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Featherlight Snap-Action Mini OTF Knife - Blue

Price:

15.99


Stealth Micro Precision OTF Knife - Matte Black
Stealth Micro Precision OTF Knife - Matte Black
15.99 15.99
Stealth Slide Mini OTF Knife - Black Aluminum
Stealth Slide Mini OTF Knife - Black Aluminum
15.99 15.99

Skyline Snap Mini OTF Knife - Blue Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4749/image_1920?unique=f145900

10 sold in last 24 hours

Heat’s still rolling off the pavement when you hit the truck stop outside Odessa. This mini OTF knife rides light in your pocket, but that 1.999-inch dagger blade snaps out with a clean, sure stroke. Blue anodized aluminum stays steady in a sweaty grip, double-action slide runs true, and the deep-carry clip keeps it quiet. For tight Texas spaces and quick, simple cuts, this is the little automatic folks actually carry.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB104BL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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When a Full-Size Blade Is Too Much for the Moment

The sun’s dropped behind a West Texas pumpjack, and the heat is still coming off the gravel like a slow burn. You’re easing between trucks in a tight lot, arms full, package strap cutting into your fingers. A big knife would print through your shirt and draw eyes. This is where a slim mini OTF earns its place.

The Skyline Snap Mini OTF Knife - Blue Aluminum was built for those in-between Texas spaces—crowded Buc-ee’s parking lanes, apartment breezeways in San Antonio, narrow alleys behind bars in Deep Ellum. Places where you still want a real automatic blade, just not six inches of it hanging off your hip.

OTF Knife Texas Carriers Trust in Tight Quarters

This is a true double-action OTF knife, not a gimmick. Thumb rides the side-mounted slide, blade rockets out clean, then tucks back in just as fast. The 1.999-inch dagger-style blade keeps you on the right side of more cautious workplaces while still being sharp enough for day-to-day Texas chores—slicing pallet wrap in a Laredo warehouse, trimming drip line in a Fredericksburg vineyard, cutting cord in the dim bed of a ranch truck at 4 a.m.

At 5.75 inches overall and roughly 3.75 inches closed, it disappears in the front pocket of a pair of Wranglers or the watch pocket of some broken-in jeans. The deep-carry clip keeps the blue anodized aluminum handle riding low, so you’re not flashing an automatic every time you reach for your keys. For someone hunting for a Texas OTF knife that works in town as easily as it does out past the last gas station, this one fits the job.

Why This Compact Texas OTF Knife Belongs in Your Daily Rotation

Texas doesn’t have one way to carry. You’ve got office workers in Austin who spend as much time in parking garages as they do on the trail, refinery hands around Beaumont with gloves on half the day, and night-shift security in Houston who can’t afford to fumble gear. This small OTF knife was built to move between those worlds without complaint.

The satin-finished, silver dagger blade slides out of the front in a straight, honest line—no wobble, no show. Double-edged grind, plain edge, needle-focused point. It opens boxes from the San Antonio dock just as well as it cuts shrink wrap on a pallet of feed out in Abilene. The action has that tight, confident snap you notice once, then stop thinking about because it just works.

The anodized blue aluminum handle isn’t there to look loud; it’s there to be found by feel in a dark truck console or in the bottom of a backpack under a dash light. Subtle texturing on the sides keeps it from twisting in a sweaty summer grip. Black Torx fasteners lock the build down, and a lanyard hole at the butt gives you options if you like to tether gear on a side-by-side or throw it on a key dangler.

OTF Knife Texas Law: What Matters and What Doesn’t

Texas used to be touchy about automatics. That changed. Today, switchblades and OTF knives are legal to own and carry across the state for most adults, with a key detail: once a blade hits 5.5 inches, it’s considered a "location-restricted knife" in many settings. This one doesn’t even come close.

Built Under the Limit, Without Feeling Like a Toy

At just under two inches of blade—1.999 inches—you stay well under that 5.5-inch line. That means this OTF rides with you into most daily Texas locations without drawing the kind of attention a larger automatic might. You still need to respect restricted places like schools, courts, and some government buildings, but for truck drivers, warehouse hands, ranch workers cutting twine in the feed store lot, and apartment dwellers grabbing late-night groceries, this blade length is about as low-risk as an automatic gets.

The legality doesn’t make it a novelty. It still snaps out with real intent, still carries like a working tool, not a keychain trinket. The size just means you don’t have to think as hard about where you’re headed that day.

How This Mini OTF Works in Real Texas Carry Culture

From Downtown High-Rise to Hill Country Back Road

Picture a weekday in Dallas. You park six levels up in a concrete deck, squeeze past a row of oversized trucks, and slip your hand into your pocket. The Skyline Snap rides vertical, flat, and quiet behind your phone. Slide switch sits where your thumb finds it without effort. One push forward, the blade is live. One pull back, it’s gone. No two-hand dance, no fishing for a nail nick.

Come Friday, you’re out past Kerrville. Tailgate down, cooler half-open, feed sacks and tie-down straps everywhere. This same little OTF knife clips into the watch pocket of your jeans, where it won’t dump out when you hop on and off a trailer. That bright blue handle stands out just enough against dust and mesquite chips that you can spot it when it’s tossed on the truck seat.

The Feel of the Action in Texas Heat

Texas summers test weak springs and sloppy builds. The double-action mechanism in this compact OTF was tuned for one-handed use, even when your grip is slick. The slide has enough resistance that it won’t fire by accident if it brushes against a steering wheel or seat belt, but not so much that a gloved hand can’t run it. It’s the kind of action you can cycle absentmindedly at a picnic table in Llano, knowing it’ll behave the same on a cold Panhandle morning.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults. The main legal line to watch is blade length: knives with blades over 5.5 inches are considered "location-restricted" in many situations, which limits where you can carry them (schools, certain government buildings, and a few other protected locations). This mini OTF, with its 1.999-inch blade, sits well under that threshold, making it an easy everyday choice for most Texans. Always check local rules and posted signs where you live and work.

Is this mini OTF big enough for real work around Texas?

If your day is mostly straps, tape, bags, cord, and light utility work, yes. The double-edged dagger point and plain edges punch into plastic clamshells, slice shipping tape on a San Antonio dock, and cut nylon line out at a Lake Travis marina without struggle. It’s not meant to dress a Hill Country whitetail or baton wood at a Big Bend campsite, but for the daily cutting tasks that stack up in Texas city and small-town life, it’s plenty of blade without the bulk.

Why choose this Texas OTF knife over a small folder?

Speed and straight-line deployment. A folder still needs some arc to open, whether it’s a thumb stud, flipper, or nail nick. In tight quarters—wedged between seats in a Midland work truck, inside a crowded Houston elevator, or kneeling on a trailer tongue at a feed store—an OTF comes straight out of the handle with no swing. One motion out, one motion in. If you want a compact blade that can be opened and closed one-handed with less movement, this style of OTF fits that Texas carry need better than most small folders.

Where This Knife Fits in Your Texas Day

It’s late. You’ve just rolled into a dim H-E-B lot in Corpus after a long drive. Groceries in the cart, plastic wrap around a pack of water won’t tear, and you’re not about to wrestle it. Your hand finds the blue handle in your pocket, the slide runs forward with a quiet, certain snap, and that short, sharp blade does what it’s supposed to do—quick cut, no fuss, gone again before anyone notices.

That’s the role this compact OTF knife plays in Texas: not the star of the show, not the biggest blade in the drawer, but the one that’s actually with you. Light, fast, lawful-minded, and ready in all the small, real moments between the big ones.

Blade Length (inches) 1.999
Overall Length (inches) 5.75
Closed Length (inches) 3.75
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes