Skip to Content
Patriot Rally Commemorative Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

Price:

9.99


Dragon Tempest Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Steel
Dragon Tempest Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Steel
9.99 9.99
Rally Resolve Quick‑Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - USA Flag
Rally Resolve Quick‑Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - USA Flag
9.99 9.99

Rally Banner Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2426/image_1920?unique=36259fc

9 sold in last 24 hours

Late evening, two-lane blacktop outside Waco, you flip this spring-assisted knife open with one thumb while you cut a loose tie-down in the truck bed. The matte black clip-point blade snaps into place, light in the hand, solid in the lock. The flag-wrapped handle and rally slogan aren’t subtle. It’s a working pocket knife first, a statement second—built for box tape, feed sacks, and whatever else the day hands you.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

JK6418T8

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Rally Banner Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife Built for Real Texas Days

The sun’s dropping behind a row of metal buildings on the edge of town. You’re behind a half-ton in a gravel lot, cutting zip ties off campaign signs, breaking down boxes, and clearing out a truck bed before you point it toward home. This spring-assisted pocket knife rides flat in your front pocket, comes out quick, and opens with a clean, one-handed flick. No drama. Just a matte black blade and a loud handle that already says what you came here to say.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and a Spring-Assisted Alternative

A lot of folks searching for an OTF knife in Texas are really looking for a fast, one-hand folder they can carry daily without thinking twice. This spring-assisted knife gives you that quick-action feel without the full automatic mechanism of a true OTF. The flipper tab and thumb stud sit proud enough to find without looking, even in the cab with the dome light off, and the assisted mechanism drives the blade open with a solid snap you can feel through the aluminum handle.

At 4.75 inches closed, it rides easy in jeans or work pants, whether you’re walking into a feed store in Llano or a gas station off I-35. Opened out to 8.375 inches, the clip-point stainless blade gives you real working length for cutting plastic banding, slicing hose, or clearing rough cordage out at a deer lease. It’s the same role many Texans buy an OTF knife for—fast deployment, pocket ready, dependable—but in a spring-assisted liner lock build.

How This Spring-Assisted Blade Works in Texas Conditions

The matte black blade isn’t built to sit in a glass case. It’s stainless steel, plain edge, with a clip-point profile that bites into cardboard, feed sacks, and light rope without wandering. Out on a hot job site in San Antonio, when sweat and dust get into everything, the matte finish cuts glare and shrugs off smudges well enough that you don’t baby it. It sharpens back up with a basic stone or pull-through sharpener—no boutique steel, just a working edge you can bring back in a few minutes at the tailgate.

The handle is aluminum with a gloss finish laid over full-color flag and rally artwork. That coating does more than show off; it smooths the contours so the knife doesn’t chew up your pocket lining, and it wipes clean after a muddy rodeo parking lot or a dusty afternoon on county roads outside Abilene. The liner lock inside the handle engages clean when the blade snaps open, giving you a simple, visible lockup you can check at a glance.

Texas OTF Knife Law, Spring-Assisted Carry, and What’s Legal

In this state, the law is straightforward. Switchblades, automatic knives, and OTF knives are legal to own and carry for adults in most everyday situations. Texas removed the old switchblade ban years back. What matters now is blade length and location. This spring-assisted knife runs a 3.75-inch blade, which keeps it under the 5.5-inch limit that applies in most public places.

Where This Knife Fits Under Texas Knife Laws

Under current Texas law, this knife is not a “location-restricted knife” because the blade is under 5.5 inches. That means an adult can legally carry it in the pocket in day-to-day spots: hardware stores, grocery runs, gas stations, and most workplaces that don’t have their own policies against knives. You still have to respect posted signage, private property rules, schools, and certain government buildings, but from a state law standpoint, this spring-assisted folder falls on the easy side of legal carry.

For Texans who’ve been asking if switchblades or OTF knives are legal here, this knife slides into that same conversation. It opens fast like an automatic, but the assisted mechanism stays on the right side of the law and the blade length keeps you out of the “restricted” category. For pocket carry around town—from Beaumont to Lubbock—you’re in practical, legal territory, as long as you use common sense.

Why Texas Buyers Cross-Shop This with an OTF Knife

When somebody walks into a shop along Highway 287 asking where to buy OTF knives in this state, they usually add a second question: can I carry it every day? That’s where this knife earns its keep. You get one-hand, spring-driven deployment that feels a lot like an OTF when you’re in a hurry, but you keep the familiar folding profile and classic liner lock. It drops into the pocket, clips onto the edge of your jeans, or rides in a truck console tray without taking over the whole space.

Everyday Tasks from Panhandle to Gulf Coast

Picture a day that starts at a rig yard north of Odessa and ends backing a boat into a slip at Clear Lake. You’re cutting pallet wrap, trimming stray rope on a dock line, and opening bulk mail in the office in between. This knife rides clipped to your pocket the whole way. The pocket clip is set for one position along the spine, keeping the handle artwork tucked in close. You draw, flip the tab, hear the snap, make your cut, and fold it away with your thumb on the liner lock. No searching, no two-hand fuss.

Down along the Coast, salt in the air and grit on everything, that stainless blade and finished handle make cleanup simple. A rinse, a wipe-down, and a drop of oil at the pivot keep the assisted action ready for the next day. For many Texans, that’s the same role they imagine for a Texas OTF knife—always there, always ready—just in a friendlier, everyday package.

Patriotic Artwork, Practical Build

The handle doesn’t whisper. Full-color flag art runs the length of the aluminum scales, with rally imagery and MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN printed bold. It’s a knife that says exactly where you stand before you ever open it. That plays out at a county fair, a small-town barbecue, or a late-night meet-up outside a civic center after a rally lets out. When you pull this knife to cut baling twine, slice open a sack of ice, or trim zip ties off signage, people notice what’s in your hand and what’s on it.

The hardware keeps up. The flipper tab and thumb stud give you two ways to run the assisted opening, handy when you’re wearing gloves at a winter event in Amarillo or working in the wind at a ranch gate. The lanyard hole at the handle end lets you tie off a short cord, making it easy to fish out of a deep pocket or glove box in the dark. Nothing fancy. Just the kind of details that matter when your knife is more than something you show off once and put away.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal for adults to own and carry, as long as the blade is not over 5.5 inches in most public places. Location-restricted knives—those over 5.5 inches—can’t be carried into schools, certain government buildings, and a short list of sensitive locations. This spring-assisted knife runs a 3.75-inch blade, so it stays under that limit and is generally legal for everyday pocket carry, barring local rules or posted signs.

Will this spring-assisted knife handle Texas ranch and roadside work?

It will do the sort of everyday jobs most Texans actually use a pocket knife for. The 3.75-inch stainless clip-point blade is long enough to cut hay string, slice fuel hose, open sacks, or trim light cord on a stock trailer. It opens fast when you’re standing on the fender or leaning over a tailgate. For heavy prying or bone work, you’d step up to a fixed blade, but for normal ranch, road, and shop tasks, this spring-assisted folder pulls its weight.

How should I choose between this and an OTF knife for Texas carry?

Pick based on how you really carry. If you want a knife that disappears in your front pocket, looks like a regular folder, and still opens fast with one hand, this spring-assisted build makes sense. It keeps you under the 5.5-inch blade length limit and stays familiar to anyone used to a liner-lock pocket knife. If you prefer a true OTF mechanism and don’t mind the different feel and profile, a Texas OTF knife is another option, but this one covers most daily Texas use cases cleanly.

First Use, Somewhere Off a Texas Highway

Night’s coming on outside a fairground along a two-lane road. You’re loading signs, breaking down tables, and strapping tarps tight before the wind shifts. You reach into your pocket, feel the gloss-slick edge of the flag handle, and bring out a knife that looks like it belongs at the rally you just walked out of. One push on the flipper, the matte black blade snaps open, and you cut the last length of cord. No speech, no spotlight. Just a simple pocket knife doing its job in the back lot of a Texas town that’ll be quiet again by morning.

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
Theme USA Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock