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Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Gray Aluminum

Price:

10.99


Milano Ember Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Pakawood
Milano Ember Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Pakawood
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Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum
Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum
10.99 10.99

Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife - Matte Gray Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/702/image_1920?unique=b92b924

4 sold in last 24 hours

West of Weatherford or outside Houston’s loop, this assisted knife feels at home in a work truck door pocket. One press on the flipper and the 3.625-inch drop point snaps open, locks solid, and goes to work on straps, hose, or cardboard. Matte gray aluminum keeps it low-profile on the job, deep-carry clip buries it in your jeans. It’s the kind of knife a Texan carries daily—fast, quiet, and ready without showing off.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

A122BK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Out on a caliche lease road or behind a warehouse off I-35, this assisted knife feels like part of the workday. It rides low in your pocket, matte gray against denim, quiet until you need it. Thumb hits the flipper, the spring takes over, and that drop point is already cutting wrap off a pallet or nylon cord off a gate panel before anyone looks up.

Why this assisted knife belongs in a Texas pocket

Texas days are long. Hot, gritty, and hard on gear. An assisted knife that lasts here has to do three things: deploy fast, stay out of the way, and shrug off abuse. This one clears all three. At 8.5 inches open with a 3.625-inch plain-edge drop point, it’s big enough for real work on a fence line or shop floor, but closes down to 4.875 inches and disappears behind a deep-carry clip.

The angular matte gray aluminum handle feels like something off an oilfield service rig—industrial, no nonsense, built to be grabbed with sweaty hands or light gloves. The blue pivot collar is the only hint of color, a quiet nod to the tuned action inside. That pivot and spring are what make this a knife you’ll actually use ten times a day instead of letting it ride as pocket décor.

Texas assisted knife action: speed without drama

In Texas, you learn fast that fumbled gear wastes daylight. This assisted knife opens on a flipper that needs intent, not effort. You start the motion; the assist finishes it with a clean, certain snap. No clatter, no show—just the blade locked on a liner lock you can trust leaning out of a deer blind ladder or standing on a forklift tines.

Jimping runs along the spine and on the flipper tab where your fingers actually land. That means even with dusty gloves from a Hill Country cedar-cutting day, you can still hit the tab and drive the blade open one-handed. The matte gray blade keeps glare down when you’re cutting line on a bay dock or trimming drip tubing in a greenhouse outside Lubbock.

OTF knife Texas buyers consider—and why many still choose assisted

When folks in Texas walk into a shop asking about an OTF knife, the talk usually turns to how they’ll really use it. OTFs have their place, but a well-built assisted knife like this often wins out for ranch gates, warehouse shifts, and plant maintenance runs. You get near-automatic speed with a familiar folder profile that rides lighter in jeans or FR pants all day.

For anyone comparing an OTF knife Texas style carry to this assisted design, it comes down to comfort, cost, and trust. This knife gives you quick deployment without the bulk of many OTFs, and the straight, slim aluminum handle carries flatter when you’re sliding into a truck seat or up onto a combine. You still get that satisfying, fast open Texans love, just with fewer moving parts to worry about in dust, sand, or coastal humidity.

Why Texas OTF knife shoppers end up with this flipper

Texans who come in asking to buy an OTF knife often leave with this assisted in their pocket. The tuned spring does what they wanted from an OTF: instant, one-hand deployment. But the maintenance stays simple—keep the pivot clean, add a drop of oil, wipe the blade. No complicated internals, no struggle with pocket lint from a summer of shorts and dusty boots.

Everyday tasks from Panhandle yards to Gulf docks

Picture Amarillo wind cutting across a jobsite trailer. You’re breaking down heavy cardboard, slicing strapping, and trimming zip ties on temporary fencing. Or picture a Galveston dock at first light, cutting line and shrink wrap off pallets of gear. In both places, this assisted knife opens the same: quick, sure, and ready to bite without flinching.

Texas OTF knife laws, assisted openings, and what really matters

Knife law trips people up more than it should. In this state, the law doesn’t single out assisted or OTF knives the way some places do. Here’s what matters: blade length and where you’re carrying. Under state law, blades over 5.5 inches fall into "location-restricted" territory—there are places you simply can’t bring them. This assisted knife stays under that line with its 3.625-inch blade, which keeps day-to-day carry simple for most adults.

OTF knives draw a lot of attention in some parts of Texas—security at certain venues, plant gates, or campus-adjacent areas may react differently to them. An assisted knife like this tends to fly under the radar, especially with its matte finish and deep-carry clip. Still, anywhere you go—stadiums, schools, certain government buildings—posted rules can be stricter than state knife laws. Texans know to read the sign at the door and respect it.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, OTF knives are legal for most adults in Texas, but the same 5.5-inch blade length rule applies. Anything longer is subject to place restrictions—schools, polling places, some government buildings, and a few other protected locations. Law can change, so a quick check of current Texas statutes, or a word with a local attorney if you’re unsure, is never wasted time.

Why this assisted knife stays legal-friendly across Texas

Because the blade is well under 5.5 inches, most Texas adults can carry it daily without bumping into state-length limits. And since it’s an assisted folder rather than an OTF, it reads like a work knife to most people—something used on the job, not a piece meant to stir attention.

Built for Texas jobs: from feed stores to chemical plants

Spend a week running between a feed store in Brenham, a fabrication shop outside Dallas, and a refinery turnaround on the Gulf Coast, and you’ll see the same pattern: knives that survive here aren’t fragile. This assisted knife leans on a sturdy liner lock and aluminum scales that take the inevitable dings from steel grating, concrete, and truck beds. The weight—just north of six ounces—gives it a planted, dependable feel when you’re bearing down on stubborn nylon rope or reinforced pallet banding.

The plain-edge drop point makes sense in Texas work. It slices hay twine clean, opens shrink-wrapped pallets, cuts poly pipe, and handles the occasional piece of leather or rubber hose without chipping out on grit. When it dulls after a week of hard use, it’s straightforward to bring back on a stone or pull-through sharpener in the shop.

Pocket, console, or tool bag—Texas carry options

Some Texans clip a knife in the front-right pocket every day. Others drop it into a center console between ranch gates or leave it in a bag in the combine cab. The deep-carry clip on this assisted knife keeps it low when it’s on you and secure when it’s hooked to MOLLE on a range bag. The lanyard hole lets you tie it off in case you’re working over water in Port Arthur or on a catwalk outside Midland.

Questions Texas buyers ask about OTF knife Texas choices

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for most adults they are. Texas law focuses more on blade length—5.5 inches is the key mark—and specific restricted locations than on whether a knife is OTF, assisted, or manual. Still, venues and employers can write their own tighter rules. Before you pocket an OTF or an assisted knife like this into a refinery, plant, school zone, or stadium, check both state law and posted policies.

How does this assisted knife compare to an OTF for Texas ranch and work use?

For ranch work, oilfield runs, and general Texas job use, this assisted knife often beats an OTF on practicality. It rides flatter in your jeans when you’re climbing through a barbed-wire fence or into a skid steer, the action is simple to maintain in dust and mud, and the drop point handles everything from feed bags to irrigation tubing without being temperamental.

Is this the right choice if I want the best OTF knife in Texas?

If your heart’s set on the best OTF knife in Texas, you may still end up buying one. But if what you really want is Texas-fast deployment, solid lockup, and a blade that carries clean from office to jobsite, this assisted knife delivers that feel in a simpler package. Many buyers who came in chasing an OTF leave with this instead once they feel the action and realize how it carries.

Picture the first hard north wind of fall rolling across a pasture outside Abilene. You’re riding fence in a side-by-side, jacket zipped, daylight fading. A section of wire sags where a hog pushed through. You pull this assisted knife from your pocket, thumb the flipper, and the blade is there—quiet, ready, familiar. You cut, twist, fix what needs fixing, and slide it back under the deep-carry clip. That’s how a knife earns a place in a Texas day.

Blade Length (inches) 3.625
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.875
Weight (oz.) 6.28
Blade Color Gray
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock