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Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

Price:

10.99


Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Gray Aluminum
Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Gray Aluminum
10.99 10.99
Carbon Gauntlet Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Carbon Fiber
Carbon Gauntlet Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Carbon Fiber
11.99 11.99

Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/703/image_1920?unique=d947014

4 sold in last 24 hours

Late in a Central Texas shift, you’re cutting pallet straps behind the store with dust in the air and sweat on your hands. This assisted knife opens with a single press on the flipper, the coil doing the rest. The 3.625-inch satin clip point goes straight to work on cardboard, nylon, or shrink wrap, while the matte gray aluminum handle and blue pivot collar stay low-key in a pocket or uniform. It feels like something a foreman or field tech actually carries.

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When a quick-deploy assisted knife earns its place in a Texas pocket

End of a long day on a San Antonio loading dock. Heat still radiates off the concrete, a trailer’s backed in crooked, and the straps are pulled tight. You’ve got one hand on the load bar, the other on this Vector Pivot assisted knife. A press on the flipper, the spring takes over, and the satin clip point is working before the driver finishes griping about the heat.

This isn’t a showpiece. The matte gray aluminum handle disappears against a work shirt or duty pants. The blue pivot collar is the only hint of flash, more like a precision tool marking than decoration. In the hand, it feels like a piece of solid gear you’d keep in a truck console running I‑35 or clipped inside your pocket on a refinery turnaround in Baytown.

Why this assisted opening knife fits real Texas work and carry

Closed, this assisted opening knife rides at about 4.875 inches. That means it drops into the front pocket of a pair of Wranglers or rides under a tool belt in Midland without printing like a brick. Open, you’re looking at 8.5 inches of working length—enough leverage to cut thick nylon straps on a flatbed outside Laredo, but still controlled when you’re breaking down boxes in the back room of a Dallas shop.

The 3.625-inch satin clip point blade gives you a fine tip for controlled piercing and a long belly for slicing. Shrink wrap, feed bags, cable ties, rubber hose—this is the stuff Texans actually cut, not just test paper. At 6.28 ounces, it has enough weight to feel honest, but not so much that you notice it during a long shift walking a plant or a ranch supply yard.

Spring-assisted action tuned for Texas tasks

The deployment is simple: flipper tab, straight press, coil assist. There’s no thumb stud to miss with gloves on, no button to hunt in the dark. Out in West Texas wind, holding a gate rope in one hand and needing to slice baling twine with the other, that matters. The spring snaps the blade into place with a clean, confident action, and the liner lock seats with an audible click you can feel through the frame.

Ergonomics for dusty, sweaty, real-world grip

Jimping along the spine and inside the liners gives your thumb and forefinger something to bite into when your hands are slick with sweat or dust from a job site in Odessa. The angular pommel braces into the heel of your hand during push cuts, and the chamfered edges keep the handle from chewing up your palm after a long run of cutting down boxes in a Houston warehouse.

Texas OTF knife buyers sizing up an assisted alternative

Plenty of folks who come in ready to buy an OTF knife in Texas are really chasing one-handed speed and reliability. This assisted opening knife gives you that snap and readiness without jumping straight into full automatic territory. For some buyers in more conservative workplaces—from corporate campuses in Austin to hospital maintenance crews in Fort Worth—an assisted folder feels easier to explain than an OTF or button-lock automatic.

The Vector Pivot runs that middle ground well. You still get fast, one-handed deployment that keeps up with most Texas OTF knife options when you’re opening feed sacks, cutting hose, or trimming paracord at deer camp. But you don’t have the same raised eyebrows from a supervisor or property manager when you pull it out to break down recycling behind the office.

Texas knife law confidence: assisted vs automatic and OTF

Texas law took a hard turn toward common sense a few years back. Switchblades, OTF knives, and other automatics are no longer banned here the way they used to be. For most adults, most places, carrying a knife like this assisted opener—or even a full automatic—is legal, as long as you stay clear of a few restricted locations like schools, certain government buildings, and similar protected spots.

Where this assisted knife shines is in perception and policy, not just statute. A Texas OTF knife might be perfectly legal, but your refinery, hospital, or warehouse may still frown on push-button blades. The Vector Pivot looks and feels like a straightforward work knife. The flipper and spring assist give you speed, but the format stays closer to a traditional folder. That blend matters in corporate security briefings from The Woodlands to Las Colinas.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF designs—are generally legal for adults to own and carry, with restrictions mostly tied to specific locations and certain age-related situations. Many Texans still choose assisted openers like this one because they fit more comfortably within workplace rules and draw less attention in public settings.

Workplace policies from the Gulf Coast to the Panhandle

Plants along the Houston Ship Channel, distribution centers around Dallas, and refineries near Corpus can each have their own knife policies. An assisted folder without a push button often slips through those rules more cleanly. It’s fast enough for daily work, but it doesn’t look like a dedicated tactical or combat blade when you’re standing in a safety meeting.

Built for Texas carry: pocket, console, and kit

The black pocket clip keeps the profile low, whether it’s clipped to the pocket of FR coveralls in the Eagle Ford or the back pocket of jeans headed into a H‑E‑B run. The gray aluminum handle doesn’t shout; it reads like a tool. For truck carry, it tucks neatly into a center console between a flashlight and registration paperwork, easy to grab when you pull over to cut hay twine off a fence or trim a loose strap on a trailer outside Kerrville.

The lanyard hole at the angled pommel gives you options. Run a short cord and clip it inside a range bag headed to a Hill Country lease. Tie in a bright fob if you’re prone to dropping gear in tall Johnson grass or behind equipment where visibility matters. However you rig it, it stays tied into your kit instead of wandering off in the back seat.

Blade performance in Texas conditions

The satin finish on the clip point shrugs off tape gunk and dust. A quick wipe with a rag in the shop or a shirt tail under a mesquite tree keeps it honest. The plain edge sharpens easy on a basic stone, so you can bring it back after a week of cutting cardboard, plastic banding, and nylon webbing around a Lubbock warehouse without babying it.

Questions Texas buyers ask about assisted opening knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed the old switchblade ban, so most adults can own and carry OTF knives, autos, and assisted folders without trouble, outside of a few restricted locations. Many Texans still reach for an assisted opening knife like this one for day-to-day carry because it balances speed with a more workplace-friendly look.

How does this Vector Pivot compare to a Texas OTF knife for daily use?

In real Texas chores—cutting straps on an Amarillo dock, trimming rope at a Hill Country campsite, opening feed bags in the Brazos bottom—this knife keeps pace on deployment speed. The flipper and assist give you one-handed opening without a push button, and the slim handle carries flatter than many double-action OTFs when you’re in and out of a truck all day.

Is this assisted knife a good choice for first-time Texas buyers?

If someone walks into a shop in Abilene or Waco wanting “something quick I can legally carry to work,” this is an easy recommendation. The action is simple, the size is practical, and it doesn’t look aggressive clipped to a pocket. It feels like a natural step up from a cheap box cutter without jumping straight into full tactical or collectible territory.

First use: where this knife starts its Texas story

Picture this knife’s first real day: clipped to your pocket on a humid Houston morning, keys in one hand, coffee in the other, walking into a warehouse with trucks already backed up to the bay. An hour later you’re one-handed on a pallet, flipper under your finger, spring snapping the blade into place as you slice through strapping. By evening it’s riding easy in your jeans as you cut open a sack of charcoal on the back porch.

That’s where this Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife belongs—in the pocket of someone who works, drives, hauls, and fixes things across this state. Quiet, fast, capable. The kind of knife a Texan carries because it earns its keep every single day.

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