Skip to Content
Stealth Weave Quick-Index OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black

Price:

36.99


Katana Wrap Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - White/Yellow
Katana Wrap Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - White/Yellow
36.99 36.99
Carbon Surge Double-Action Tanto OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber
Carbon Surge Double-Action Tanto OTF Knife - Blue Carbon Fiber
36.99 36.99

Stealth Weave Rapid-Access OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/732/image_1920?unique=41452a2

5 sold in last 24 hours

Late run down I‑35, rest stop lights buzzing, you crack the truck door and reach for the OTF knife you trust. Thumb hits the slide, blackout tanto is working before your boots touch the gravel. Carbon fiber panels lock in, deep-carry clip disappears under a T‑shirt, glass breaker stands ready. This is the OTF knife Texas hands learn fast and don’t forget.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB291LBKCF

Not Available For Sale

9 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
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

Stealth that belongs in a Texas truck door

Long after the sun drops behind a mesquite line, the highway doesn’t let up. Somewhere between Waco and San Marcos you step out at a dimly lit fuel stop, grab a bundle of rattling straps in the bed, and reach for the one tool you don’t have to look for. Your thumb tracks straight to the side slide on this OTF knife, the blackout American tanto clears the handle, and nylon surrendering under the edge is the only sound that matters. No flick, no flourish—just motion turned into work.

OTF knife Texas buyers reach for when seconds matter

In this part of the country, gear either earns its pocket or ends up in a coffee can in the shop. This OTF knife stays. The slide actuator rides where your thumb naturally settles, so even in work gloves—on a lease road outside Midland or behind a warehouse in Pasadena—you get the same straight, predictable deployment. At 5.625 inches closed and 9.5 inches open, it fills the hand without printing hard through jeans. The 3.75-inch matte black American tanto blade runs on-axis, so your first cut starts exactly where your eye is already working.

This isn’t a showpiece. It’s the OTF knife Texas hands use to open shrink-wrapped pallet corners in Dallas distribution yards, cut irrigation hose in the Valley, or trim paracord on a Hill Country deer blind. One motion, one result.

Carbon fiber control built for real Texas carry

The handle tells you what this knife is for. Carbon fiber weave panels sit into a black frame, adding grip that doesn’t go slick when you’re sweating through a South Texas August or working in a Panhandle cold front. The glossy weave gives just enough texture to index your fingers without tearing pockets or gloves. At 8.17 ounces, the knife settles into the hand like a small tool, not a toy—heavy enough to track straight through thick rope on a bay dock, steady enough for controlled scoring when you’re stripping cable in a Houston attic.

A deep-carry clip rides low on a back pocket or jean waistband, disappearing under an untucked shirt or work vest. When you’d rather not pocket it—running fence lines on a UTV outside Llano or climbing in and out of a skid steer—the nylon sheath shifts the OTF knife to a belt or MOLLE strap on a plate carrier. Wherever it rides, the geometry stays the same: slide, lock, work.

American tanto edge tuned for Texas material

Texas work doesn’t spare blades. You cut ratchet straps that have baked on flatbeds, feed sacks that shed grit, packaging tape gone gummy in warehouse heat. The American tanto profile here earns its keep with a reinforced tip for puncturing heavy plastic, drums, or stubborn strapping, then easing into a controlled slice along the secondary edge. A swedge and blade fullers pull a little weight without feeling hollow, so the knife still bites deep into baling twine or heavy cardboard without fighting you.

Texas OTF knife confidence without the drama

People ask if this kind of OTF knife is just for show. Around here, it’s about repeatable deployment. A folder demands an arc and a wrist change just when you might be twisted under a dashboard in a San Antonio parking garage, or wedged in a tight service closet in Plano. This OTF knife runs the blade straight out the front with the thumb slide—same grip to open, same grip to close. In the cramped cab of a work truck or in the back of a bass boat, that straight-line action matters more than flash.

The matte black finish on the blade cuts glare under yard lights or in bright shop bays. It doesn’t shout when you draw it at a crowded feed store counter to slice a box open. It looks like what it is: a working tool, not a movie prop.

Texas knife laws, OTF reality, and how this one fits

Knife laws here used to keep people guessing. That changed. Texas removed the old switchblade ban and now treats OTF knives like any other automatic. The focus in state law is on blade length for certain locations—not the mechanism. With a sub‑4‑inch blade, this OTF knife sits comfortably inside what most Texans want for everyday carry, whether you’re in Lubbock, Laredo, or logging miles around the 610 loop.

Where a Texas OTF knife can realistically ride

Day to day, most buyers carry this in a front pocket, clipped inside the waistband, or riding on a belt in the nylon sheath. It works at the ranch house, on job sites, at the lease, and in the truck. But like any blade, there are places in Texas law that stay off-limits: certain schools, secured government buildings, some sporting or ticketed events. The knife doesn’t change that. Knowing when to leave it in the console does.

Why Texas buyers choose this layout

The legality is only half of it. The other half is trust. Double-action slide means you control extension and retraction from the same point. There’s no hunting for a recessed button or wrestling a liner lock when your hands are cold or wet. For a lineman easing out onto a bucket in a North Texas ice storm, or a game warden stepping through cattails along a coastal marsh, that one, familiar motion is why this stays in the rotation.

Field-focused details that hold up across the state

Specs on paper don’t mean much until they see a season. Over time, the Torx hardware lets you tighten this OTF knife back up after dust, grit, and the kind of accidental drops that happen in a West Texas caliche yard. The glass breaker on the pommel is not a gimmick—more than one buyer keeps this clipped in a center console in case a low-water crossing turns quick or a rollover traps a door. In a flood-prone neighborhood off Buffalo Bayou, that’s not theory.

The nylon sheath, often overlooked at the counter, makes sense once you put it through a deer season or a string of night shifts. It frees up pockets when you’re in brush pants or coveralls and lets you keep the OTF knife on your person when you’re throwing on rain gear over your clothes in a Hill Country storm. The consistent slide feel—positive, not stiff—keeps it from firing by accident in a pocket, yet still responds clean under stress.

Questions Texas buyers ask about OTF knife Texas carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its switchblade restriction years ago, so OTF knives like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults. The law now cares more about blade length and specific locations than how the blade deploys. This OTF knife’s roughly 3.75-inch blade fits what many Texans view as a practical everyday length. As always, certain places—schools, some government buildings, and posted venues—have tighter rules, so folks leave any knife in the truck when the sign or situation calls for it.

Is this OTF knife practical for ranch and lease work?

It was built for it. On a lease road outside Sonora, you can thumb this open one-handed while your other hand steadies a busted wire or feed sack. The American tanto pushes through old poly rope and stubborn feed bags, and the carbon fiber panels stay grabby when your hands are dusty or wet. Clipped in jeans, on a belt, or kept in the UTV console, it’s the kind of OTF knife Texas ranch hands actually carry instead of just talking about.

How do I choose this versus a regular folder for Texas EDC?

If your days are mostly desk, light boxes, and occasional camping, a folder can do fine. But if you’re in and out of trucks, working around equipment, or moving through tight spaces where you don’t want to break your grip to open a blade, an OTF knife like this makes more sense. The slide keeps everything on-axis. For many Texans—electricians in Katy, oilfield crews near Odessa, or officers running night shift in Amarillo—that straight-line deployment is the difference between a pocket toy and a real tool.

The first cut you make with it will feel familiar

Picture an early start outside a metal building north of town. Steam from your coffee hangs in the cool air, pallets wait on the dock, and the sun is just catching the tops of parked trucks. You slide this OTF knife from your pocket without thinking about it, thumb finds the actuator, and the blackout tanto is working before the cup hits the bumper. Straps part, tape gives way, and by the time the yard is awake you’ve already proven why it rides with you. No fuss, no story—just a Texas hand, a straight-line blade, and another day handled.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.625
Weight (oz.) 8.17
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Slide
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath