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Blackout Lever-Lock Stiletto Automatic Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

36.99


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Blackout Workline Lever-Lock Automatic Knife - Midnight Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1403/image_1920?unique=7853912

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This lever-lock automatic knife is built for Texans who like their tools fast, quiet, and honest. Flip the lever and the blackout tanto blade jumps into place, locking up with authority. The textured aluminum handle stays planted, even when your hands are slick or gloved, and the lanyard hole keeps it riding low in a pocket or on a key loop. Not an OTF and not an assisted opener—just a clean side-opening automatic that works hard, disappears fast, and feels right at home in a Texas day’s work.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB301BK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.625
Closed Length (inches) 4.375
Blade Color Black
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Textured
Button Type Lever
Theme Stiletto
Double/Single Action Single Action
Pocket Clip No

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What This Lever-Lock Automatic Knife Really Is

This Blackout Lever-Lock Stiletto Automatic Knife is a side-opening automatic knife with a lever lock, not an out-the-front knife and not an assisted opener. Flip the lever, the blade snaps out from the side, and the lock holds it in place until you’re ready to close it. For a Texas buyer who cares about mechanism, this is a classic lever-lock automatic knife dressed in midnight black with a modern tanto work blade.

At 3 inches of blade and 7.625 inches overall, it rides in the pocket like a compact stiletto but cuts like a utility knife. No pocket clip, just a lanyard hole and a blackout profile that stays out of sight until you need it.

Lever-Lock Automatic Knife Mechanics, Plain and Simple

Mechanically, this is a single-action, side-opening automatic knife. You press or flip the lever; an internal spring drives the tanto blade out from the side of the handle, and the same lever acts as the lock to keep the blade open. That’s the essential difference between this automatic knife and an OTF knife.

Automatic vs OTF vs Switchblade in This Design

An OTF knife—out-the-front—sends the blade straight out the nose of the handle. This knife does not do that. It looks lean like some OTF designs, but the blade pivots on a side-mounted hinge. As for “switchblade,” in Texas law that word gets used broadly for automatic knives. In collector talk, this is best called a lever-lock automatic knife with a stiletto profile, not a true OTF switchblade. The action is fast, firm, and deliberate, with that positive snap collectors listen for.

Why the Tanto Blade Matters to Texas Users

The tanto blade on this automatic knife brings a strong tip and a straight cutting edge. That makes it more than just a dressy stiletto. It opens boxes, cuts strapping, trims cord, and digs into the rough jobs a Texas workday throws at you. You get stiletto lines with a utility-minded edge.

Carry Reality for Texas Knife Owners

This lever-lock automatic knife is built for low-profile carry. With no pocket clip, it drops straight into the pocket or hangs from a lanyard through the rear hole. For Texans who want an automatic knife handy without advertising it, that matters. It doesn’t print much, doesn’t drag on a seatbelt, and doesn’t chew up jeans like an aggressive clip can.

The textured black aluminum handle gives real traction. In a hot Texas summer with sweat on your hands, or working around oil and dust, that texture keeps the automatic knife steady. The blackout finish on both handle and blade keeps glare down—more shop light than showroom shine.

Texas Law, Automatic Knives, and Where This One Fits

In Texas today, automatic knives, OTF knives, and what most folks call switchblades are broadly legal to own and carry, with the main concern being blade length and location restrictions. This automatic knife carries a 3-inch blade, keeping it well under the 5.5-inch threshold that Texas law uses for many location-based limits. That gives this lever-lock automatic some breathing room for everyday Texas carry, whether you’re in town or out on the place.

Where folks get confused is lumping every automatic knife and OTF knife into the same bucket. From a Texas legal standpoint, they can all fall under the same general automatic or switchblade language, but as a buyer, you should know the difference. This is a side-opening lever-lock automatic knife, not a double-action OTF. That distinction matters when you’re comparing reliability, maintenance, and how it rides in your pocket.

Collector Value: A Working Stiletto Automatic Knife

Collectors in Texas don’t just chase safe queens; they like an automatic knife that will actually see some miles. This blackout lever-lock stiletto automatic sits right in that sweet spot. The stiletto silhouette will look familiar to anyone raised on classic Italian switchblades, but the modern tanto blade and textured aluminum handle push it into everyday use territory.

Build and Materials for Everyday Use

The steel tanto blade wears a matte black finish to cut glare and keep the profile subtle. The plain edge is easy to touch up on a stone or pocket sharpener. Aluminum handle scales keep the weight down but stay rigid, with visible Torx fasteners so a mechanically minded Texan can service it if needed. The single-action automatic mechanism keeps things simple: fewer moving parts than a double-action OTF, with the lever doing double duty as actuator and lock.

What Sets This Automatic Knife Apart in a Drawer Full of Blades

In a drawer that already holds a couple of OTF knives and a few classic switchblades, this lever-lock automatic earns its place by being honest about its job. It’s a blackout, no-clip, work-leaning stiletto automatic. You reach for this one when you want the snap of an automatic knife, the straight-cutting capability of a tanto, and a handle that doesn’t mind getting dirty. It doesn’t pretend to be a deep-carry tactical OTF or a dressed-up showpiece; it’s the knife you’re not afraid to scratch.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

This is a side-opening lever-lock automatic knife. The blade pivots out from the side when you work the lever. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a thumb slider. In casual talk, folks may call any automatic a switchblade, but for a Texas collector, it’s more accurate to say lever-lock automatic stiletto, not OTF.

Is this automatic knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including what many call switchblades and OTF knives—are generally legal to own and carry, with certain location and blade-length restrictions. This automatic knife has a 3-inch blade, under the common 5.5-inch line used in Texas statutes. Laws can change and local rules can vary, so a serious Texas buyer should always confirm current state and local regulations before carrying any automatic knife.

Who does this lever-lock automatic knife make sense for?

This knife suits a Texas buyer who wants a working automatic more than a glass-case showpiece. If you already own a couple of OTF knives and a traditional switchblade, this lever-lock gives you a different mechanism and a different role: compact, blackout, clipless carry with a strong tanto edge for daily cutting. It’s the right call if you know the difference between automatic, OTF, and assisted—and want a lever-lock that actually goes to work.

For a Texas collector or everyday carrier who values getting the mechanism right, this blackout lever-lock automatic knife fits cleanly into the lineup: a side-opening automatic with stiletto lines, a utility-minded tanto blade, and a low-profile, clipless carry style that feels at home in a Texas pocket. It doesn’t try to be every kind of switchblade at once. It knows what it is, and that’s exactly what the right buyer is looking for.