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Blackwood Velocity Assisted Opening Knife - Damascus Pattern

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10.99


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Blackwood Ripple Fast-Deploy Assisted Knife - Damascus Pattern

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7249/image_1920?unique=15bc630

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This assisted opening knife rides that line Texas collectors like—classic blackwood scales, modern Damascus-style spear point, and fast, clean deployment. A spring-assisted flipper brings the blade to life with a confident snap, then locks up solid on a liner lock. At 8.75 inches open with a pocket clip and lanyard hole, it carries easy from ranch gate to city curb. For Texans who know the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and a switchblade, this is the right tool for everyday cut duty.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.6
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Patterned
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Natural
Handle Material Wood
Theme Damascus
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Blackwood Ripple Fast-Deploy Assisted Knife – What It Really Is

This Blackwood Ripple Fast-Deploy Assisted Knife is a spring-assisted folding knife built for everyday Texas carry. It is not an automatic knife or an OTF knife, and it is not a traditional switchblade. You start the motion with the flipper tab, the internal spring helps it home, and the liner lock keeps it honest once it’s open. That clear, mechanical difference is exactly what serious Texas collectors pay attention to.

Here you’ve got a 3.75-inch spear point blade with a Damascus-style pattern, riding inside blackwood handle scales that feel settled and familiar in the hand. It opens with authority, carries like a gentleman’s folder, and works like a modern EDC that understands real use.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics: How This One Runs

An assisted opening knife sits in that middle ground between a pure manual folder and a fully automatic knife. On this piece, the front and guard-style flipper tabs give your finger a starting point. You nudge the blade past its detent, and then the internal spring takes over. That’s assisted, not automatic—important language for any Texas buyer who cares about how their gear is described and how it’s treated under the law.

Spring Assist vs. Automatic vs. OTF

With this knife, nothing happens until you move the blade yourself. That’s the key difference between an assisted opening knife and a side-opening automatic knife or OTF switchblade. A true automatic knife opens at the press of a button or switch. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a thumb slide. This Blackwood Ripple is a side-folding, assisted opener: you move the flipper, the spring finishes the job, the liner lock holds it open. Simple, reliable, and mechanically honest.

Liner Lock and Everyday Control

The liner lock is straightforward: a steel liner moves under the tang of the blade when it opens, locking it solid for work. When you’re done, thumb the liner aside and close the blade like any standard folder. Jimping along the spine and handle, plus that guard-style flipper acting as a finger stop, give you real purchase for push cuts, cardboard, rope, or ranch chores.

Texas Carry Reality: Where This Knife Fits

Texas law is far friendlier to knives than it used to be, but a smart buyer still knows what they’re carrying. This is a folding assisted opening knife, not an OTF knife and not a button-activated switchblade automatic. For most Texas adults, the bigger questions are blade length and location, not whether it’s assisted or automatic.

At 3.75 inches of blade and 8.75 inches overall, this rides comfortably as an everyday carry knife in pocket or on a belt. The pocket clip keeps it anchored when you’re in jeans, work pants, or Sunday slacks. The lanyard-ready tail lets you rig it for pack straps or throw a little leather or paracord on it for easier retrieval in the blind or the barn.

From Hill Country to High-Rise

Texas collectors don’t all live on a dirt road. This knife works just as well riding in a Houston briefcase as it does in a West Texas pickup console. The Damascus-style blade finish gives it a dressy edge, while the blackwood handle keeps it from looking tactical just for show. It’s an EDC piece that doesn’t have to be explained when you lay it on the table.

Damascus Pattern and Blackwood: Collector-Worthy Details

The blade on this assisted opening knife wears a modern Damascus-style pattern—swirling lines that catch the light and give it that forged, layered look collectors love. Whether you’re chasing real Damascus or you just appreciate the aesthetic, the pattern is what your eye finds first. It sets this knife apart from the plain-satin crowd in your drawer.

The handle scales are blackwood: warm, natural grain with enough darkness to feel refined. That wood against the patterned steel, broken up by the blue-accented pivot hardware, gives this piece a modern–classic mix you don’t see on every automatic knife or OTF switchblade. Those often lean hard toward tactical. This one leans toward everyday carry with a gentleman’s streak.

Size, Weight, and Work

Open length is 8.75 inches, closed it’s about 5 inches, and the whole thing weighs around 4.6 ounces. That puts it squarely in the full-size EDC pocket knife lane—big enough for real work, light enough for all-day carry. The spear point blade with a plain edge means you’re getting a versatile profile: fine point for detail, enough belly for slicing.

How It Stacks Up Against Automatic Knives and OTF Switchblades

If you already own an automatic knife or an OTF knife, you know each mechanism has its place. An OTF switchblade is fast and flashy, usually built with a double-action slide that makes a statement when you hit it. A side-opening automatic swings out with a button press and feels like a classic switchblade. This Blackwood Ripple keeps the speed without the drama. The assisted opening keeps you in control at the start of the motion, with the spring there to help—not to surprise you.

For Texas collectors who rotate through side-opening automatics, OTF knives, and assisted openers, this one earns its spot as the wood-handled Damascus-style EDC—less aggressive in appearance, still quick to the cut, and easier to explain to someone who only sees "knife" when you pull it.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is an assisted opening knife the same as an automatic knife or OTF switchblade?

No. An assisted opening knife like this Blackwood Ripple needs your hand to start the blade moving with the flipper tab; then a spring helps finish opening it. A true automatic knife opens from a button or switch with no blade movement from you. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a thumb slide, and is the classic OTF switchblade style. All three are fast, but the mechanics—and often the legal treatment—are different.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has become much more permissive about knife carry, and assisted opening knives are generally treated the same as other folding knives, not as prohibited switchblades. The key Texas considerations tend to be blade length and sensitive locations, not whether the knife is assisted, automatic, or OTF. Laws can change and local rules can vary, so a responsible Texas carrier still checks current statutes and any local restrictions before they clip anything in their pocket.

Why would a Texas collector choose this assisted opening knife over an automatic or OTF?

Because this piece threads the needle: you get fast deployment, a Damascus-style spear point, and blackwood scales in a package that doesn’t shout "tactical." It rides easy in jeans, boots, or office wear, and it fills a different slot in a collection than a metal-handled automatic knife or aggressive OTF switchblade. If you like to rotate according to mood, setting, or company, this is the knife you reach for when you want smooth, capable, and quietly distinctive.

Built for Texans Who Know Their Knives

This Blackwood Ripple Fast-Deploy Assisted Knife is for the Texan who can tell you exactly why an assisted opening knife isn’t the same thing as an OTF knife or a switchblade—and doesn’t need to show off about it. It’s a Damascus-patterned, wood-handled folder that opens fast, cuts clean, and carries right whether you’re walking a fence line or a city block. If you like your collection to say you pay attention to mechanisms, materials, and the law in your own state, this one belongs in your rotation.