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Shadow Grip Rapid-Deploy Tanto OTF Knife - Black Rubberized

Price:

36.99


Grip-Grid Rapid-Deploy Double Edge OTF Knife - Matte Black
Grip-Grid Rapid-Deploy Double Edge OTF Knife - Matte Black
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Aurora Surge Double-Action OTF Knife - Rainbow Damascus
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Shadow Anchor Rapid-Deploy Tanto OTF Knife - Black Rubberized

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4768/image_1920?unique=4cccbe7

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Wind’s still coming off the caliche lot when the trouble shows up. Your OTF knife is already there. The side switch finds your thumb without thought, double‑action tanto blade snapping out clean and locked. Rubberized handle stays planted in sweat, dust, or rain. Pocket clip for jeans and a MOLLE sheath for the plate carrier or ranch rig. Quiet, quick, and built for people who don’t rehearse the moment—they’re just ready for it.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip
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Shadow Anchor in a West Texas Parking Lot

Sun’s dropping behind the pumps, heat still rolling off the asphalt. You’re leaning against the truck, watching the lot the way folks do when they’ve seen a few things. In your pocket rides a nine‑inch OTF with a rubberized grip that doesn’t slip, even when the day’s dust and sweat have soaked through your shirt. When a situation turns fast, you don’t want a folder that needs finesse. You want a side switch you can find without looking, a blade that drives straight and hard.

This Shadow Anchor Rapid-Deploy Tanto OTF Knife - Black Rubberized was built for that kind of evening—the long, quiet ones where nothing happens, until it does. It sits flat, clips deep, and comes out quick. No drama. No show. Just a working Texas OTF knife that does exactly what your thumb tells it to do.

Why This OTF Knife Belongs in Texas Pockets

Across the state, from refinery shifts on the Gulf to late runs across 281, knives don’t live in display cases. They live in back pockets, truck consoles, and MOLLE webbing on plate carriers. That’s where this double-action OTF knife settles in. Closed, it runs about five and three-quarter inches, long enough for a full grip when you draw, short enough to disappear against your pocket seam.

The side-mounted silver deployment switch tracks your thumb naturally along the frame. Push up and the American tanto blade jumps out, black two‑tone edge locking solid. Pull back and it snaps home again, ready to ride. Stainless steel takes the edge and keeps it through cardboard, nylon, hose, and the day’s odd jobs. The tanto tip gives you straight-line punch for breaking down heavy plastic or driving a controlled cut in tight angles—useful on a ranch gate, inside a truck cab, or along a dusty fence line miles from the nearest hardware store.

Texas OTF Knife Carry: Grip, Heat, and Real Use

Texas doesn’t do mild weather. Handles that feel fine in an air‑conditioned shop start to twist when your palms sweat through August. That’s where the black rubberized scales on this Texas OTF knife earn their keep. The texture bites into your hand without chewing it up, even if you’ve been swinging a post driver or running a wrench all morning. Linear grooves along the handle spine give your fingers reference points in the dark, under stress, or with gloves on.

At three and a quarter inches, the plain‑edge stainless blade is long enough to open feed bags, cut hose, or clear webbing, but short enough to maneuver in a cab or tight apartment hallway. Those small cutout slots along the blade lighten the profile without turning it into something delicate. This isn’t a safe queen. It’s a knife that shrugs off dust, pocket lint, and whatever sits at the bottom of your center console.

Carrying options match the way Texans actually live. The low‑profile pocket clip keeps it pinned to your jeans or shorts when you’re in town. The included MOLLE nylon sheath lets you run it on a plate carrier, pack strap, or range belt when the weekend turns to training or work. However you mount it, that glass breaker pommel gives you one last tool if you have to punch out a window over a flooded low-water crossing or a rollover in the dark.

Texas OTF Knife Law: What You Need to Know

There was a time when folks asked if they could even own a switchblade here. That time’s gone. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults, and there’s no special ban on automatic deployment. What matters now is blade length and location, not whether the blade fires out the front or folds.

