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Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

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7.99


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Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7476/image_1920?unique=42a8b6e

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West of Weatherford, parked on a caliche shoulder, this assisted opening knife sits clipped in pocket, matte black blade riding quiet under a rebel-banner handle. One nudge on the flipper and the 3.5-inch spear point snaps out, light but ready, locked solid on a liner. It’s the kind of quick-deploy folder you forget about until the moment you need to cut rope, break down a box, or handle small work around the place. Then it speaks first.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Rebel Banner Attitude, Built for Real Road Miles

On a two-lane outside Abilene, the sun’s dropping behind a windmill and the truck bed is full of feed sacks and busted-down boxes. This assisted opening knife rides clipped inside a back pocket, rebel-banner handle catching a flash of color when you lean into the tailgate. One press on the flipper and that matte black spear point is out, steady, and already working.

This isn’t a safe-queen. It’s a quick-deploy assisted opening knife made for the kind of days when you’re cutting bale twine before breakfast and stripping tape off pallets by dark. The banner may be loud, but the mechanics are quiet and sure.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

Across the Panhandle, the Hill Country, and down through refinery towns on the Gulf, folks carry blades for work first and show second. This assisted opening knife threads that line. The rebel-banner handle gives it that barroom personality, but the real story is the fast, predictable deployment and the way it sits in hand when the job isn’t pretty.

Closed, it runs about four and a half inches, slim enough to disappear in jeans or slide into a truck console organizer beside a flashlight and registration. At just over three ounces, it won’t drag your pocket, even on long days walking fenceline or running parts into town. The spring-assisted action hits that sweet spot: light pressure on the flipper, then a confident snap to full lock, controlled enough that you’re not fighting the blade on open.

Matte Black Spear Point That Works From Barn to Jobsite

The blade runs three and a half inches, matte black, spear point, and plain edged. In a feed store parking lot or behind a strip mall dock in Houston, it cuts what Texans actually cut: stretch wrap, nylon rope, feed bags, irrigation line, cardboard, and the odd stray zip-tie some contractor left where it shouldn’t be.

The spear point profile gives you a strong tip for piercing plastic drums or starting a cut in heavy packaging, while the plain edge makes quick work of clean, straight slices. The matte finish helps it stay low-key in town, not flashing light every time you flip it open. Steel is straightforward working steel—no marketing tricks, just a solid edge you can touch up on a pocket stone in the shade of a barn or at the tailgate between loads.

Texas Knife Law, Assisted Openers, and Everyday Carry

Folks ask about legality more than almost anything else. In this state, the law draws a clear line: automatic knives and OTFs had their day in the penalty column before Texas updated the statute. Now, both automatics and assisted folders like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not taking them into places Texas law marks off-limits—schools, certain government buildings, secured areas, and spots where posted signs shut down weapons carry.

This knife is a spring-assisted folder, not an automatic switchblade or OTF. You start the motion on the flipper, and the spring finishes it—no button-only deployment, no hidden mechanism that fires without you moving the blade. For everyday carry in most Texas towns, from Amarillo to Corpus, a knife like this rides on the right side of current state law when carried by a law-abiding adult outside those restricted zones.

Understanding Texas Carry Reality

On a Friday night in Midland, this assisted opening knife sits clipped in a front pocket at a roadside diner. The pocket clip keeps the rebel-banner handle high enough to grab, low enough that it doesn’t shout across the room. You’re within the law, you’re within reason, and you’ve got a tool that opens in a heartbeat if you need to cut a stuck seatbelt or slice a hose in a ranch yard before it floods a stall.

From Pasture Gates to Parking Garages

Out at a lease near Junction, you might carry it backup to a heavier fixed blade, using it for tag ends on wire, tape, light cord, and every small cut you’d rather not gum up a big knife on. In a Dallas parking garage, it’s the knife that trims frayed paracord on a rooftop rack or opens packages in the back of an SUV. Same tool, different ground, same straightforward purpose.

Build Details That Stand Up to Texas Use

The handle is aluminum with a matte finish, light but solid, so sweat, dust, and the occasional splash of hydraulic fluid can be wiped off without fuss. The rebel-banner graphic rides on the scales, framed by black hardware and a squared-off butt that gives your hand a positive stop when you’re bearing down on a cut.

A liner lock does the real work of keeping the blade in place. When you flip it open outside a feedlot or in the shade of a warehouse bay, that liner moves behind the tang with a clear, tactile engagement. Close it one-handed by thumbing the liner back and folding the blade into the handle, all without shifting your grip more than you need to.

The pocket clip anchors it where Texans actually carry knives—front pocket of work jeans, back pocket on a late-night run to Buc-ee’s, or along the edge of a truck visor when you don’t want it buried in a console. The slim profile means it won’t snag climbing into a lifted cab or sliding into a crowded bleacher row at a small-town football game.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, most adults can legally own and carry OTF knives and other automatics, as long as they stay out of specific prohibited places—schools, certain government buildings, secured facilities, and any location where proper signage restricts weapons. This knife isn’t an OTF; it’s a spring-assisted folder. You start the open with the flipper, and the spring helps finish it. For everyday use in most Texas towns and counties, an assisted opener like this is treated like a standard folding knife, carried responsibly within state and local rules.

Will this assisted opening knife hold up to Texas heat and dust?

From Lubbock cotton dust to Gulf humidity, this knife is built for real-world abuse. The aluminum handle shrugs off sweat and dry grit, and the matte black blade doesn’t glare in direct sun. Keep a light coat of oil on the pivot and wipe it down after dusty days in the yard or on the lease, and the spring-assisted action will keep snapping open cleanly. It’s not a safe display piece—it’s meant for hot dashboards, dusty pockets, and tailgate sharpening sessions.

Is this the right knife for my main Texas everyday carry?

If your main work is opening boxes, cutting light cord, trimming hose, and tackling small jobs around a place or in-town shop, this assisted opening knife fits that role well. It’s fast, light, and easy to carry all day, with a blade long enough for real tasks but not oversized for city carry. If you spend most days breaking down game or prying in rough material, pair it with a heavier fixed blade and let this ride as your quick-access pocket tool.

First Use: A Small Job on a Big Texas Day

Picture a hot evening outside a Waco warehouse. Trucks are lined up at the dock, cicadas are loud, and a pallet shows up wrapped in plastic that might as well be armor. You feel the rebel-banner handle under your fingers as you slide this assisted opening knife from your pocket. A touch on the flipper and the matte black spear point is there, locked, no hesitation.

In three smooth pulls, the plastic is off, boxes are open, and you’re folding the blade back into the handle without thinking. It goes back into your pocket the way it came out—easy, sure, part of the day. That’s where this knife belongs: in the quiet, necessary work that fills the hours between sunrise on a caliche road and the last load under yard lights.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.125
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 3.43
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Confederate Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock