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Batwing Dual-Edge QuickDeploy Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

Price:

9.99


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Shadow Wing Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2027/image_1920?unique=334e193

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The Shadow Wing Dual-Blade Assisted Knife is a bat-inspired assisted opening knife built for Texas collectors who like their EDC with a little drama. Dual 2-inch dagger blades snap out with spring-assisted speed, while the matte gray aluminum handle keeps things light but durable. It’s not an automatic knife or an OTF knife—it’s a fast, flipper-fired assisted opener that begs to be displayed. In a Texas collection full of switchblades and autos, this one stands out on looks alone.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

934SGY

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.05
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Bat-inspired
Pocket Clip No
Deployment Method Spring-assisted

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Batwing Style, Assisted Speed: What This Knife Really Is

The Batwing Dual-Edge QuickDeploy Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum is an assisted opening knife first and a fantasy showpiece second. Those dual dagger blades and the bat emblem might make you think switchblade at a glance, but this is not an automatic knife and it’s not an OTF knife. It’s a spring-assisted flipper that still relies on your hand to start the action, then lets the mechanism take it home.

For a Texas buyer who’s already sorting knives into mental buckets—OTF knife, side-opening automatic, classic switchblade—this one lands squarely in the assisted opening lane. Same drama when those blades snap out, different mechanism and different legal story under Texas law.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics: Dual Blades, One Purpose

Mechanically, this assisted opening knife runs on a simple idea: you start the opening with the flipper tab, the spring does the rest. There’s no button-fired automatic knife release, no OTF knife track, no coil spring pushing a blade straight out the front. Instead, each 2-inch dagger blade pivots from the handle like a standard folding knife, just with spring help once you cross that detent.

How the QuickDeploy Action Works

Press either flipper tab and the blade rides a pivot, not a track. Once you nudge it past resistance, the spring takes over and snaps the blade into place. Do it from both sides and you’ve got a mirrored pair of dagger points extended from the 4.05-inch handle, for a total open length of 6.875 inches. It feels quick and satisfying without drifting into automatic or switchblade territory.

Why It’s Not an Automatic or OTF Knife

An automatic knife or switchblade fires from a button, lever, or similar release and does all the work once that release is hit. An OTF knife rides in a channel and moves straight out the front, usually from a thumb slider. This batwing piece stays in the assisted opening knife lane: flipper activation, pivoting blades, and a spring that only finishes what your thumb starts.

Bat-Themed Design for Texas Collectors

Design-wise, this is where the knife earns its spot in a Texas collection. The matte gray aluminum handle is cut into a clear batwing shape with a central bat emblem that anchors the whole look. The dual dagger blades mirror each other for a clean, horizontal display profile that reads more like a vigilante fantasy piece than a ranch chore tool.

For a Texas collector who already owns a few automatic knives, a carry OTF knife, and maybe a classic switchblade or two, this assisted opening knife fills a different niche. It’s the one that goes on the shelf, on the desk, or in the display case when you want a talking piece that still opens like a real tool, not a prop.

Materials That Hold Up Beyond the Gimmick

The blades are steel with a two-tone matte finish: silver edges with darker central panels. The handle is matte gray aluminum with visible Torx hardware, giving the fantasy theme a grounded, mechanical look. No pocket clip, no pretense of deep-pocket work duty—this is purposely more display-friendly than a typical assisted opener, automatic knife, or duty-ready OTF knife.

Texas Carry Reality: Where This Assisted Knife Fits

Texas law is friendlier than most when it comes to blades, including automatic knives and switchblades, and this assisted opening knife sits on the more conservative side of that world. Because it’s not a button-fired automatic knife or true switchblade, and it’s not an OTF knife shooting straight out the front, it typically draws less attention than those more aggressive mechanisms.

With dual 2-inch blades and an overall length under 7 inches, this batwing assisted opener is compact enough for around-the-house or off-duty carry in Texas when you just want something interesting on you. Functionally, it’ll open boxes, cut tape, and handle light EDC tasks, though most owners will treat it as a collectible first and a backup utility blade second.

Texas Law Context: Assisted vs Automatic vs OTF

Under current Texas law, the big former red flag was anything defined as a switchblade or automatic knife. That landscape has relaxed, and OTF knives, switchblades, and other automatics are now legal for most adults, with some location-based limits. An assisted opening knife like this doesn’t use a button or slider to fire the blade; you start it with the flipper and the spring finishes the move. That distinction matters to collectors who care how each piece would’ve been treated before and after those statute changes.

Assisted Opening Knife vs Switchblade vs OTF Knife

If you’re building a serious Texas collection, you don’t want three knives that all do the same thing under three different names. You want one solid automatic knife, one reliable OTF knife, one classic switchblade—and then specialty pieces like this batwing assisted opener that bring something different to the table.

In hand, the difference is obvious. A switchblade or automatic knife fires from a button; the OTF knife rides a linear track; this batwing design uses flipper tabs and a pivot. You feel the assist catch and drive the blade home, but only after you’ve done your part. It’s a smaller, more deliberate gesture, which suits the knife’s role as a collectible conversation starter more than a rapid-deployment duty tool.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this closer to an OTF knife, an automatic knife, or a switchblade?

Mechanically, it’s closest to a standard flipper-style assisted opening knife. Both blades pivot from the handle and need a manual start from the flipper tab. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or similar release to fire the blade on its own, and an OTF knife runs the blade straight out the front on a track. The Batwing Dual-Edge QuickDeploy Assisted Knife keeps things in the assisted-opening lane with that bat-themed flair layered on top.

Is an assisted opening knife like this legal to own and carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can generally own and carry assisted opening knives, automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives, subject to certain location restrictions and blade-length rules in sensitive places. This assisted opening knife has 2-inch blades and a compact footprint, which puts it well under most Texas length thresholds. As always, serious collectors check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules, but in broad strokes, this falls on the easier side of the spectrum.

Is this more of a user or a collectible for a Texas buyer?

Functionally, it’ll handle light EDC work just fine, but the dual opposing dagger blades, bat emblem, and no-pocket-clip design make it more of a display-ready collectible. In a Texas drawer full of workhorse automatic knives and a pocket-worn OTF knife you actually carry, this batwing assisted opening knife is the one you set out when friends come over and you’re talking steel, mechanisms, and the difference between a switchblade and an assisted opener.

Why This Batwing Assisted Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Every serious Texas collector reaches a point where another plain black tactical blade doesn’t move the needle. What keeps the hobby interesting is rounding out the lineup: the one OTF knife you trust, the automatic knife you’ve tuned just right, the old-school switchblade with history—and then the wild cards like this Batwing Dual-Edge QuickDeploy Assisted Knife.

It’s an assisted opening knife that wears its fantasy design on its sleeve but still respects the mechanics. The flipper tabs, the spring assist, the steel blades, and the aluminum handle keep it rooted in real knife-making, not cheap novelty. It’s the kind of piece a Texas buyer keeps on the desk or the bar, ready to demonstrate the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife to anyone who still calls everything a switchblade.

If you know your mechanisms and you like your collection to say so, this batwing dual-edge assisted knife fits right in—lived-in, a little dramatic, and unmistakably chosen by someone who understands the difference.