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Stormhold Rubberized Grip OTF Knife - Two-Tone Black

Price:

39.99


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Stormhold Mission-Ready OTF Knife - Two-Tone Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5197/image_1920?unique=71d5430

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West of Weatherford, shoulder of 20, truck half in the grass. You reach for the OTF knife in the console, thumb finding the rubberized grip before your eyes do. The side slide kicks that two-tone spear point out clean and fast. At over nine inches open with a glassbreaker on standby, this Texas-ready out-the-front knife rides clipped, quiet, and useful until the moment it has work to do.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB183BKCP

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Stormhold OTF in Its Natural Habitat

Late summer, two-lane blacktop outside Stephenville, shoulder crumbling into caliche. A busted ratchet strap leaves a mess of webbing under your trailer, tight and hot from the road. You slide a hand into your pocket, find rubber texture instead of smooth metal, and the knife is already halfway to work before you finish thinking about it.

This out-the-front knife wasn’t built for a glass case. It was built for the cab of a half-ton, the pocket of a rig hand, or the console of a weekend truck that still pulls its weight. The rubberized grip, single-action slide, and full-length two-tone blade match how Texans actually carry and cut.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For When Things Get Real

In Texas, an OTF knife earns its place by doing three things: riding secure, deploying fast, and surviving heat, dust, and sweat without getting slick in your hand. This knife checks all three in a way that feels honest the first time you thumb the slide.

At 5.5 inches closed and 9.125 inches overall, it fills the hand like a real tool, not a toy. The side-mounted slide actuator runs in a straight, confident track. There’s no hunting for the switch, even when your fingers are numb from a January front or slick with used motor oil under a barn lean-to. You push forward, feel it hit the wall, and the spear point blade shoots out with the clean, single-action snap you expect from a working OTF.

That two-tone finish isn’t decoration. The darker grind and lighter flats give instant edge visibility when you’re cutting ratchet straps in a dim trailer, slicing irrigation hose before sunrise outside Pecos, or breaking down cardboard under warehouse fluorescents in Houston. Eight ounces and change of steel and hardware feel anchored in your grip, controlled by that rubber handle instead of sliding around in sweat or rain.

Texas OTF Knife Built for Dust, Sweat, and Glass

Most days, this is a cutting tool. Some days, it’s more than that. The glassbreaker at the butt sits right where a Texas driver expects it—back corner of the handle, inline with the spine, ready if a creek crossing goes bad or a ditch fills faster than you planned in a Hill Country storm.

The rubberized handle earns its keep when conditions get rough. Step out of an air-conditioned truck into August heat around Laredo and you’ll feel sweat instantly. That matte-textured rubber keeps you locked in, even if you’ve been throwing hay, loading pipe, or working a pasture fence all afternoon. The pocket clip runs along the spine, deep enough to disappear inside your jeans, uniform pants, or the edge of a MOLLE pocket on a plate carrier riding shotgun.

The spear point blade, 3.5 inches of plain-edge steel, does the work Texans actually do: cutting braided line at the coast, trimming zip ties around a low-voltage panel in a new Dallas build, or opening feed bags in a Panhandle wind that stings your eyes and fills every crease with grit. The cutout slots in the blade knock a little weight off and give the profile a clean, modern tactical line without turning it into a showpiece.

Texas OTF Knife Law: How This Blade Fits Your Carry

Not too long ago, Texans had to think twice about an automatic knife. That changed. Switchblades and OTFs are now legal statewide for most adults, and this knife fits squarely in that modern reality.

Understanding OTF Carry in Texas

For everyday carry across the state—San Antonio hardware runs, late-shift security in El Paso, long days on a Midland lease—an out-the-front knife like this rides well within what Texas law allows. Adults can generally carry an automatic or OTF knife openly or concealed, whether it’s in a front pocket, clipped in a waistband, or dropped in a truck console. There’s no need to baby it or hide it like some forbidden piece of gear.

Location still matters. Certain restricted places—like some schools, secured government facilities, or areas posted with specific signage—may have tighter rules. But for a normal Texas day that runs from job site to feed store to backyard cookout, this knife lives in the green zone. You get modern OTF speed and confidence without playing guessing games at every stop.

Why Texans Choose an OTF Over a Folder

In Texas carry culture, the choice to run an OTF instead of a simple folder usually comes down to deployment and control. Picture climbing into a lifted truck in a West Texas dust storm, one hand on the grab handle, the other trying to free up a jammed cargo net. An OTF like this lets you keep your grip and still bring steel to the problem with a single thumb motion.

No flipper tab to miss. No nail nick to hunt for. No two-handed open while you balance on a running board. It’s one steady slide along the side of that rubber handle, and you’ve got a full-length spear point out front, locked and ready. When the work is done, the blade retracts back into a sealed handle that won’t chew up your pocket or your truck upholstery.

Designed for Real Texas Carry, Not a Display Case

Texas doesn’t care how shiny your blade is. It cares if it works when it’s 105 in the shade or 28 with a north wind off Amarillo. This OTF knife answers that by keeping the finish subdued and the ergonomics honest.

The matte black rubber handle doesn’t glare in harsh sun on an open range or reflect light in a dim parking lot. The contouring gives your index finger and thumb a natural landing zone behind the slide, so you can index the knife in the dark under a truck bed or in the back corner of a stock trailer. Torx fasteners keep the chassis tight and serviceable, the kind of hardware a Texas gearhead is used to working with.

At 8.1 ounces, you know it’s there. It doesn’t vanish like a featherweight gentleman’s knife, but it doesn’t drag your waistband down either. It feels right clipped to the pocket of boot-cut denim, riding in the chest pocket of a work shirt in Odessa, or tucked into the visor of an older single-cab that’s seen more leases than paved driveways.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including switchblades and out-the-front knives—are legal for most adults to own and carry, whether concealed or openly. There are still restrictions in certain sensitive locations, and minors can face different rules, so it’s smart to check the most recent Texas statutes and any local policies where you work or travel. But for day-to-day Texas life—work, errands, land, and road—an OTF like this is a lawful tool, not contraband.

Will this OTF knife hold up to Texas truck and ranch carry?

This knife was built with that exact carry style in mind. The rubberized grip shrugs off sweat and dust, the two-tone spear point gives you a strong, versatile cutting edge, and the glassbreaker adds a layer of security if a creek crossing, low-water bridge, or rollover goes sideways. It rides clipped to a pocket through long miles of I-35 traffic or gets tossed in a center console without complaining. Wipe it down, keep the slide track clean, and it will keep answering when you reach for it.

How do I decide if this is the right Texas OTF knife for me?

Ask how you really carry. If your knife lives in gym shorts, you may want lighter. If it lives in jeans, work pants, or a truck, this size and weight feel right. If you need one-handed opening while you’re on a ladder, in a blind, or balancing on a trailer tongue, the side slide and strong spear point make sense. And if you value grip you can trust in August heat, that rubber handle is the deciding factor. This isn’t a dress knife. It’s for people whose days don’t stay indoors.

First Cut, Somewhere on Texas Ground

Imagine a Sunday evening, sun dropping behind a fenceline outside Llano. You’re strapping down a load of rough-cut cedar, wind pushing the last of the heat across the pasture. A strap needs shortening. You reach down, feel the rubberized handle against your palm, thumb finds the slide, and the blade snaps out smooth and straight.

One clean cut, strap trimmed, load secure. The blade disappears back into the handle with the same quiet finality. No show, no fuss—just a Texas-ready OTF knife doing what it was built to do, then riding silent until the next time the road, the work, or the land asks for steel.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 8.1
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Rubber
Button Type Slide
Theme None
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes