Skip to Content
Carbon Check Micro-Tanto Mini OTF Knife - Gray Anodized

Price:

16.99


Featherstrike Micro Tanto OTF Knife - Gold Anodized
Featherstrike Micro Tanto OTF Knife - Gold Anodized
16.99 16.99
Stealth Micro Razor OTF Knife - Midnight Black
Stealth Micro Razor OTF Knife - Midnight Black
18.99 18.99

Slim Carbon Micro-Tanto OTF Knife - Gray Anodized

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5360/image_1920?unique=3eed854

13 sold in last 24 hours

Hot gravel parking lot, August sun, tailgate down. This mini OTF knife sits light in your pocket until you thumb the top switch and that 1.99-inch tanto snaps out clean. Gray anodized aluminum keeps the weight down, carbon-check texture keeps it put when your hands are slick. It rides small, hits fast, and disappears again. The kind of OTF Texans carry when they want real utility without broadcasting a thing.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB7064GY

Not Available For Sale

6 people are viewing this right now

  • 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

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Micro OTF Built for Real Texas Days

Truck doors slam outside a metal shop on the edge of town. Heat’s already coming off the caliche and it’s barely past sunrise. You’ve got invoices in one hand, coffee in the other, and this Slim Carbon Micro-Tanto OTF Knife riding low in your front pocket. Light enough you forget it, close enough you reach it without thinking.

That’s the point. A compact OTF that doesn’t shout, doesn’t print, and doesn’t fight your pocket when you’re sliding into a dusty F-150 or leaning across a welding table. Just a 1.99-inch American tanto blade tucked inside a gray anodized aluminum frame with carbon-check texture that actually bites into your fingers when sweat and dust show up, like they always do here.

Texas OTF Knife Control in a Compact Frame

The first thing you notice is the weight—or the lack of it. At about 1.2 ounces, this OTF knife sits easy in jeans, scrubs, or the mesh shorts you throw on to drag cans to the curb in a Hill Country cul-de-sac. No sag, no drag. The gray anodized aluminum keeps things rigid without feeling like a brick.

The American tanto profile is short but honest. Almost two inches of straight-working edge with a reinforced tip that doesn’t complain about cutting heavy plastic feed bags, slicing shrink wrap at a warehouse in Laredo, or opening taped boxes that have ridden a few hundred miles of I-35. The black Ti-Ni finish shrugs off the scuffs from gravel, desk drawers, and the odd drop between the seats.

The top-mounted sliding button runs the length of your thumb pad. That matters when you’re grabbing this OTF knife in a dim barn aisle or trying to manage it one-handed with your other arm wrapped around a feed bucket. The single-action mechanism fires the blade forward with a clean, confident snap, then locks back into that slim frame when you retract it. No drama, no loose play, just mechanical purpose.

Why This OTF Knife Fits Texas Carry Life

Texas days are long, and you’re not always in the same place. One morning you’re walking concrete in Dallas, that afternoon you’re out past the last gas station, where the FM road drops to chip seal and then disappears. A full-size tactical knife can feel like overkill in an office, but a barebones folder doesn’t always cut it on a fence line.

This is the bridge between those worlds. Clipped inside slacks at a Houston jobsite walk-through, it rides flat against the pocket seam. In a pair of broken-in Wranglers, it tucks behind your phone without digging into your hip. The deep-carry style clip holds tight against vibration in a ranch truck or side-by-side, and the lanyard hole at the handle end gives you an option to tether it in a kayak on Lake Travis or off the side of a bay boat in Rockport where losing gear happens fast.

Because the overall length is only about 5.25 inches with the blade deployed, you can use this Texas OTF knife for all the small, constant jobs that stack up in a day: cutting zip ties on a trailer wiring harness outside a Buc-ee’s, trimming nylon rope at a deer lease, or making a quick, clean cut on electrical tape under a truck hood when the wind is kicking West Texas dust in your face.

Texas Knife Law, OTF Knives, and Everyday Carry

Folks still walk into shops across the state and ask if they can even have an OTF or switchblade. That used to be a fair concern. Not anymore. Texas law changed. Under current Texas statutes, automatic knives and OTF knives like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, statewide, as long as you’re not somewhere with its own specific restrictions—think certain schools, secure government buildings, or posted locations that limit weapons.

This blade comes in under the old five-and-a-half-inch benchmark by a wide margin, which gives some Texans peace of mind even though the law no longer splits hairs on length the way it used to for ordinary carry. What still matters is where you bring it and how you use it. You respect posted signs, you know your local rules, and you treat this OTF like any other serious tool.

For a lot of Texas buyers, that compact size makes this an easy legal and practical choice. It doesn’t draw attention in a San Antonio coffee shop, doesn’t print under a golf shirt in The Woodlands, and doesn’t give a deputy a reason to look twice when you’re digging in the console for your registration during a late-night stop on Highway 6.

Texas-Specific OTF Carry Considerations

Law or no law, most Texans still think in terms of common sense. You don’t flip this out at a kid’s ballgame in Round Rock. You don’t use it as a fidget toy in a crowded bar on Sixth Street. You do keep it sharp, clean, and ready in your pocket, truck door, or range bag, where it belongs.

The micro size and plain-edge blade make it a natural fit for utility work that doesn’t cross lines. Cutting line at a stock tank, trimming a frayed ratchet strap before a long haul toward Amarillo, or opening a taped case of water at a church work day in Waco—all the normal, everyday cutting that keeps a place running.

Built for Texas Heat, Dust, and Daily Abuse

Steel and aluminum don’t care what county they’re in, but design has a way of showing where a tool fits. The straight-line gray handle with carbon-check panels gives your fingers purchase when sunscreen, sweat, or diesel have made everything slick. The grooves machined into the frame break up the flat surfaces just enough to guide your grip in the same spot every time.

The black blade finish does more than look sharp. Ti-Ni coating helps protect the edge from the light corrosion that eats at blades when they live in a truck in Corpus Christi or ride on a belt line every day in Beaumont humidity. Plain edge means you can sharpen it on a basic stone in a barn or at a kitchen counter in Lubbock without cussing at serrations.

Inside, the OTF mechanism is tuned for repeatable, one-direction action. Hit the button, blade jumps. Pull it back, blade disappears. That single-action design cuts down on complexity and keeps the feel predictable, even when you’re working in gloves in a Panhandle cold snap or barehanded in August Brownsville heat.

Texas Use Cases That Suit a Mini OTF

This isn’t the knife you use to dress a hog or hack cedar. This is the knife that’s there when you need quick, clean cuts in tight quarters: inside an engine bay in Midland, under a sink in a San Angelo remodel, or in the narrow aisle of a feed store in Navasota where there’s no room to swing your elbow.

It shines in town, too. Breaking down cardboard after a move into a Fort Worth apartment, cutting loose shipping straps in a Dallas warehouse, or trimming paracord while rigging a shade tarp at a Hill Country campsite. All the quiet, constant jobs that make up most of a Texan’s cutting, done with a blade that doesn’t make a scene.

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 automatic knives are legal for most adults to own and carry. The state removed the old switchblade ban and no longer treats autos as a special category for ordinary carry. What still applies are location-based restrictions and common-sense limits—certain schools, secure facilities, and posted properties can ban knives altogether. You’re responsible for knowing those spots and following any signs or local rules.

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

For heavy field dressing or chopping, no. For everyday Texas tasks—cutting rope, opening feed bags, trimming hose, slicing tape, dealing with packaging—it’s more than enough. The 1.99-inch American tanto tip handles precise cuts and light prying jobs you actually run into most days, without the bulk of a full-size blade. It’s the knife you always have on you, even when your larger blades are back at the truck.

Why pick this Texas OTF knife over a regular folder?

If you’re working around dust, gloves, or tight spaces, a top-slide OTF gives you one straight motion from pocket to open blade. No flipping, no fumbling for a liner lock. In a rattling ranch truck on a caliche road or on a dark jobsite, being able to deploy and retract with a simple thumb stroke matters. You trade some blade length for speed, control, and a flatter ride in any pocket.

End of the day, the sun’s dropping behind a line of live oaks off a narrow county road. You’re by the bed of the truck, cutting baling twine, trimming a strip of duct tape, and popping open the last box that needs to make it inside tonight. The Slim Carbon Micro-Tanto OTF Knife rides right where it has all day—quiet, forgotten, until a thumb push sends that black blade out into the warm air. Quick work, clean cuts, no fuss. The kind of tool that feels like it belongs in a Texas pocket.

Blade Length (inches) 1.999
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Weight (oz.) 1.2
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Ti-Ni
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Ti-Ni
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Button
Theme None
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes