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Stealth Two‑Tone Dagger + Rapid OTF Knife - Black

Price:

36.99


Shadowline Two-Tone Precision OTF Knife - Black Handle
Shadowline Two-Tone Precision OTF Knife - Black Handle
36.99 36.99
Signal Grip Compact OTF Knife - Pink Rubberized
Signal Grip Compact OTF Knife - Pink Rubberized
32.99 32.99

Shadowline Rapid-Dagger OTF Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5133/image_1920?unique=fcf2357

7 sold in last 24 hours

West of Fort Worth, under a parking-lot light that barely works, this OTF knife rides flat in your pocket until you thumb the slide and the double-edge dagger snaps to life. The matte black handle vanishes against a work belt, the two‑tone blade does the cutting without show. Quiet action, solid lockup, easy reset. It feels like something a serious Texan carries, not something they talk about.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB194BKDP

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When a Quiet Blade Belongs in Your Pocket

You step out of the truck behind a feed store in Llano after dark. Wind pushing dust down the alley, one dim security light humming overhead. You don’t want a flashy blade; you want something that just works. Thumb finds the slide on this Shadowline Rapid-Dagger OTF Knife, and the two‑tone dagger is there—no drama, no delay.

This isn’t a showpiece. The matte black handle lies flat against your jeans or work pants, deep in the pocket, clip snug on the seam. The double-edge dagger blade carries a black center fuller and clean plain edges that don’t snag cardboard, strap, or nylon. It’s an OTF built for people who work in parking lots, on back steps, and in tight Texas spaces where you don’t have room to fiddle with a folder.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For After Dark

Across the state—from refinery lots in Baytown to late runs around the yards in Lubbock—an OTF knife Texas workers trust has to do three things. It has to deploy fast, stay put until it’s called on, and handle the kind of cutting that never makes the job description. This double‑action mechanism answers all three.

Push the thumb slide up, the blade drives straight out the front with a crisp, mechanical snap. No wrist flick, no extra motion if you’re wedged between a truck bed and a trailer gate. Pull the slide back, the dagger disappears into the handle, locked away until the next task. That’s the quiet benefit of a Texas OTF knife like this—fast in hand, just as fast out of sight.

On a hot August afternoon in Houston, you’re slicing pallet wrap in a warehouse with fans doing more noise than cooling. In January, you’re cutting zip ties with half-frozen fingers in the Panhandle wind. The straight, rectangular handle and top-side actuator give you a repeatable grip, gloved or bare, so the motion stays the same whether it’s 30 degrees or 103.

Double-Edge Dagger Built for Texas Work, Not Talk

Most folks don’t need a blade that looks mean; they need a blade that bites when asked. The two‑tone dagger here earns its keep with twin plain edges you can put to work from either side. Cutting feed bags in a Hill Country barn, trimming hose under a truck in a Midland yard, or breaking down thick cardboard by the dock in Corpus—this knife doesn’t care which way it’s turned when you start the cut.

The center black panel down the blade keeps reflections down under bright yard lights or sun off a white metal roof. It’s not about being tactical for its own sake; it’s about not drawing the eye when you open a Texas OTF knife in a crowded gas station lot or on a jobsite where everyone’s already on edge. The matte black handle and hardware keep the whole package quiet visually, the way most Texans prefer their everyday tools.

That rectangular handle isn’t just there to look clean. The light texturing, body screws, and chamfered edges give you real control when hands are slick with sweat or dust. It’s the kind of shape that sits flat in a back pocket on a long drive from Amarillo to Abilene and never digs into your hip.

Texas Knife Laws, Switchblades, and This OTF

There was a time you had to think twice about an automatic OTF knife in this state. That changed. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades—including out-the-front designs like this—are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not somewhere that restricts blades by length or type. The law shifted to match how Texans actually use their gear.

Reading Texas Law in Real Life

In practice, that means this OTF knife rides legally in most pockets walking into a hardware store in San Angelo, filling up at a truck stop in Sweetwater, or running errands after work in Waco. You still use common sense: check your local rules for courthouses, schools, or posted restricted locations, and respect any private property policies. But from a state standpoint, a Texas OTF knife like this double‑action dagger is no longer a back‑alley secret—it’s recognized as a legitimate tool.

That’s why you see more of these clipped inside work pants on job sites or tucked into the console of ranch trucks. Fast deployment, positive lockup, and quick retraction make sense in a state where a tool might go from opening shrink-wrap to cutting a stubborn nylon strap in a single shift.

How This Texas OTF Knife Rides, Draws, and Works

Think through a regular day. You start before sunrise in New Braunfels, keys in one pocket, this OTF knife in the other. The deep-carry clip drops the matte black handle low enough that it doesn’t print against a tucked shirt or light fishing shorts. Slide your hand down, and there’s no guesswork—rectangular handle, glass-breaker point at the bottom, slide actuator on top.

On a lease outside San Angelo, the glass-breaker style point on the butt becomes more than a design note. It’s there if you ever have to punch out glass on a truck window or knock a stubborn latch loose. That same point doubles as a lanyard option if you’re climbing in and out of tractors or boats and want a bit of insurance against dropping your Texas OTF knife into mud or water.

Use Cases Texans Actually Face

In a Plano warehouse, you’re moving from pallets to banding to rope without changing tools. The twin plain edges slice clean whether you’re pulling toward you or pushing away. Up in Longview on a stormy night, you’re cutting twine and tarp to keep a load from shifting in the rain. The double-action system lets you work one-handed on a ladder or in a truck bed without ever folding anything over your knuckles.

This isn’t a blade you baby. It’s something you clip on at 6 a.m. and forget about until a cable tie, strap, box, or cord gets in the way. Then the OTF action takes over: straight out, straight back, ready again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades—including OTF knives—are legal to own and carry for adults in most everyday situations. The key is respecting restricted places and any posted rules at schools, courthouses, or secure facilities. For most Texans walking into stores, driving to work, or heading out to the lease, carrying a Texas OTF knife like this one is fully legal. If you’re unsure, check the latest state statutes or ask a local attorney, but the broad ban on switchblades is gone.

Is this OTF dagger practical for everyday Texas use?

It is. Even though it’s a double-edge dagger, both edges are plain and ready for work. That makes it just as useful for cutting boxes in a San Antonio shop as it is for trimming rope on a Trinity River dock. The low-profile matte handle and deep-carry clip keep it discreet, while the straight profile sits comfortably whether you’re driving, walking a big-box parking lot, or sitting at a desk.

How do I choose this over a regular folding knife?

It comes down to how and where you work. If you’re often in tight spaces—between pallets in a Dallas warehouse, in truck cabs around Katy, or on ladders changing signs in College Station—one-handed, straight-line deployment from an OTF knife Texas workers rely on can save time and fumbling. If you prefer a knife that disappears until it’s needed, deploys with one motion, and retracts just as fast, this double‑action OTF makes more sense than a traditional folder.

First Cut, Somewhere Between Asphalt and Mesquite

Picture it: late evening behind a strip of shops outside Weatherford. The breeze carries dust and the smell of cut grass from a nearby lot. You feel the familiar weight in your pocket, thumb finds the slide without looking. The dagger blade snaps out, you slice a stubborn strap, retract, and it’s gone again before anyone turns their head.

No shine, no show, just a Shadowline Rapid-Dagger OTF Knife doing what it was built to do in the place it was built to belong—clipped to the pocket of someone who understands that in this state, the right tool is the one that works every time and doesn’t need an introduction.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes