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Reaper’s Grasp Trench-Assisted Tactical Knife - Skull Black

Price:

11.99


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Reaper’s Grasp Trench Assisted Knife - Black Skull

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8020/image_1920?unique=dd064d5

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Late-night fuel stop off I-20, truck lights humming, and you slide the Reaper’s Grasp from your pocket. The spring-assisted blade snaps out clean, skull and bullet scars catching the light. Knuckle-guard handle locks your hand in, tan inlays biting into your grip. It’s not a gentleman’s folder. It’s a trench-style tool built for rough lots, glovebox duty, and the kind of Texas nights where you’d rather be ready than lucky.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

PWT382BK

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When the Parking Lot Is Empty and the Wind’s Up

West Texas station, pumps humming, not another soul in sight. You step out, feel that big quiet you only get on the edge of town. Reaper’s Grasp rides in your pocket, trench handle flat against your palm as you draw. One nudge on the flipper and the spring-assisted blade snaps open, skull and bullet holes flaring white against black steel. Not for show. For those in-between places every Texan passes through.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Compare: Why This Assisted Trench Blade Holds Its Own

A lot of folks searching for an OTF knife in Texas want the same thing you do here: fast, one-handed deployment and a blade that doesn’t blink at rough use. This isn’t an OTF mechanism; it’s a spring-assisted trench knife that opens with a solid, positive kick. At 3.5 inches, the drop-point blade brings enough belly for cutting hose, feed sacks, or nylon straps, with a straight edge that bites in and tracks true.

The three oval cutouts along the spine shave a little weight and give it that air-cut whistle when you work it fast. Gloss-black finish keeps reflections down under gas station lights or in a mesquite thicket, while the big skull and bullet impact art mark it as a piece you don’t confuse with anyone else’s.

Texans Who Reach Past Pretty Knives and Grab Steel That Fights Back

This trench-style handle isn’t shy. Full knuckle guard, finger grooves you can find in the dark, and exposed pommel points along the guard that make it clear what this knife is built for. The metal frame runs the length of your hand, with matte black finish and tan inlays that lock into your grip, sweaty or gloved.

In a Panhandle windstorm, tying down a loose tarp on a lowboy trailer, that guard keeps your fingers from sliding forward when the line jerks. In a dim apartment lot in San Antonio, walking in late from second shift, it gives your hand structure and authority without needing you to say a word.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers, Same Concerns: Speed, Control, and the Law

Folks hunting for a Texas OTF knife are really after confidence: will it open fast, stay put, and ride legal? This assisted trench knife hits the same first two needs with a different mechanism. The spring-assist fires from a flipper tab; once you start the blade, it finishes with a decisive snap. Liner lock sets in behind the tang, so when you bear down to cut baling twine or slice through thick cardboard in a warehouse in Lubbock, the blade feels planted.

Closed, it sits a little over four and a half inches, riding along the seam of your jeans or clipped inside a work vest. The pocket clip drops it low but not buried, easy to grab in a dark feed store lot or when you’re leaning into a truck console digging for tools. It’s not a gentleman’s slipjoint; it’s a modern trench-style assist that lives where you work and drive.

Texas Knife Laws, OTF Questions, and Where This Trench Knife Fits

More buyers walk into a Texas shop now asking the same thing: are switchblades and OTF knives legal here? Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTFs are generally legal to own and carry, with blade length and location restrictions tied to “location-restricted” places. This Reaper’s Grasp isn’t an automatic or an OTF; it’s a spring-assisted folding knife with a manual start and mechanical assist.

That difference matters. For most everyday Texas carry — from a Corpus warehouse floor to a ranch outside Kerrville — this style of assisted opener rides comfortably inside what most buyers consider a safer, less controversial choice than a full auto. You get speed and one-handed use without crossing into true switchblade territory, which gives a lot of people peace of mind when they clip it on before driving through multiple counties.

Reading the Land and the Law the Same Way

Texas knife culture isn’t about waving steel around; it’s about having the right tool, on your terms, within the law. A trench-style assisted like this fits that mindset: clearly defensive in profile, obviously practical when you’re cutting brake line packaging, slicing zip ties, opening pellet bags, or trimming paracord behind a deer lease cabin.

From Truck Stops to Lease Roads

Slide this knife into a truck door pocket as you roll down 35 through Austin traffic, or clip it inside your waistband before grabbing coffee in a dusty Hill Country town. The metal handle and skull-marked blade don’t care if it’s city concrete or caliche road dust—steel wipes clean, jimping on the spine gives your thumb somewhere honest to rest, and the guard keeps your knuckles out of trouble when work gets clumsy.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted and OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are generally legal to own and carry, but some locations are still restricted and local rules can vary. Blade length categories also matter in certain areas. If you’re worried about how a true switchblade looks to law enforcement or at specific job sites, a spring-assisted folder like this trench knife gives you fast deployment without being an OTF. Always check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules where you live and work before you carry.

Is this trench-style assisted knife practical for everyday Texas carry?

For a lot of Texans, yes. It’s not a tiny pocket knife, but it’s compact enough to ride clipped in work jeans on a framing site in Dallas or in the console of a South Texas service truck. The knuckle guard gives you more control when your hands are slick with sweat or oil, and the 3.5-inch blade is right in that sweet spot for breaking down boxes, cutting rope, or handling quick camp chores without feeling like you’re carrying a short sword everywhere you go.

How do I choose between an OTF knife and this assisted trench knife in Texas?

Ask yourself what you really need it to do. If you want a knife that looks less mechanical and more like a traditional folder, but still opens fast with one hand, this assisted trench design makes sense. It gives you strong grip, solid steel, and a quick, predictable open. If you’re focused on pure mechanism and novelty, you might lean OTF. If you care more about control in a bad parking lot, a windy jobsite, or on a lease road after dark, this blade and guard combination earn their keep.

First Night Out with Reaper’s Grasp

Picture a long day ending somewhere between Fort Worth and Abilene. You pull into a small lot behind a faded café, sky still holding a line of orange on the horizon. Before you step out, your hand finds the knife clipped on your pocket. Metal handle, tan inlays, skull-shadowed blade waiting on a light push. The spring takes it from there. It’s one quiet, simple motion that reminds you you’re not stepping out empty-handed. In a state this big, with this much ground between streetlights, that kind of prepared calm is exactly why Texans carry a trench-style assisted knife like this.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.625
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Theme Skull
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock