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V-Channel Gripster Double-Action OTF Knife - Silver

Price:

30.99


V-Grip Microframe Double-Edge OTF Knife - Matte Black
V-Grip Microframe Double-Edge OTF Knife - Matte Black
30.99 30.99
Stealth Clip Quick-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Black
Stealth Clip Quick-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Black
26.99 26.99

V-Channel Control Double-Action OTF Knife - Silver Handle

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5111/image_1920?unique=8e2c06c

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Dust hangs over a caliche lot and the cab is cramped. This Texas OTF knife sits clipped in your pocket, V-channel handle locked into your palm the moment you draw. The double-action slide snaps the double-edge dagger blade out clean, serrations ready for belt, webbing, or hose. At just under seven inches open, it carries light but hits solid, glass breaker on standby for when a routine drive on 35 turns sideways. This is what a prepared Texan rides with.

30.99 30.99 USD 30.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
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  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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  • Double/Single Action
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V-Channel Control for Tight Texas Spaces

Late summer, two-lane blacktop outside Marble Falls, traffic stopped dead behind a wreck. You’re out of the truck, heat coming off the asphalt, and everything around you feels close and crowded. This is where a compact double-action OTF knife with real grip earns its keep.

The V-Channel Control Double-Action OTF Knife - Silver Handle is built for tight spaces and bad angles. That V-cut machining down the handle doesn’t just look sharp; it bites into your palm when your hands are slick with sweat or rain. At 4.125 inches closed and about 6.875 inches open, this Texas OTF knife disappears in your pocket until you need it, then fills your hand like it belongs there.

Texas OTF Knife Control When Seconds Get Loud

On a Houston feeder road, a Fort Worth stockyard, or a packed San Antonio garage, you don’t always get a clean stance or two free hands. That’s when a true double-action OTF knife Texas carriers can trust makes the difference. Thumb hits the top-mounted slide, blade rockets out the front, locks with a solid, mechanical stop. Same motion pulls it back in, one-handed, even with gloves on.

This isn’t a flipper you fumble with. The slide actuator sits high on the handle so you can find it by feel alone in a dark truck cab or under a dashboard. The action is firm enough not to fire accidentally in your jeans or your boot, but not so stiff you can’t run it after a long day swinging pipe or stacking feed. It’s tuned for real use, not a table demo.

Double-Edge Dagger Built for Texas Tasks

The dagger blade rides dead center in the handle, matte steel and double-edged with partial serrations near the base. That serration pattern is there for what Texans actually cut: seat belts on Highway 6, tow straps in a pasture outside Abilene, nylon feed bags in a Panhandle barn. The teeth grab and go, even when your angle is bad and your footing’s worse.

At roughly 2.625 inches of blade, you’re not swinging a camp chopper. You’re working a tight, controlled edge that slices zip ties in a Conroe warehouse, cardboard in a Lubbock back room, and paracord on a Hill Country deer lease. Both edges give you cutting options in cramped quarters—flip your wrist and you’re back on a clean stretch of steel without having to adjust your grip.

The matte finish cuts glare, which sounds small until you’re working under bright yard lights or midday sun on a jobsite. You see what you’re cutting, not a flash of reflection off polished metal.

Texas Knife Laws and Everyday OTF Carry

Not long ago, a switchblade or OTF knife Texas carriers wanted was walking a legal tightrope. That changed. Under current Texas law, these automatic out-the-front designs are legal to own and carry for most adults, statewide, as long as you respect the location restrictions that still apply to all "location-restricted" knives.

What That Means for This OTF in Texas

With its compact size and sub-5.5-inch blade, this OTF rides as an everyday tool, not a wall-hanger. In most day-to-day settings—your truck, your ranch, your shop, your pocket—this blade fits cleanly within Texas knife carry laws. You still use your head: you don’t carry it into places where any restricted knife is off-limits, and you keep it holstered in polite company. But for the Texan who wants a fast-deploying automatic as their daily pocket knife, this design checks the legal and practical boxes.

If you’ve ever typed “are OTF knives legal in Texas” before buying, this is the kind of blade those law changes were written for: an everyday tool with emergency upside.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Carry

Ask ten Texans where they carry their knife and you’ll get ten honest answers. Front pocket on jeans in Midland. Back pocket at a Port Aransas bait shop. Clipped in a work shirt on a Dallas loading dock. This Texas OTF knife plays well with all of them.

The black pocket clip rides low but not buried. You can still get a clean purchase on the silver handle, even seated behind a truck wheel or wedged in a tractor cab. At about 4.5 ounces, it has enough weight to feel like a real tool but not so much it drags your pocket or prints hard through thinner shorts in August heat.

Truck Console, Range Bag, or Ranch Gate

In a center console on 290, it sits ready, glass breaker pointed back. In a range bag outside Navasota, it slots between mags and ear pro, reserved for targets, tape, and the odd stubborn staple. At a ranch gate near Uvalde, it rides clipped inside your pocket while you’re dealing with wire, chain, and old hardware that won’t give up easy.

No sheath. No extra straps. Just draw, slide, cut, stow.

Emergency-Ready Details for Texas Roads and Weather

Spend enough time on Texas highways—IH-10 through the Hill Country, 45 cutting through Houston storm bands—and you see how fast a normal day turns sideways. That’s where the emergency touches on this Texas OTF knife matter.

The glass breaker at the pommel isn’t decoration. In a high-water rescue, a rollover outside Waco, or a flash flood surprise on a low-water crossing, that hardened point is your last option when doors jam and windows won’t budge. The dagger blade with serrations handles webbing and belts; the breaker handles glass. Simple division of labor.

The matte silver handle shrugs off sweat, rain, and dust. You can drop it in the red dirt of a West Texas lease, rinse it, wipe it on your jeans, and put it back to work. Torx hardware keeps the handle solid; the liner and internal track keep the blade running straight, shot after shot.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic and OTF knives are legal for most adults to own and carry. Texas removed the old switchblade ban, so a Texas OTF knife like this one can be carried daily as a tool. The main thing to remember is that all knives still fall under certain location restrictions—schools, some government buildings, and other protected places have stricter rules. Treat this like any serious blade: know where you are, know the rules there, and carry accordingly.

Is this OTF knife practical for everyday Texas use, or just tactical?

It looks tactical, but it works like a straight-ahead pocket knife. In a North Texas warehouse you’ll use it on stretch wrap and banding. In South Texas brush you’ll use it to trim cord, flagging, and small line. The double-action slide just lets you get the blade in play faster and stow it quicker, especially when you’re moving between tasks all day. It’s built to live in your jeans, not your safe.

How do I choose this over a folding knife for Texas carry?

If you spend most days at a desk, a simple folder might be enough. But if your Texas days involve trucks, tools, long drives, and the chance that you’ll be first on scene when something goes wrong, this OTF knife Texas carriers favor has advantages. One-handed open and close. Strong, centered blade. Glass breaker built in. It trades a bit of old-time simplicity for speed and control when seconds and inches matter.

First Ride Out: This Texas OTF Knife in Your Pocket

Picture a late drive back from a high school game on a two-lane outside Temple, or a pre-dawn run down 59 with a trailer in tow. The cab is cluttered—work gloves, receipts, old coffee lids—but your knife isn’t. It sits clipped and quiet until the one moment you really need it. Hand goes to the pocket, silver handle finds your palm, slide moves, blade answers. No fumbling, no searching.

Next morning, it’s the same knife opening feed, cutting line, and trimming loose strap ends at the barn, carrying easy in a pair of worn jeans. That’s the whole point. This isn’t a conversation piece. It’s the OTF you carry in Texas when you’d rather be ready and never need it than wish you’d had it once.

Blade Length (inches) 2.625
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.125
Weight (oz.) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Slide
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster No