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Stealth Utility 14-in-1 Pocket Multi Tool - Midnight Black

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7.99


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Backroad Fix 14-Function EDC Multitool - Midnight Black

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This compact pocket multitool is built for the days that don’t go to plan. Butterfly-open pliers anchor 14 stainless steel tools—knife blade, saw, screwdrivers, fish scaler, file, bottle and can openers—inside midnight black handles that fold down to just 4 inches. It rides light in a nylon belt pouch, right at home in a Texas truck, tackle bag, or ranch gate kit. When something breaks, loosens, or needs cutting, this quiet little workhorse is already there.

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What This Pocket Multitool Really Is

The Backroad Fix 14-Function EDC Multitool - Midnight Black is not a switchblade, not an automatic knife, and not an OTF knife pretending to be something it’s not. This is a compact, butterfly-open pocket multitool built around a set of pliers, with a folding knife blade and other tools tucked into each handle. It’s the kind of everyday carry Texans keep in a truck door, range bag, or tackle box for all the small jobs that still need doing right.

Closed, this multitool sits at about 4 inches, riding light in its nylon pouch with belt loop. Open it butterfly-style and the needle-nose pliers take center stage, backed up by 14 total functions: knife blade, saw, screwdrivers, fish scaler with ruler, file, bottle opener, can opener, and more. It’s a stainless steel work tool with midnight black handles, meant for real use and real miles.

Mechanism: Butterfly-Open Multitool, Not an Automatic Knife

Mechanically, this is a classic butterfly-open multitool. The two black handles swing around a plier head on pivots. When folded, the pliers hide inside the handles. When opened, the handles lock into place around the plier joint and give you a solid grip. That’s a completely different animal from an automatic knife or a switchblade.

On an automatic knife or a switchblade, you have a spring-loaded blade that deploys with a button or switch. On an OTF knife, the blade rides in a track and shoots straight out the front. This multitool doesn’t do any of that. The knife blade and other tools are manual folders that you pull open with a nail nick or thumb grip. There’s no spring assist, no button, and no automatic deployment. For Texas buyers, that distinction matters—this is a manual pocket tool first, a cutting edge second.

Why the Butterfly Layout Matters

The butterfly layout gives you real leverage on the pliers while still dropping down to a compact pocket size. You’re not buying this to replace a primary OTF knife, automatic knife, or dedicated switchblade; you’re buying it to handle the light mechanic work around them. Tighten a loose screw on a holster, trim cordage at camp, crimp down a barb, or snug up a scope ring—this is the multitool you open when the job needs more than just a single blade.

Stainless Steel Tools With Blacked-Out Handles

The tools themselves are stainless steel with a satin finish, contrasting cleanly against the glossy midnight black handles. That black-on-steel look gives it a modern EDC feel that fits right alongside a tactical automatic knife or a slim OTF in your kit. Where the automatic blade does the cutting with style, this multitool brings the utility—sawing, prying, driving, opening, scaling, and filing—all from one compact piece.

Pocket Multitool Performance in Texas Carry Life

In Texas, most days don’t require a dedicated combat-style switchblade. They require something that fixes small problems without a lot of fuss. This pocket multitool fits that role. It’s compact enough for waistband carry in its nylon pouch, or you can drop it in a truck console or ATV storage bin. When you’re fencing, fishing, camping, or just knocking around town, this little 14-in-1 is the quiet helper that keeps things moving.

Because the blade is a simple manual folder nested inside a multitool, it’s less likely to raise eyebrows than an aggressive-looking OTF knife or a side-opening automatic. That doesn’t make those knives less legitimate; it just means this tool has a different social profile. This is the one you pull out at a tailgate or workbench when you need pliers, a screwdriver, or a can opener, without turning the moment into a knife demonstration.

Everyday Uses a Texas Buyer Will Recognize

  • Snipping loose wire at a gate or feeder with the knife blade
  • Tightening loose screws with the flat and Phillips drivers
  • Cleaning a fish creekside with the scaler and ruler-marked spine
  • Cutting small branches for camp with the saw blade
  • Popping bottle caps or opening cans at a cookout

None of these jobs call for an OTF knife or a switchblade. They call for a pocket multitool that disappears until you need it and then just works.

Texas Law, Multitools, and Where This Fits

Texas law is far friendlier to blades than it used to be. Automatic knives and switchblades are legal to own and carry in most everyday situations, and OTF knives ride in pockets all over this state now. That said, this 14-in-1 pocket multitool lives in an even calmer legal neighborhood.

There’s no automatic deployment, no button-release switchblade mechanism, and no OTF-style track. You have a standard folding knife blade tucked inside a multitool body, plus pliers and other tools. For most Texas buyers, this is as low-drama as it gets. You still need to respect local rules about blades in schools, courthouses, and similar restricted locations, but this piece is about as non-controversial as everyday carry gets.

Multitool vs. Switchblade vs. OTF in a Texas Truck

Think of it this way: a switchblade or automatic knife in your truck is your fast-deploy cutting solution. An OTF knife gives you that same speed with a different mechanism and a distinctive front-opening style. This pocket multitool is the support crew. It’s for every job that needs pliers, a screwdriver, a saw, a file, or an opener. Most Texas collectors run all three: primary blade, backup blade, and a solid multitool tucked nearby. This one checks that third box without taking up much space.

Collector Value: Why This Multitool Earns a Spot

A serious Texas knife collector doesn’t just line up switchblades and OTF knives and call it a day. The collection tells a story about how blades and tools get used. This pocket multitool earns its keep because it completes that story. It bridges the gap between display-grade automatics and real-world chores.

The stealthy midnight black handles and clean stainless tool set give it a modern EDC look that pairs well in a case with tactical automatics and front-opening OTF knives. It’s not trying to steal the spotlight; it’s the piece you actually reach for when something needs fixing. And that practicality is what gives it quiet collector appeal. A drawer full of knives without a single solid multitool says something’s missing.

Why Texas Buyers Add It to the Kit

  • Compact 4-inch closed length makes it true pocket gear
  • Butterfly-open pliers handle real grip and pinch tasks
  • Fourteen functions cover the common camp, ranch, and roadside jobs
  • Black nylon belt pouch makes carry simple and discreet
  • Plays well alongside an automatic knife or OTF as the utility companion

What Texas Buyers Ask About Pocket Multitools

Is this multitool anything like an automatic knife or OTF?

No. This is a fully manual pocket multitool. The pliers open butterfly-style. The knife blade and other tools fold out by hand and do not deploy automatically. An automatic knife or traditional switchblade uses a spring and a button or switch to snap the blade open. An OTF knife pushes the blade straight out the front with a sliding actuator. This multitool relies on your hand, not a spring, and sits legally and mechanically apart from automatics and OTF designs.

How does a pocket multitool like this sit under Texas law?

In general terms, Texas is very permissive about knives and tools, and this pocket multitool sits on the mild end of the spectrum. There’s no automatic mechanism, no switchblade-style button, and no OTF track. It’s a manual folding multitool with a modest blade built into a plier-based frame. You still have to respect common-sense restrictions—certain government buildings, schools, and secured venues—but for normal adult carry in Texas, this is about as straightforward as an EDC tool gets. For specific legal guidance, talk to a Texas attorney who works in weapons law.

Is this worth it if I already carry an automatic knife?

If your automatic knife or OTF is your only tool, you’re asking one blade to do every job. A collector who knows better splits duties: the automatic or switchblade is for fast cutting; the multitool is for everything else. This 14-in-1 pocket multitool covers pliers work, screwdriving, cutting, sawing, and opening without beating up your primary blade. That division of labor is exactly how a serious Texas buyer keeps their nicer knives in good shape while still handling real-world chores.

For a Texas collector or everyday carrier, the Backroad Fix 14-Function EDC Multitool - Midnight Black is the quiet piece that makes your whole carry make sense. Let the switchblade or OTF knife handle the quick cuts and clean edges; let this pocket multitool live in the truck, on the belt, or in the kit, ready for the fixes that keep a long day from turning into a longer night. That’s not hype—that’s just how Texans actually use their gear.