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Shadowline Front-Switch OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber

Price:

39.99


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Metro Beacon Keychain OTF Knife - Purple Aluminum
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Quiet Range Front-Switch OTF Blade - Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5142/image_1920?unique=7a6252a

10 sold in last 24 hours

Sun’s barely up over the lot and the heat’s already pushing through the concrete. This OTF knife rides low in your pocket, front switch right under your thumb when you need it. The spear point blade snaps out straight and sure, light in the carbon fiber handle, ready for hose, feed bag, or a stray length of wire. No flash. No fight with the clip. Just a clean-working blade built for the way Texans actually carry.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB167CF

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When a Front-Switch OTF Belongs in Your Pocket, Not Your Glove Box

You’re walking out of a metal building in Odessa, sun bouncing hard off the hood of your truck. One hand’s full of cable, the other’s dragging a busted pallet. You don’t want to dig for a folder or pry with a box cutter. Your thumb finds the front switch on this OTF, and the spear point blade is already out working before the gate swings shut.

That’s where this front-switch OTF lives: jeans pocket at a job site, tucked into a console between toll tags, pinned in a boot at the edge of a caliche lot. Light, slim, no showy finishes. Just a carbon fiber handle and a clean blade that opens in one straight line.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For in Real Work

People who search for an OTF knife in Texas aren’t hunting for a toy. They want a blade that’ll cut nylon strap on a feed delivery in Gonzales one day and slice shrink wrap off a pallet in a Dallas warehouse the next. This single-action front-switch OTF drives its spear point blade forward with a solid, unhurried snap. Three inches of matte-finished steel step out of a 4.375-inch carbon fiber body, keeping the overall profile at about 7.25 inches — enough reach to get past tape, plastic, or hose without feeling like you’re waving a dagger in a parking lot.

At 2.85 ounces, it all but disappears in a front pocket or clipped inside a work vest. That deep-carry clip rides low, so in a Buc-ee’s line or a Hill Country tasting room, it looks more like a pen than a problem. When you step back out to the truck and need it, the switch is right where your thumb expects it.

Carbon Fiber, Front Switch, and the Way Texans Actually Carry

There’s plenty of heavy steel you can strap to a belt. This isn’t that. The carbon fiber handle keeps the weight down without feeling hollow, so it doesn’t drag your gym shorts when you’re walking the dog down a San Antonio greenway or climbing into a bay boat at Rockport. The matte handle finish and torx hardware stay subdued — no mirror shine to catch parking lot lights or the eye of the guy at the register.

The front switch sits in the natural run of your thumb. It’s ribbed for traction, so even with sweat from a Houston August or dust from a Lubbock windstorm, you can drive the blade forward in one measured push. Single-action means it fires out with authority, then you reset it by hand — simple, predictable, fewer moving parts to foul with grit and pocket lint.

At the back, the glass-breaker tip doesn’t beg for attention, but it’s there if you ever find yourself sideways in a flooded low-water crossing or trying to punch a window on a locked truck in an Austin parking garage. You hope you won’t use it. Texans know better than to count on hope alone.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Law They Live Under

Not long ago, you had to worry about whether a switchblade or OTF knife would put you on the wrong side of a patrol stop on I-35. That changed. Texas removed its switchblade and automatic ban back in 2017, and out-the-front knives like this front-switch are legal to own and carry for most adults. The real lines now are about places and blade categories, not whether it’s an automatic.

Understanding How Texas Treats OTF Knives

Under current Texas law, an OTF knife sits in the same bucket as other knives. The key distinction is between an ordinary knife and what the statute calls a “location-restricted knife,” mostly tied to blade length over 5.5 inches and certain protected places. This blade runs about three inches, well under that threshold, which gives you more freedom sliding it into a pocket before heading into town. You still have to respect restricted locations — schools, certain government buildings, courts, and a few other carved-out spots — but the automatic part no longer makes it contraband.

This isn’t legal advice, and laws can change. Any Texan serious about carry should read the current text of the Texas Penal Code and local ordinances. But if you’re looking for an OTF knife that falls comfortably in the under-5.5-inch camp and carries like a regular pocket knife, this one fits how most Texans move through their day.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Works From Bayou to Brush

Knife buyers in this state test blades against real miles. In the pineywoods around Livingston, that plain-edge spear point sees rope, tarp, and the occasional stubborn feed sack. In Midland, it’s more likely to be cutting zip ties, ducting, or stubborn tape in a hot warehouse. Plain edge steel in a spear point profile gives you that fine tip for detailed cuts and a long, usable belly for push cuts through thicker material.

Texas Use Cases: From Job Site to Lease Road

If you’re walking a lease road outside Junction and catch a length of wire drooping across a gate, the matte silver blade won’t flash like a signal mirror when you cut it free. On a San Marcos river bank, the same edge goes clean through wet paracord or the frayed end of a throw bag rope. The central fuller and drilled accent holes keep the blade light without turning it delicate, so the action stays smooth even after a month of pocket grit and field dust.

Back in town, it handles quieter work: opening boxes at a Fort Worth shop without shredding whatever’s inside, trimming zip ties behind a server rack in a Plano office, or cutting banding off lumber on a weekend build. It’s quick to deploy, just as quick to put away, which matters in the tight quarters of city life where people notice motion more than metal.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic or switchblade-style knives are legal to own and carry for most adults. The main legal concern now is blade length and specific restricted locations, not the opening mechanism. This blade sits at roughly three inches, under the 5.5-inch line that triggers the “location-restricted knife” category. You should still avoid carrying any knife into clearly restricted areas and stay current on Texas statutes and any local rules.

Is this front-switch OTF a good fit for discreet Texas everyday carry?

For Texans who want a low-profile automatic, this front-switch design checks the boxes. The deep pocket clip tucks the carbon fiber handle low in your jeans or work pants, and the slim 4.375-inch closed length keeps it from printing. The matte blade and handle don’t draw eyes in an H-E-B aisle or gas station line, but the switch sits right under your thumb when you step outside and need a blade now.

How does this OTF compare to a regular folder for Texas work and ranch chores?

A regular folder will get the job done, but this OTF gives you a straighter, faster path from pocket to cut. On a hot job site in College Station or along a fence line near Amarillo, you can bring the spear point to full lock with one clean thumb stroke, even if your other hand is busy steadying a load or holding a gate. The tradeoff is you treat it like the precision tool it is — keep the tracks reasonably clean, respect the single-action reset, and it’ll keep serving when dust and time wear on cheaper pocket knives.

Where This Texas OTF Knife Ends Up: On You, Every Day

Picture a summer evening on a Hill Country back porch. Grill’s going, kids are chasing each other through the dry grass, and a stubborn bale of charcoal refuses to tear open. You don’t hunt for a box cutter in the garage. Your hand goes to the front pocket you’ve carried from job site to feed store to this chair. The front switch moves without thought, the spear point blade opens the bag in one straight cut, and disappears again before the smoke even thickens.

Same knife rides with you before dawn in a Houston parking garage, clipped deep and quiet as you cross to your truck. It’s there in San Angelo when you’re cutting baling twine in the wind, or in Brownsville when you slice rope off a cooler on the dock. This isn’t a showpiece or a souvenir. It’s the OTF you carry because it fits the way this state works — direct, ready, and always close at hand.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.375
Weight (oz.) 2.85
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Front Switch
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Single Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Deluxe Sheath