket at a weekend cookout, or sits visible in the console tray when you're parked out by the lease. Closed up at 4.75 inches, it tucks into the side pocket of a range bag or a backpack without catching zippers or straps.

The pocket clip mounts on the spine side of the handle, keeping the flag artwork outward when you draw it. That means in a gun club parking lot outside Waco, the first thing someone sees is the red, white, and blue—then they hear the snap of the blade coming out. Statement first, work second, but both get done.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

True out-the-front automatics—what most folks call OTF knives—are legal to own and carry for most adults in Texas under current law, as long as you're not in a restricted location and you're not otherwise prohibited. This knife is not an OTF; it's a spring-assisted folding knife. That puts it in an even more straightforward category for everyday carry inside the state. Always check the latest statutes and any local rules, especially around schools, courthouses, and secure facilities.

Is this assisted opening knife a good fit for Texas political events?

For rallies, fundraisers, or watching returns at a friend's place, this design fits the mood. The 2024 campaign art and "God Bless America" handle text make it a natural pocket piece at a county GOP meeting or a watch party in a Fort Worth backyard. Just remember: some venues with metal detectors or strict security may ban knives outright, no matter the size, so know the rules before you line up.

How does this compare to a more expensive everyday carry knife?

A seasoned Texas buyer might keep a high-end folder for serious field work, then run a knife like this as their statement piece. You get spring-assisted speed, a secure liner lock, and stainless steel that holds up to light to medium chores. If your goal is a durable, disposable, conversation-starting knife you won't baby in a Deer Park refinery parking lot or a San Angelo tailgate, this hits that mark. It's the one you loan out without worrying if it comes back.

First Open in a Texas Evening

Picture a fall Friday night, small-town stadium lights burning over a packed lot. Someone hands you a bundle of raffle tickets still bound in tight plastic. You pinch the colorful strip in one hand, feel the familiar shape in your pocket with the other. The flipper catches, the spring takes over, and the matte black blade is working before the band finishes the song.

When you hand the tickets back, the person finally notices the flag on the handle and the bold campaign message on the steel. They nod, because in that moment, under those lights, a knife like this makes sense: a simple assisted opening blade that cuts what needs cutting and says exactly what you mean without another word.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.375
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Theme USA Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock