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Reaper USMC Tribute Assisted Tactical Knife - Black

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19.99


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Reaper Honor Assisted Tactical Knife - Black USMC

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Panhandle lease gate at dawn, dust on the wind, glove on your hand. The Reaper Honor Assisted Tactical Knife snaps open with a thumb flick, black USMC blade ready—smooth edge for feed sacks, serrations for nylon and rope. The rubber-over-nylon handle locks into your grip, skull-bead lanyard catching light. It rides clipped in your pocket or tossed in the truck, built for the Texan who likes his gear a little mean and always ready.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

MA1020BK

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

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When a Knife Belongs in a Texas Truck Console

The Reaper Honor Assisted Tactical Knife doesn’t live in a drawer. It lives in the center console of a half-ton pickup somewhere between Killeen and Copperas Cove, or clipped inside the pocket of a ranch jacket rolling down a gravel road outside San Angelo. Black USMC blade, skull-bead lanyard, spring-assisted snap—it looks like it’s supposed to be there, next to registration papers and an old gas receipt.

This isn’t an OTF knife. Texas buyers who reach for autos and switchblades know the difference. This is an assisted tactical folder built for the same kind of work: fast one-handed action, reliable lockup, and a blade that doesn’t complain when you ask too much of it.

Why This Texas Assisted Knife Stays in Reach

In a Texas workday, you don’t plan your cutting jobs. They just show up. One stop it’s a bundle of hay twine outside Abilene. Next stop it’s a pallet strap behind a San Antonio shop. The Reaper Honor’s 3.38-inch, half-serrated drop point blade handles the jump without drama. The plain edge bites clean into cardboard, plastic wrap, and feed sacks. The serrated section chews through tough nylon, paracord, and hose when you’re in a hurry.

The blade rides black and matte, USMC emblem stamped like it means it. A blood groove runs the length, not for show, but to pull a little weight out and give the blade some attitude. The thumb stud and spring-assisted action work together, so even if your hands are cold, sweaty, or gloved on a deer lease outside Junction, the knife still kicks open with a firm nudge.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers and This USMC-Assisted Alternative

If you’ve been searching for an OTF knife in Texas, it’s usually for two reasons: speed and control. The Reaper Honor checks both boxes in a different format. Spring-assist gives you that quick, decisive open Texans look for in an OTF knife Texas buyers often favor, without the double-action mechanism. Once deployed, the liner lock sets with a solid, audible click—no wobble, no guessing.

The handle is where this folder earns its keep. Double injection molding puts tough nylon fiber under a layer of rubber, so the grip stays in your hand when West Texas dust or Gulf Coast humidity make everything slick. Finger grooves and jimping along the spine give you purchase when you’re bearing down on stubborn hose or thick shipping straps behind a Houston warehouse.

Built for Texas Hands, Texas Heat, and Texas Habits

Texas doesn’t give knives easy days. The Reaper Honor runs 8.13 inches open, 4.75 inches closed, with enough heft—about 6.75 ounces—to feel solid without dragging your pocket down. It clips to the inside of a pair of Wranglers, tucks into a duty belt headed onto Fort Hood, or dangles skull-bead-first from a lanyard on a field pack outside Lubbock.

The pocket clip rides deep enough that it doesn’t flash every time you shift in a Buc-ee’s parking lot, but the knife comes out quick when you need it. That matte black finish on the blade doesn’t glare under sun on a Hill Country range, and it doesn’t shout for attention under evening lights in a Houston parking lot.

Steel blade, rubber-over-nylon handle, simple hardware—this is gear you don’t baby. Toss it in the truck door, drop it on caliche, wipe it on your jeans, put it back to work. That’s the kind of relationship most Texans want with a tactical folder.

Understanding Texas Knife Laws: Where This Assisted Folder Fits

Texas knife laws used to be a mess of old rules and grey areas. That changed. Today, most of the state’s concern is about location, not whether your blade is assisted, automatic, or a switchblade. OTF knives are legal in Texas. So are assisted-opening folders like this Reaper Honor. The focus is on blade length and whether you’re in a restricted place like certain schools, courts, or secure areas.

With a blade under four inches, this knife sits comfortably in the everyday-carry range for most Texans. It’s compact enough to ride along legally in almost every routine setting—from a hardware run in Temple to an evening meet-up in Amarillo—while still being long enough to be useful on the lease or at the range.

Where Texas Carry Culture Meets Practical Use

Ask a Texas cop, rancher, or line worker what they carry, and most of them will say the same thing: something they don’t have to think about. A knife that just works when the job shows up. Assisted-opening folders go over well here because they feel natural in the hand and don’t require explanation if someone sees you open one at a worksite in Dallas or at the back of a feed store in Seguin.

This USMC-branded blade fits that culture. It nods to service without being costume gear. It opens fast, locks solid, and cuts what Texas days put in front of you.

OTF, Automatic, Assisted: How Texans Actually Choose

OTF knives Texas buyers search for bring a little extra mechanical flair. But when it comes to day-in, day-out use, a lot of folks settle on assisted folders because they trust the simplicity. One spring, one liner lock, one thumb stud. No levers to fail, no learning curve, no drama if someone less knife-savvy is watching you work.

If you like the speed and attitude of an OTF but want something friendlier in mixed company—office, warehouse, truck stop—this Reaper Honor hits that middle ground.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry in most situations. The main limits now are on where you carry and, in some locations, blade length—places like schools, certain government buildings, and secured areas have special rules. Laws can change, and local policies can differ, so it’s smart to double-check current Texas knife laws and any posted regulations where you work or travel.

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

It is. The half-serrated 3.38-inch blade handles rope, hose, and feed sacks without fuss, and the rubberized, textured handle keeps your grip steady when your hands are wet, dusty, or gloved. The skull-bead lanyard gives you an easy grab point if it’s buried in a pack, and the low-riding clip keeps it handy on long days bouncing across pasture roads or climbing in and out of a side-by-side.

How does this compare to buying an OTF knife in Texas for everyday carry?

If you’re drawn to an OTF knife Texas shoppers often choose for rapid deployment, this assisted folder gives you similar one-handed speed with simpler mechanics and a more familiar profile in everyday Texas settings. It rides easier in a pocket, draws less attention when you open it in public, and still gives you that "ready now" feeling when you thumb the stud and feel the spring take over.

Putting This Knife to Work in a Texas Day

Picture a long, dry afternoon on a lease outside San Saba. Sun low, wire sagging on the back line. You step out of the truck, clip of the Reaper Honor catching under your thumb. One motion and the black USMC blade snaps open, serrations going to work on baling twine while the plain edge trims tarp and feed bags. When the job’s done, it folds, disappears back into your pocket, skull bead tapping against your palm as you slam the door and roll on. No showboating. Just a tactical assisted knife that makes sense in the places Texans actually live and work.

Blade Length (inches) 3.38
Overall Length (inches) 8.13
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 6.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Nylon fiber
Theme USMC
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock