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Patrol Tribute Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Rescue Knife - Police Graphic

Price:

7.99


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Blue Line Response Assisted Rescue Knife - Police Graphic

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/6467/image_1920?unique=5c22352

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This assisted opening rescue knife rides that line between tribute and tool. Spring-assisted deployment snaps the partial-serrated clip point into play, backed by a liner lock you can trust. The seatbelt cutter and glass breaker are there for the worst Texas roadway nights, while the POLICE graphic and cruiser art honor the badge. Honeycomb-textured black handle, pocket clip carry, one-handed thumb-stud opening. For Texas buyers who know an assisted opener isn’t a switchblade, it’s the right tool for the job.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

PK3164PO

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 4.8
Blade Color Multicolor
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material ABS
Theme Police Theme
Safety Seatbelt cutter
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Assisted Rescue Knife Really Is

The Blue Line Response Assisted Rescue Knife is a spring-assisted opening pocket knife built as a working rescue tool, wrapped in a clear police tribute. It is not an automatic knife or an OTF knife, and it’s not a switchblade. This is a side-opening assisted opener: you start the blade with the thumb stud, the internal spring takes over, and the liner lock holds it open. Simple, mechanical, and reliable enough for a Texas patrol car or a collector’s drawer.

At 3.5 inches, the clip point blade gives you a practical edge length for cutting tasks without feeling unwieldy. The partial-serrated edge bites through rope, webbing, and seatbelts, while the plain edge portion handles cleaner cuts. The seatbelt cutter and window breaker aren’t decoration—they’re why this qualifies as a true rescue knife, not just a tactical folder with pretty graphics.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanism vs Automatic and OTF

If you’re buying knives in Texas, you already know words matter. This is an assisted opening knife, not a full automatic knife, and not an OTF knife. The difference lives in what starts the blade.

How the Assisted Mechanism Works

On this police tribute folder, you nudge the blade open with the thumb stud. Once you’ve moved it a short distance, an internal spring snaps it to lock-up. That makes it fast, but still user-initiated. The liner lock engages along the tang, giving you a solid, familiar lock-up you can close one-handed.

An automatic knife or true switchblade opens with the press of a button or release—no manual start. An OTF knife (out-the-front) sends the blade straight out of the handle, often by a sliding actuator. This police-themed rescue piece doesn’t do either of those; it’s a side-opening assisted knife that folds into the handle like a standard pocket knife.

Why That Matters to a Texas Collector

For a Texas buyer who owns all three types—assisted, automatic, and OTF—this knife fills that rescue-tool role. You get near-automatic speed without committing this slot in your kit to a switchblade or OTF mechanism. It’s the knife you can loan to a rookie or keep in the truck door without explaining how to work a double-action OTF.

Texas Carry Reality for an Assisted Opening Rescue Knife

Texas has loosened up a lot on blades, and modern knife law here is friendlier than folks remember. For a spring-assisted opening rescue knife like this, the main questions are blade length and where you’re carrying it, not whether it’s a switchblade. At 3.5 inches and folding, this sits comfortably in the pocket-knife range that most Texans carry every day.

This isn’t legal advice, but in general, Texas doesn’t treat an assisted opening knife the same as a prohibited automatic weapon the way some older laws once did. The key distinctions that used to trip people up—automatic knife versus assisted opener, switchblade versus OTF—have largely been cleared up by modern statutes. For many Texas collectors and law enforcement supporters, that means you can focus on choosing the right mechanism instead of dodging outdated definitions.

On duty, this knife rides well clipped inside a pocket, on a vest, or in a bag. Off duty, it’s an easy everyday carry that still brings the police tribute art to the front when you flip it open. It’s compact enough for jeans and sturdy enough for a ranch truck or a range bag.

Design Details: Police Tribute Meets Working Tool

The styling on this assisted opener is unapologetically law-enforcement focused. The blade carries a police cruiser graphic, bold POLICE text, and flag-inspired colors that echo patrol lights and the American flag. That graphic gets your attention, but the hardware is why it earns a place in a serious Texas collection.

Blade, Edge, and Hardware

  • Blade style: Clip point with a sharp, useful tip for controlled cuts.
  • Edge: Partial-serrated for webbing and rope, with plain edge up front.
  • Finish: Glossy, multicolor printed artwork over steel for a bold tribute look.
  • Lock: Liner lock for straightforward, proven folding-knife security.
  • Deployment: Spring-assisted, thumb-stud initiated for one-handed use.

Rescue Features and Grip

  • Seatbelt cutter: Integrated in the handle, ready for controlled strap cuts.
  • Glass breaker: Hardened tip at the handle end for side windows.
  • Handle: ABS with honeycomb texture for solid traction in wet or gloved hands.
  • Pocket clip: Single-position clip for secure, consistent pocket carry.

The whole package weighs in at 4.8 ounces—enough heft to feel substantial, not so much that it drags your pocket down on a long Texas shift.

Collector Value for Texas Knife Buyers

For a Texas knife collector, this piece checks three boxes at once: it’s a police tribute, a functional assisted opening rescue knife, and a clean example of how to do graphics without sacrificing utility. It doesn’t pretend to be an OTF knife or a full automatic switchblade; it stands where it belongs, as a spring-assisted rescue folder with a strong theme.

In a drawer full of plain tactical knives, the police graphics and blue-line energy make it easy to reach for. In a lineup of rescue knives, the seatbelt cutter and glass breaker give it the same credibility as more expensive tools. For Texas buyers who support law enforcement, it lands somewhere between working gear and personal statement.

At this price point, many buyers pick up two—one to carry, one to keep clean in a display with other police or first-responder blades. The ABS handle and steel blade aren’t rare-exotic materials, but that’s not the job here. This knife is built to be used, loaned, and trusted when you’re on a Texas highway at midnight and you don’t have time to wonder what kind of mechanism you’re holding.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

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

No. An assisted opening knife like this one needs you to start the blade manually with the thumb stud; the spring only finishes the move. A switchblade or automatic knife fires from a button or release without you moving the blade. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out of the handle with a slider or similar control. This police tribute rescue knife is a side-opening, spring-assisted folder—with familiar pocket-knife manners.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law today is generally friendly toward modern folding knives, including assisted opening models. Blade length and location matter more than whether it’s spring-assisted. At 3.5 inches and folding, this rescue-style assisted opener fits into how many Texans already carry a pocket knife in their jeans, on the ranch, or off duty. As always, check the current law and any local rules, but for most Texas buyers, this is a practical everyday-carry rescue piece, not a legal headache.

Why would a collector choose this over a switchblade or OTF?

A Texas collector who already owns automatic knives and OTF knives will reach for this when they want something fast but familiar. The assisted opening mechanism is simple to explain, safe to hand to family or friends, and easier to maintain than some OTF designs. Add the police cruiser artwork, seatbelt cutter, and glass breaker, and you get a themed rescue knife that tells a clear story: built for emergencies, carrying a tribute to the badge, and honest about the mechanism it uses.

For the Texas buyer who knows the difference between an assisted opener, a switchblade, and an OTF knife, the Blue Line Response Assisted Rescue Knife offers exactly what it claims: a spring-assisted rescue folder with true police tribute art. It belongs in a center console on I-35, in a patrol bag rolling through Houston nights, or in a collector’s tray alongside other law-enforcement blades. It’s a working promise in your pocket, from a state that still understands what a good knife is for.