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Skyline Switch Compact Mini OTF Knife - Blue Aluminum

Price:

15.99


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Skyline Switch Pocket OTF Blade - Blue Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5334/image_1920?unique=60ee3f5

5 sold in last 24 hours

Late light over a Panhandle parking lot, keys in one hand, small box in the other. This mini OTF knife rides deep in your pocket, matte blue handle all but forgotten until the top switch snaps that 1.875-inch dagger blade into play. 440 stainless cuts tape, cord, and loose threads clean, then slides back with the same sure stroke. No clip, no flash—just a compact Texas OTF that fits the way people here actually carry.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB7062BL

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

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Skyline Switch Pocket OTF Blade Built For Real Texas Carry

End of a long day, truck cooled down outside a Lubbock warehouse, you pat your front pocket out of habit. That small, flat shape is there, same spot it’s been all week. Thumb finds the top switch, and the mini OTF blade jumps out with a clean, mechanical snap—no drama, no wobble. Just a compact automatic that fits the way Texans actually live and work.

This Skyline Switch Pocket OTF Blade in matte blue aluminum isn’t built to impress a glass case. It’s built to disappear in your jeans, ride easy in light shorts, or drop in the console between a phone and a roll of electrical tape. When you need it, the double-action switch runs the blade out and back with the same short, sure stroke—no guessing, no second try.

Why This Compact OTF Knife Belongs In Texas Pockets

Walk any feed store in Abilene or a strip center in Katy and you’ll see the same thing: folks want something that cuts, doesn’t print, and stays out of the way until it’s needed. That’s where a compact Texas OTF knife like this earns its keep. At just over five inches open and a touch over three inches closed, it sits low in the pocket, flat against your leg instead of rolling like a bulky folder.

The 1.875-inch satin 440 stainless blade is dagger-shaped for easy point control, but grounded in real use. Cutting twine off hay bales, opening shrink-wrapped pallets in a San Antonio warehouse, trimming loose paracord off a rifle case at the range—it bites fast, then wipes clean. The blue anodized aluminum handle keeps the weight down and the profile slim, but still gives you enough purchase when your hands are dry from caliche dust or slick from Houston humidity.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Quiet, Legal, And Out Of Sight

Not long ago, carrying an automatic OTF knife in this state meant watching your back. That changed when Texas loosened up its knife laws and ended the old switchblade ban. For most adults now, an OTF knife is legal to own and carry so long as you respect the location restrictions that still apply to any blade—schools, court buildings, secure areas, and similar posted places remain off-limits.

This compact profile fits that new reality. Under Texas law, there’s no special penalty just for the OTF mechanism itself anymore. What matters is how and where you carry it, and whether you’re using it like a tool or waving it around like a problem. A low-key blue handle without a clip means it rides fully inside your pocket, not flashing off the seam of your jeans when you walk into a Buc-ee’s or the local feed store.

Texas OTF Knife Law In Day-To-Day Life

Out on a lease in the Hill Country or in a Corpus apartment parking lot after dark, the legality piece fades into the background—you’re just glad the blade snaps open on command. But it still matters that this is a knife you can carry day in, day out without worrying that the OTF action makes it off-limits. Adults who stay clear of restricted locations and trouble aren’t the ones the law is aimed at.

If you’re the type who reads the Penal Code before tossing a knife into your pocket, this compact OTF fits that mindset. Respect the posted signs, keep it holstered in your pocket unless you’re cutting something that needs cutting, and it’ll serve you as quietly as any old slipjoint your grandfather carried.

Design Details That Make This A True Texas OTF Knife

The first time you thumb the top-mounted switch, you understand the point. Double-action means the same motion sends the blade out and calls it home—no two-handed resets, no hidden levers. That matters when you’re juggling boxes on a San Angelo loading dock or trying to open feed bags without setting down the gate chain.

The matte blue aluminum handle does two things at once. It stands out just enough when tossed into a dark truck console, so you’re not fishing blind between receipts and a spare magazine. But it also looks like any other piece of work gear—no skulls, no neon graphics—so it doesn’t draw eyes when it rides in light summer shorts at a Fredericksburg farmer’s market.

Torx hardware along the spine keeps the build serviceable if you ever decide to open it up for a deep clean after months of West Texas dust. A lanyard hole at the pommel lets you tie in a short cord for gloved retrieval on a cold Panhandle morning. With no pocket clip, it carries like a small tool, not a tactical badge, which is exactly how most Texans prefer it.

Blade And Performance In Texas Conditions

That satin 440 stainless dagger blade hits a good middle ground for this state. It shrugs off sweat on a Galveston fishing pier, condensation from an iced tea in Austin, and the grit that settles on everything from Midland wind. The plain edge takes a straightforward sharpen on a basic stone or pull-through, no fussy bevels, no special systems required.

The point geometry makes it quick to start cuts—slipping under packing straps, picking tape off brake light lenses, or punching through the plastic on bagged mulch in a Hill Country driveway. At under two inches, it’s nimble more than it is brute force, which suits the kind of tasks most Texans use a pocket knife for twenty times a day.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its old switchblade ban, so OTF knives and other automatics are now legal for most adults to own and carry. The law focuses more on location and behavior than mechanism. You still have to avoid certain restricted places—schools, secured government buildings, and similar locations where any blade can be an issue—and you’re expected to use it as a tool, not a weapon. For everyday work, ranch, or city carry, an OTF knife like this is lawful for the average Texan who stays within those boundaries.

Is this mini OTF knife big enough for real Texas use?

If your day is more feed sacks, boxes, and cord than quartering hogs, this size is right. The 1.875-inch blade and 5.25-inch overall length cover most real Texas EDC tasks—cutting bale twine outside Stephenville, splitting plastic banding on oilfield shipments near Odessa, or opening packages on a Dallas porch. It’s not a field-dressing knife, and it’s not pretending to be. It’s a quick, compact cutter you’ll actually carry instead of leaving in the glove box.

Why pick this Texas OTF knife over a regular folder?

For a lot of Texans, the difference is speed and simplicity. With this double-action OTF, your thumb stays on one switch—forward to deploy, back to retract. No flipper tab, no liner lock to close around kids or skittish coworkers. That matters when you’re on a roof in Waco trying to cut underlayment in the wind or leaning into a trailer, one hand braced on the door, the other on the blade. If you want something that snaps open and shuts just as fast, this style of OTF earns its place in your pocket.

First Use: Where This Compact OTF Knife Fits Your Texas Day

Picture late summer in San Marcos. You’re standing in the shade of the carport, sweat running just enough to sting your eyes, breaking down a stack of boxes from the last big supply run. You reach into your front pocket without looking; thumb finds that ridged switch, blade snaps out with a sound you can feel more than hear. Cardboard falls clean, tape parts without a fight, and the knife disappears back into your pocket before the next box hits the ground.

No one around you gives it a second glance—it’s just another tool in a state built on people who keep the right tools close. That’s what this compact blue OTF becomes: not a conversation piece, not a toy, but the small, reliable edge you carry because you live here, work here, and like knowing that when something needs cutting, you don’t have to think. You just reach, switch, and get on with your Texas day.

Blade Length (inches) 1.875
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 Stainless
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Switch
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip No