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Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Tanto Automatic Knife - G10 Green

Price:

16.99


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Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Automatic Tanto Knife - G10 Green

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1777/image_1920?unique=01b512e

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Sun’s barely up over a caliche lot and you’re already cutting pallet wrap and nylon strap. This automatic tanto knife fires with a clean button press, then locks solid with a thumb-safe you can trust in a moving truck. The green G‑10 scales stay planted in sweaty hands, while partial serrations chew through rope and webbing. Slim in a front pocket, sure in the hand, it’s the kind of automatic Texans clip on and forget—until it saves five minutes on every job.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB262GNTS

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Ranger Signal Safety-Locked Automatic Tanto Knife - G10 Green

The morning starts gray over a gravel yard outside San Angelo. Forklift backing, trucks idling, stretch wrap piled at your boots. You thumb the button on this automatic tanto, hear that quiet snap as the blade locks out, and the day gets easier by inches instead of inches of cussing.

This isn’t a drawer queen. It’s a work knife built for people who live out of trucks, cross lease roads before daylight, and know that a good automatic saves more time than a second pair of hands.

Why This Feels Like the Right OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For

Texans searching for what feels like the best OTF knife Texas can offer are really after a few things: instant one-handed deployment, a blade that doesn’t blink at nylon or feed bags, and a handle that doesn’t squirm when your grip is dusty and wet. This automatic tanto knife checks those boxes without shouting about it.

The button sits high enough to find with gloves on, but low enough not to fire in your pocket. Press, and the 3.75-inch American tanto blade snaps open with a short, clean stroke. Thumb the safety forward and it stays put, locked for cutting hay twine in a trailer or zip ties on a skid in a San Antonio warehouse.

It rides slim in jeans or work pants, disappears in a console tray, and sits light on your pocket until you need it. That’s what Texas buyers are after when they go hunting for a Texas OTF knife: speed without drama, reliability without babysitting.

Automatic Tanto Built for Real Texas Work, Not Just Talk

On a job site outside Midland, wind kicking dust under your safety glasses, you don’t need a fragile point. The American tanto tip on this blade gives you a strong, reinforced edge you can lean into for scraping gasket off a valve cover or punching through stiff plastic banding without worrying about snapping anything delicate.

The forward edge handles the push cuts and punctures; the straight main edge and partial serrations do the rest. Serrations near the handle bite into manila rope, poly rope, and that stubborn braided nylon every ranch seems to collect. The plain edge section handles cardboard, feed sacks, and tape without tearing them to shreds.

The matte steel blade doesn’t glare in bright West Texas sun and doesn’t scream for attention if you’re opening boxes in a Houston receiving bay. It’s steel meant to be ground, used, touched up, and put back to work, not babied.

Grip, Safety, and Carry That Make Sense Across the State

Texas heat doesn’t care if you’re on a Corpus dock or watching fence lines near Childress; your hands will sweat either way. That’s where the green G‑10 handle earns its place. It’s textured, not slick, with just enough bite to stay in your palm when your grip is oily or wet, but not so aggressive it chews up your pockets.

The straight profile lays flat along your pocket seam or tucks into a boot top if you prefer. The pocket clip pins it in place on a belt or jeans pocket, handy when you’re climbing in and out of a crew cab all day or squeezing past pallets in a Plano stockroom.

Right next to the deployment button sits a sliding safety lock. Coming out of a glove, you can feel it by touch alone—forward to fire, back to lock. Walking a busy show barn, bending, sitting, or sliding into a tractor seat, that safety means you’re not wondering if the blade is coming alive on its own. It stays shut until you tell it otherwise.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and Where This Automatic Fits

For years, Texans had to second-guess carrying anything automatic. That changed when the state rolled back restrictions on switchblades and OTF-style autos, treating them like any other pocketknife for most adults. Today, for law-abiding adults, carrying an automatic like this is legal in most day-to-day situations, whether you’re in Amarillo or Allen.

The key in Texas is where you are and what else is going on. Schools, secure government buildings, and certain posted locations can still have rules that make any knife a problem, automatic or not. But for the typical Texas buyer—contractors, ranch hands, warehouse workers, linemen, and everyday carriers—this automatic is built to sit on your pocket legally and quietly while you do your job.

The safety lock adds peace of mind: it’s there to keep the blade from opening unintentionally, not to make it legal. Texas law doesn’t require a safety, but anyone shoving a knife into a truck seat gap or throwing it in a tackle bag will appreciate that extra mechanical insurance.

How This Automatic Compares to an OTF Knife Texas Carriers Might Consider

Some Texans go straight for a true out-the-front mechanism. They like the double-action click and the straight-line deployment. This knife answers a different need. Where an OTF knife Texas carriers favor might excel in speed and novelty, this side-opening automatic leans into simplicity and durability. Fewer moving parts, a robust pivot, and a tanto shape that forgives ugly jobs.

If your day is more about cutting and less about collecting, this style of automatic often makes more sense. You get the fast deployment and one-handed use of the Texas OTF knife category, but with the lateral strength of a traditional folder.

Texas Use Cases That Suit This Automatic Knife

On a lease road outside Laredo, this knife is for cutting drag chain ties and trimming hose. In a Dallas warehouse, it’s for breaking down triple-wall boxes and slashing banding fast between dock doors. On a small place outside Waco, it lives on your pocket while you cut baling twine, trim tarp edges, and slice feed sacks when the utility knife walked off again.

The lanyard hole at the handle end lets you tether it to a vest, throw a short cord through it for gloved retrieval on cold Panhandle mornings, or hang it from a nail in a barn office so it has a place to live between shifts.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law no longer singles out switchblades and OTF knives the way it used to. For most adults, an OTF knife or automatic like this can be carried much like any other pocketknife. The main concerns today are location and behavior: schools, secured government facilities, and certain posted properties may restrict all knives, not just autos. Outside those zones, a law-abiding adult in Texas can usually carry an automatic or OTF knife daily without issue, whether that’s in a pocket, belt, or truck.

Is this automatic knife a good fit for Texas ranch and lease work?

Yes. The combination of a 3.75-inch tanto blade, partial serrations, and green G‑10 scales makes it well suited to ranch chores and lease work across the state. You get a tip strong enough for puncturing feed bags and cutting plastic drums, serrations for poly rope and net wrap, and a grippy handle that doesn’t turn slick when your hands are muddy or sweaty. The safety lock keeps it from opening when you’re bouncing in a side-by-side or crawling through a fence.

How does this compare to a higher-priced Texas OTF knife for everyday carry?

A premium OTF knife Texas buyers might cross-shop will usually bring exotic steels, more complex mechanisms, and a higher price. This automatic focuses on what most working Texans actually need: reliable button deployment, a strong tanto profile, practical serrations, and a G‑10 handle that can be dropped, scraped, and rinsed off. If your knife spends more time cutting shrink wrap and rope than posing for photos, this work-first build may make more sense than a high-dollar collectible.

Carrying It Home: A First Day in Your Pocket

End of a long Thursday in August, storm building over the Hill Country, you’re locking the yard gate with sweat dried into your shirt. The knife rides light in your front pocket, clip just visible above worn denim. One last strap to cut, one more piece of tape that didn’t want to tear, and the blade is there with a press and a snap, then gone again before anyone thinks to ask for help.

That’s the point. A dependable automatic that fits Texas work, Texas roads, and Texas carry habits without calling attention to itself. You don’t have to think about it. You just reach for it, and it’s there.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material G-10
Button Type Button
Theme None
Safety Safety Lock
Pocket Clip Yes