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Azure Guardian Double-Action OTF Knife - Blue Titanium

Price:

25.99


Liberty Surge Single-Action OTF Knife - USA Flag Aluminum
Liberty Surge Single-Action OTF Knife - USA Flag Aluminum
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Skyline Sentinel Double-Action OTF Knife - Blue Titanium

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4887/image_1920?unique=4730eae

11 sold in last 24 hours

Summer thunderheads stacking over a Hill Country highway, you feel that familiar weight in your pocket. This OTF knife runs a blue titanium dagger blade out the front with a clean, positive snap. Textured zinc-alloy handle, deep pocket clip, glass-breaker pommel—nothing fancy, nothing fragile. At 9.5 inches open, it works as hard in a truck door pocket as it does in a ranch gate repair. Quiet confidence, ready when it matters.

25.99 25.99 USD 25.99

SB112LTBLDP

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

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Skyline Steel Over an Open Road

The sun is dropping behind a line of power poles outside Ozona, sky washed in that hard blue you only see after a dry front. You climb out of the truck to wrestle with a length of stubborn poly rope in the bed. Your hand goes to the pocket clip without looking. The slider finds your thumb. The blade jumps out clean, blue titanium catching what’s left of the light. No drama, no hesitation. Just work getting done.

This double-action out-the-front knife isn’t a desk toy. At 9.5 inches overall with a 3.75-inch dagger blade, it’s built to live in a truck console, ride a pocket on an oilfield run, or sit clipped inside the waistband on the walk from downtown parking to the last bar light in the alley. The weight—just over nine ounces—tells you it’s there, and that’s the point.

Texas OTF Knife Confidence When the Slider Moves

With any OTF knife, Texans care about one thing first: what happens when the slider moves. This one runs double action—push forward and that blue titanium blade drives straight out the front with a solid, mechanical punch; pull back and it returns home just as clean. The black side-mounted switch sits high enough to find under work gloves, but not so proud it snags on a seatbelt or pocket seam climbing into a high truck.

The dagger profile and central fuller keep the blade balanced. Twin edges ground plain and matte mean it glides through feed sack, pallet wrap, radiator hose, or a taped-up Amazon box on the porch in Pflugerville without flashing like chrome. Decorative holes along the spine cut a little weight and give a visual check you’re locked out, even in a dim barn aisle with a single bulb burning.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: How It Rides, Where It Lives

Real use decides whether an OTF knife belongs in a Texas rotation. Closed, this knife runs about 5.75 inches, which means it disappears against the seam of a pair of jeans but still fills the hand when it’s time to work. The pocket clip anchors deep, holding steady on denim or the thinner fabric of scrubs walking across a hospital lot at midnight in Lubbock.

For those who keep a blade in the truck instead of on the belt, the included nylon pouch sits clean in a door pocket or center console. The knife slides in and out without fighting seams or snagging on loose change, ready when you need to cut a length of baling wire along a fence line outside Giddings or slice open a busted bag of ice at a tailgate in College Station.

At 9.1 ounces, it’s no featherweight. That extra mass steadies the blade when you’re bearing down on zip ties under a boat trailer or punching through thick plastic on a jobsite outside Katy. It feels more like a tool than a toy—exactly what most Texas buyers want from an automatic.

Built for Texas Heat, Dust, and Hard Use

The blue titanium blade isn’t just a color choice. Titanium brings corrosion resistance that matters when your knife spends half the year riding in triple-digit heat and West Texas dust. Sweat, humidity rolling in off the Gulf, the occasional blood and salt from a cleaned redfish on a Port Aransas dock—it shrugs it off better than a soft bargain steel.

The zinc-alloy handle wears textured blue panels that earn their keep when your hands are slick with oil, sunscreen, or August sweat. That texture bites just enough without chewing up pockets or gloves. Black hardware and a glass-breaker style pommel finish the package. That hardened tip isn’t for show; it will take out a side window underwater or break a stuck truck glass on a flooded low-water crossing outside Wimberley when seconds count.

Texas OTF Knife Legality and Everyday Carry Reality

For years, the first thing a customer asked a Texas knife dealer about a switchblade or OTF knife was simple: “Can I even carry this?” The law changed. In 2017, Texas removed the ban on switchblades and automatic knives. Today, an OTF like this is legal to own and carry for most adults across the state, with one big rule: location-restricted places are still off-limits.

Understanding Texas OTF Knife Laws in Plain Terms

State law doesn’t single out OTFs anymore. Instead, it talks about “location-restricted knives,” mostly defined by blade length. This knife’s 3.75-inch blade keeps it under the five-and-a-half-inch threshold that triggers those restrictions. That means in most everyday settings—driving I-35 between San Antonio and Austin, running errands in Plano, walking the dog after dark in El Paso—you’re within state limits.

You still need to respect the usual no-go zones: secure areas of airports, certain schools, court buildings, and places clearly marked under Texas law. But for normal life—work, ranch, lease, or city carry—this OTF rides on the right side of the rules for most Texans.

When a Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Spot

On a Panhandle lease, this knife cuts braided line, opens feed, and trims torn tarp without needing babying. In Houston traffic, it sits in the console, glass-breaker pointed toward the window, insurance against high water or a bad rollover. For a night-shift nurse in San Antonio crossing a dim garage, it’s a quiet layer of confidence clipped inside a scrub pocket, fast out, fast back, no fumbling with a folder.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal to own and carry for most adults. The law now focuses on blade length and certain restricted locations, not the opening mechanism. With a blade under 5.5 inches, this knife sits within the general everyday-carry limit statewide. You still have to avoid obvious restricted places like certain government buildings and secured airport areas, but for day-to-day Texas life, this OTF is legal for typical adult carry.

Is this blue titanium OTF knife practical for Texas work, or just a showpiece?

The color catches the eye, but the build is pure utility. The matte blue titanium blade holds up to sweat, humidity, and grit from the Permian to the Piney Woods. The double-action mechanism gives fast, one-handed use on a ladder, in a saddle, or bent over a trailer hitch. The handle’s texture and weight make it more at home cutting rope on a gate or breaking glass in a flood than sitting in a display case.

How do I decide if this is the right Texas OTF knife for me?

Think about how you really carry. If you want a knife that rides clipped in jeans or scrubs, under the 5.5-inch blade limit, with a deployment you can trust in heat, dust, and cramped truck cabs, this fits. If you prefer a featherweight pocket piece or a traditional lockback, look elsewhere. But if you want a modern OTF that can live in a Texas work truck, walk a city block after dark, and still look sharp on a Friday-night belt, this one earns a spot.

First Cut, Long Road

End of the day, you’re parked on the shoulder outside a small town whose name never makes the weather report. A tarp has come loose in the wind. You step out, wind kicking grit, traffic rolling by. Your hand finds the blue handle without thinking. Slider forward, blade out. Two clean cuts, tarp retied, blade back in the handle. The door shuts, the engine turns over, and the horizon opens up again.

That’s where this OTF belongs—on the dash, in the pocket, in the real miles between one Texas town and the next.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 9.1
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Titanium
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Zinc Alloy
Button Type Slider
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon Pouch