OTF Knife Length and Places in Texas

This OTF knife runs a blade right around three and a quarter inches—well under the five‑and-a-half‑inch line that Texas law uses to define a "location-restricted knife." That means for most everyday life—gas station, grocery store, ranch supply, or walking your street—this stays on the legal side for adults. You still respect posted rules and restricted locations like schools or certain public buildings, but you’re not fighting the law just by clipping this in your pocket on the way to work.

A knife like this doesn’t make you bulletproof in court; it just keeps you from starting the day in violation. The rest is about how you use it—opening boxes, cutting rope, or standing in for the tool you don’t have on hand. That’s where a practical, under‑the‑line OTF knife Texas carriers trust is worth more than a giant showpiece that never legally leaves the house.

Shadow Anchor Details That Matter on Texas Ground

In a Panhandle windstorm or a Houston downpour, tiny details decide whether a knife stays in your rotation. This Shadow Anchor OTF rides that line well. The double‑action mechanism keeps the blade ready in both directions—no two‑handed closing, no fumbling. The torx screw construction lets you service it if you run it hard through dust, grit, or oil. The matte black handle doesn’t flash or draw attention, which matters when you’re carrying in town or inside a crowded bar after a game.

For many Texans, an automatic blade is about speed when your other hand is busy—holding a rope, steadying a dog, bracing against a doorframe. With this Texas OTF knife, one thumb does the work. The blade’s plain edge sharpens up fast on basic stones and holds enough bite to chew through nylon tie‑downs, heavy tape, or the strapping on a pallet. It’s not a delicate slicer; it’s a straight‑talking work edge that likes being used.

Hard Use from Border Brush to Hill Country Rock

Down south along the mesquite, you’ll use this to clear small branches out of a fence line or carve a quick notch in a post. In the Hill Country, it’s for cutting baling twine and trimming strap ends before a trailer run. In town, it lives in your pocket for that 2 a.m. roadside stop where you’re cutting a loose belt off a fan or digging into stubborn packaging at the warehouse. Same handle, same switch, same motion every time.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults. The key factor is blade length, not the automatic mechanism. A knife with a blade under five and a half inches—like this Shadow Anchor, at about three and a quarter—is generally legal for everyday carry in most places. You still avoid restricted locations like schools, courthouses, and certain government buildings, and you respect any posted policies on private property.

Will this Shadow Anchor OTF hold up to Texas heat and dust?

It was built with those conditions in mind. The rubberized handle keeps traction when your hand is slick with sweat, oil, or rain, and the stainless steel blade resists the rust and grit that come with Gulf humidity or Panhandle dust. The side switch and double‑action internals are simple enough to keep working with an occasional wipe‑down and a shot of light lubricant. It’s made for real carry in real Texas weather, not a climate‑controlled toolbox.

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

If you want a fast, one‑handed blade that stays legal, carries flat, and doesn’t mind hard use, it fits. The sub‑5.5‑inch blade length keeps it within Texas everyday carry norms, the rubberized grip gives you control when conditions are rough, and the pocket clip plus MOLLE sheath let you move it from jeans to duty gear without changing habits. If you need a big camp chopper, look elsewhere. If you need a reliable automatic knife you’ll actually carry, this one makes sense.

First Draw on a Two-Lane Texas Night

Picture a two‑lane road outside town, shoulders narrow, truck hood up under a washed‑out moon. You’ve killed the engine, hazards blinking against the dark. You reach for your pocket without thinking, feel the flat clip, and the Shadow Anchor is in your hand. One push of the side switch and the two‑tone tanto blade is out, cutting hose, trimming tape, or freeing tangled strap. No searching, no second try. Just a Texas OTF knife that’s as ready as you are when the road, the weather, or the moment turns. That’s why it earns a permanent spot in your pocket, on your belt, or on your kit.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Rubberized
Button Type Side switch
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double-action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster MOLLE nylon sheath