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V-Grip Rapid-Deploy Compact OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

Price:

30.99


Blush Bolt Front-Switch OTF Knife - Pink Aluminum
Blush Bolt Front-Switch OTF Knife - Pink Aluminum
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V-Channel Control Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5104/image_1920?unique=60c3af0

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Night’s coming down on a two-lane outside San Marcos and you’re clearing out feed bags in the truck bed. This compact OTF knife sits flat in pocket until you thumb the side slider and the 2.625" black clip point snaps to work. The V-channel handle locks into your fingers, even with sweat or dust. Glassbreaker, deep-carry clip, and matte black aluminum build—quiet, ready, and legal to carry from courthouse square to lease road. This is the OTF knife Texans actually use.

30.99 30.99 USD 30.99

SB144BKCP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Compact Control in a State That Never Slows Down

Sun’s dropping behind a mesquite line outside San Angelo. Tailgate down, cooler open, you’re cutting baling twine and trimming hose in the same ten minutes. This V-Channel Control Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Black Aluminum was built for that pace—quick work, one-handed, with a blade you can trust and a profile that stays out of the way until you need it.

This compact OTF knife rides light at 4.5 ounces and just 4.125 inches closed. The matte black aluminum handle carries flat in your front pocket, disappears in gym shorts, and tucks clean at the edge of a console tray. When you slide your thumb across that textured silver side control, the 2.625-inch black clip point blade drives straight out the front and locks, ready for cord, plastic, or a stubborn feed sack.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Pocket Space

Plenty of blades look tactical on a screen and feel sloppy in hand. This one feels like it was cut for a working day in Brownwood, Midland, or the east side of Houston. The V-shaped channels in the black aluminum handle aren’t decoration—they give your fingers a home. That V-grip means even with oil, dust, or sweat, your hand settles into the same repeatable hold every time you thumb the slider.

The single-action OTF mechanism gives you simple, confident deployment: push the side slider forward and the blade snaps into position with authority; pull it back and it resets for the next use. No flippers to hunt for, no folders to fish open in the dark of a truck cab. In a cramped work truck, on a ladder in a Hill Country barn, or behind a shop on the edge of Lubbock, that direct front deployment is the difference between fumbling and getting back to the job.

The black clip point blade with its spine cutouts isn’t about flash. Those slots shave a touch of weight while keeping enough meat at the spine for stiffness. The plain edge gives you clean, controllable cuts through cardboard, nylon strap, plastic jugs, and irrigation line. Matte black on blade and handle keeps it low-profile around town—no shine, no attention.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Built for Real-World Texas Law and Life

Folks still walk into shops from Amarillo to Corpus asking if a Texas OTF knife is even legal. It is. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you’re not in a statutorily prohibited place or otherwise prohibited from possessing a knife. For most Texans, this compact OTF fits into everyday carry right alongside your wallet and keys.

This knife stays on the right side of practical carry. No oversized blade, no exaggerated profile. It’s a tool that looks like a tool. Clipped inside jeans in a grocery lot in Tyler or resting in a console on I-35 through Waco, it reads as a work knife, not a prop.

Understanding OTF Knives Under Texas Knife Laws

Texas has moved away from the old switchblade bans. Today, the bigger concern is location—schools, certain government buildings, and other sensitive areas have their own rules. This OTF knife’s compact size and plain, matte finish make it easy to carry responsibly. It’s built for the ranch road, jobsite, and shop more than the courthouse metal detector.

Where This OTF Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Across the state, folks judge a knife by how it works when nobody’s watching. This one slips into the same role as that old lockback your grandfather carried in a dusty pair of Wranglers—only faster to open and with a blade centered dead in-line with your grip. Whether you’re a Houston commuter cutting zip ties off freight or a Panhandle hand fixing fence clips, this Texas OTF knife feels like it belongs in your pocket, not in a display case.

Designed for Texas Jobs: From Shop Counter to Lease Road

Picture a Saturday in College Station, truck backed up to the garage, tools scattered on the workbench. You’re breaking down boxes, cutting open parts bags, and shaving a bit of rubber hose. The 2.625-inch clip point blade gives you just enough reach for those everyday cuts while staying nimble for finer work—like trimming electrical tape or slicing tape clean off a rifle case at camp.

The matte black aluminum handle keeps weight down without feeling flimsy. You can feel the frame’s rigidity when you press the edge into a stubborn plastic tote or slice through woven feed bags. Torx screws along the handle show this isn’t a throwaway—this is a serviceable piece of kit, meant to ride years, not months.

The deep-carry pocket clip tucks the knife low, a good fit if you’re walking downtown Dallas, stopping for coffee in Austin, or running errands around San Antonio. Nothing flashy hanging out of the pocket, just a dark line at the edge of your jeans. When your day shifts from city asphalt to gravel road, that same clip locks onto a heavier work pant without complaint.

Texas OTF Knife Details That Matter When It’s Dark and Dusty

Out on a lease road near Uvalde, dust hanging in the headlights, you don’t want to think about your tools. You want them to do exactly what your hand asks. The textured silver slider gives your thumb a positive bite, even with gloves. The single-action deployment sends the blade out with a clear, mechanical certainty—no half-open surprises.

At the butt of the handle, the glassbreaker point waits quietly. Most days it’ll never see use. But if you slide off a wet low-water crossing or get hung up in a ditch outside Laredo, that hardened point can turn tempered glass into chunks fast. In a state built around trucks and long miles, a glassbreaker is less gimmick and more quiet insurance.

Because the knife is compact and balanced, it shifts cleanly between grips. Standard hammer grip to punch open a taped box in the back room of a Fort Worth warehouse. Edge-up pinch grip to slice zip ties off a bundle of rebar. The V-channel grip pattern keeps the handle planted without chewing up your hand over a long week.

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 old switchblade restrictions are gone. The key concerns now are where you carry—schools, certain government buildings, and other restricted locations have their own rules—and whether you’re otherwise allowed to possess a knife. For everyday use around town, at work, or on the road, a compact OTF like this is lawful for most Texans when carried responsibly.

Is this compact OTF knife suited for Texas ranch and lease work?

It is. The 2.625-inch clip point blade has enough length to cut hay string, poly rope, and stubborn plastic feed bags, but it’s short enough to stay controllable in tight spots, like reaching between fence wire or under a truck dash. The matte black aluminum handle with V-channel grip lines gives you secure purchase even when dust and sweat stack up, and the glassbreaker adds a layer of safety for long miles on ranch roads and lease tracks.

How do I choose the best OTF knife in Texas for everyday carry?

In Texas, the best OTF knife is the one you’ll actually carry through a full week—from jobsite to Friday night. Look for a compact closed length under about 4.5 inches, a blade that balances reach and control, and a handle that locks into your hand without hot spots. This knife hits those marks: 4.125 inches closed, a practical 2.625-inch black clip point blade, single-action slider for direct deployment, and a low-profile pocket clip that keeps it discreet in town yet ready on the back forty.

A First Cut in a Place You Know

Picture a warm night outside a Buc-ee’s off I-10, truck loaded, wind still holding a bit of Calallen heat. You feel the matte black aluminum against your palm as you thumb the slider and the blade snaps out, clean and straight, to cut a loose strap before you roll. No drama, no show. Just a compact Texas OTF knife doing what you asked, then slipping back into your pocket like it was never there. Next morning it’ll be riding the same pocket through a job walk in Plano or a fence check outside Kerrville. Same knife, same sure feel, one more quiet tool that fits exactly where you live.

Blade Length (inches) 2.625
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.125
Weight (oz.) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slider
Theme None
Double/Single Action Single
Safety None
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster None