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Skyline Control California Legal OTF Knife - Blue Aluminum

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20.99


California Street Switch Compact OTF Knife - Purple Alloy
California Street Switch Compact OTF Knife - Purple Alloy
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California Ready Compact OTF Knife - Olive Green
California Ready Compact OTF Knife - Olive Green
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Skyline Snap Compact OTF Knife - Blue Aluminum

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Late evening in a Buc-ee’s lot, you’re refueling before the last stretch home. This compact OTF knife sits flat in your pocket, blue handle easy to spot when you need it. The 1.99" spear point snaps out clean with a firm thumb push, then locks back in just as quick. Light in hand, solid in build, it opens boxes, cuts straps, and handles small camp tasks without drama. This is the kind of automatic Texans carry when they want speed, control, and a low-profile blade.

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SB102ZBL

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Compact Control in a Texas Parking Lot

End of a long day on I-35. You pull into a crowded gas station, one of those bright islands off the access road between Austin and San Antonio. You’re tired, hands slick from work, and you’ve still got straps to cut and packaging to tear into before you head home. The knife you reach for rides small and flat in your pocket, bright blue handle easy to find by feel. Thumb hits the slider. The blade snaps out clean, no drama, no hesitation.

This compact out-the-front knife is built for those small, constant jobs that stack up in a Texas day. Short blade, quick action, easy to carry whether you’re in work pants, gym shorts, or scrub pockets.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Place

A lot of autos are overbuilt for what most Texans actually do. This one stays honest. The double-action OTF mechanism runs a 1.99" spear point blade—short, straight, and useful. It rides inside a matte blue aluminum handle that doesn’t shout for attention but is easy to spot when you toss it on the dash of a dusty half-ton.

Closed, it sits at about 3.375", small enough to vanish in a front pocket or tuck in the watch pocket of a pair of old Wranglers. At 3.05 ounces, it has enough weight to feel real without dragging your shorts down when you’re walking a hot parking lot in August. The top-mounted ridged slider gives your thumb positive purchase, even when your hands are sweaty from a South Texas jobsite or a Hill Country hike.

This is the kind of Texas OTF knife that lives in your daily rotation—not a safe queen, not a showpiece—just a sharp tool that keeps up.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Small Blade, Big Utility

Across the state, from refinery towns on the Gulf Coast to feed stores in the Panhandle, people carry knives to work, not to pose. This OTF knife fits that rhythm. The 1.99" satin spear point looks clean and simple. No serrations to snag. No odd grinds to baby. Just a straight, plain edge that opens feed bags, slices packing tape, trims zip ties, and takes care of small camp chores at a Lake Travis campsite or a West Texas lease.

The steel blade rides in line with the handle, so when it snaps out, you get a straight thrust and clean control. The central fuller lightens the blade without making it flimsy. That matters when you’re cutting bale twine behind the barn or working through nylon straps in the back of a truck warming under a July sun in Laredo.

The pocket clip carries it high and accessible on the seam of your jeans or work pants. If you’d rather keep it tucked away, the lanyard hole at the butt lets you run a short cord and hang it inside a pack pocket or off the steering column where you can grab it without digging.

Texas Knife Laws, OTF Blades, and Real-World Carry

Folks still walk into Texas shops asking if switchblades and OTF knives are legal here. For years they weren’t. That stuck in people’s minds. But the law changed.

Texas OTF Legality in Plain Language

Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF and switchblade designs—are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old statewide ban on switchblades is gone. Texas law now focuses less on the opening mechanism and more on whether a blade counts as a “location-restricted knife” based on length and where you take it. Blades over 5.5" fall into that restricted category around schools, polling places, and a few other spots. This knife stays far under that mark, with a sub-2" blade, making it easier to keep within the normal day-to-day carry lanes.

As always, there are specific rules for minors, certain locations, and particular situations, so it’s on you to stay current. But for a grown Texan running errands between a warehouse in Houston and a youth ballfield in Katy, a small automatic like this fits neatly into what the law allows. The compact length keeps it out of the “problem” category in most day-to-day contexts.

Where This Compact OTF Knife Belongs in Texas

This isn’t a ranch-clearing, brush-busting blade. It’s the knife you keep clipped inside your pocket during a Friday night game in Allen, or on a workday in a Plano office, or in the pocket of your fishing shorts as you walk the pier at Port Aransas. It’s there when you need to cut a tag off a kid’s jersey, open a new reel, or slice open a box of parts at the shop without hunting for a utility knife.

Hidden in a console tray under a wad of receipts, the bright blue handle stands out when you reach down in the dark of an H-E-B parking lot. Thumb forward on the ridged slider, the blade flicks out, does its job, and disappears again with a push back toward the butt.

Built for Texas Conditions, Not Glass Cases

Texas is hard on gear. Heat warps cheap plastics. Sweat and dust find their way into every mechanism. This knife answers with a simple, tough build. The matte aluminum handle shrugs off pocket wear and console rattling. Black Torx hardware locks everything down without frills. The double-action mechanism is straightforward: push forward to deploy, pull back to retract. No flippers, no assisted springs to fight.

The satin-finished blade cleans up easy after cutting through tape gum, food packaging, or that stubborn piece of twine that’s been hanging off your trailer gate. A quick wipe and the steel is ready for the next task. For a lot of Texans, this becomes the automatic blade they’re not afraid to actually use—no polished bolsters to scratch, no elaborate inlays to baby.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for most adults. Texas removed its general ban on switchblades and OTF knives, so automatic opening is no longer the problem it used to be. Today, Texas law focuses more on blade length and specific locations. Blades over 5.5" are treated as “location-restricted knives” in certain areas like schools, polling places, and a few other protected spots. This compact OTF knife carries a 1.99" blade, well under that threshold, making day-to-day pocket carry much easier to keep within Texas law for the average adult. Always confirm current statutes and any local rules before you carry.

Is this compact OTF knife big enough for Texas work?

For heavy ranch work or processing game, you’ll want a larger fixed blade or a longer folder. But for the everyday Texas grind—opening feed sacks, cutting paracord, trimming hose, slicing tape, breaking down cardboard—this 1.99" blade is enough. The spear point bites cleanly, the plain edge pushes through common materials, and the OTF action saves time when you have one hand on a gate, cooler, or kid and the other on the knife.

Why choose this Texas OTF knife over a standard folder?

If you’re the kind of buyer who wants one-handed speed with a positive lock both open and closed, an OTF knife like this earns its keep. There’s no flipping, no thumb studs to chase. From a Dallas warehouse floor to a Corpus Christi marina, you can get a clean, controlled cut with a straight push of the thumb. And when you’re done, the blade slips back into the handle with the same motion, leaving nothing sharp exposed in your pocket or truck seat.

First Use: A Quiet Texas Evening, One Clean Cut

Picture a warm night in early fall, headlights washing over a gravel drive outside a small town between Waco and Gatesville. You’re home late with a truck bed full of boxes, gear, and one last piece of equipment you’ve been waiting on. You climb up, pull this blue-handled OTF from your pocket, and feel the ridged slider under your thumb. The blade snaps out, catches the packing strap, and in one clean move, the job’s done. No searching for a utility knife. No wrestling a big fixed blade in tight quarters.

You wipe the blade on your jeans, send it back into the handle, and tuck it away. It’s not the biggest knife you own. It’s not the prettiest. It’s the one that was there, ready, in your pocket—a compact OTF that understands how Texans actually carry and use a blade.

Blade Length (inches) 1.99
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Weight (oz.) 3.05
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slider
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes