Skip to Content
Brushed Balance Precision Butterfly Knife - Stainless Steel

Price:

16.99


Pearl Mirror Balance Butterfly Knife - Mirror Polish
Pearl Mirror Balance Butterfly Knife - Mirror Polish
16.99 16.99
Stiletto Heritage Quick-Flick Automatic Folding Comb - Red
Stiletto Heritage Quick-Flick Automatic Folding Comb - Red
11.99 11.99

Brushed Balance Precision Butterfly Knife - Stainless Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7561/image_1920?unique=4d7c2fd

13 sold in last 24 hours

This butterfly knife is all about balance you can feel. The brushed stainless steel handles and 3.25-inch drop point blade share the same clean, even weight, giving Texas flippers a predictable swing and a steady landing. No coatings, no graphics—just honest steel, tuned for smooth pivots and consistent practice. It carries slim in the pocket, flips quiet on the back porch, and fits right into a collector’s roll beside your automatics, OTF knives, and switchblades without trying to outshine them.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

BF2033GT

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Brushed Balance in a Texas Butterfly Knife

This butterfly knife is built for the Texan who cares more about feel than flash. All brushed stainless steel, clean drop point blade, and straight handles give you a classic butterfly knife that puts balance first. No gimmicks, no loud colors—just a precise, practice-ready balisong that settles into your hand and does exactly what you expect every time.

In a drawer full of automatic knives, OTF knives, and the occasional switchblade, a good butterfly knife holds its own by rhythm and control. This one does that job with quiet confidence.

What Makes This Butterfly Knife Different from Automatics and OTF Knives

A butterfly knife is its own animal. Where an automatic knife throws the blade open with a spring and a button, and an OTF knife rides a track straight out the front, this balisong asks you to be part of the mechanism. Two handles pivot around the tang, and the blade rides between them until a practiced flip brings it into play.

That’s the draw here for Texas collectors: mechanical honesty. No internal springs like a switchblade, no sliding track like a double-action OTF knife. Just brushed stainless handles, tuned pivots, and a blade that responds directly to your hands. When you snap this butterfly knife open, you’re not triggering a mechanism—you are the mechanism.

Balanced Stainless Steel Construction

Both handles and blade are stainless steel with a brushed finish. That one-material approach gives this butterfly knife a predictable center of gravity you can learn and repeat. The 3.25-inch blade and 5-inch closed length keep it in that sweet spot where it’s long enough for flow work but compact enough to ride in a pocket or pouch without fuss.

Because everything is brushed steel, your eye isn’t distracted by patterns or colors. You can focus on grip, bite handle, safe handle, and the arc of each flip.

Smooth Pivots, Simple Hardware

The pivots are secured with Torx fasteners at the tang and at the handle ends. That means a Texas tinkerer with a basic driver set can adjust tension or break it down for cleaning after dust, sweat, or pocket lint start to slow the action. It’s a clean, straightforward piece of kit—no hidden screws, no mystery parts.

Texas Carry Reality for a Butterfly Knife

Texas has loosened up on blades in recent years, but serious buyers still want clarity. Under current Texas law, a butterfly knife like this is treated as a knife, not some exotic contraption. It is not an automatic knife, it is not an OTF knife, and it’s not a push-button switchblade. It’s a manual folder that just happens to use two handles instead of one.

For most adults in Texas, carrying this butterfly knife is legal so long as you respect location-restricted zones and the general length rules that apply to all knives. It’s always wise to double-check local ordinances and keep up with any legislative changes, but you’re not sneaking around with a forbidden switchblade here—you’re carrying a manual balisong that opens by hand, flip by flip.

Where It Fits in a Texas Day

This piece makes sense in a back pocket at a ranch gate, in a range bag, or in a collector case on the shelf. You’ll reach for an automatic knife or OTF knife when you want one-handed, instant deployment under stress. You’ll reach for this butterfly knife when you’ve got a spare minute and want to run a few combos, tune your muscle memory, or just enjoy the sound of steel swinging shut.

Mechanism and Feel: For the Collector Who Practices

At 8.25 inches overall open, this butterfly knife gives you enough length for expressive tricks and controlled rollovers without feeling like a sword. The drop point blade with a central fuller keeps weight distributed and helps keep the nose from feeling too heavy during quick direction changes.

It’s not a trainer—this is a live blade with a plain edge. That’s important for a Texas buyer who already owns automatics and OTF knives and wants a real cutting edge for light utility when the flipping is done. Open a box, slice cord, cut tape—then wipe it down and go back to flow work.

Why Stainless and Brushed, Not Flashy

The brushed stainless steel finish does three things well. First, it hides the fine scratches that come from real use, not display-case living. Second, it keeps reflections muted—no mirror flash in bright Texas sun. Third, it reinforces that this butterfly knife is a tool, not a showpiece trying to outshine your more exotic automatic knives or high-end switchblades.

For many collectors, that restraint is exactly the appeal. This is the knife you don’t mind dropping once while you learn a new trick.

Collector Value in a Texas Lineup

Every seasoned Texas collector ends up with three clusters: side-opening automatic knives, front-deploying OTF knives, and manual pieces—from classic folders to butterfly knives like this. The Brushed Balance Precision Butterfly Knife fills that manual slot cleanly: all metal, honest construction, and a feel that rewards repetition.

Where an OTF knife shows off its internal track and springs, and a switchblade shows off its button, this butterfly knife shows off your hands. That’s the collector appeal—owning a piece that’s as much about your skill as the steel itself.

Easy to Add, Hard to Ignore

Because the price of entry is modest, it’s an easy add to a Texas collection that already leans heavy on automatics. But once you get used to the balance and brushed finish, you may find yourself reaching for this manual butterfly knife more often than a few of your louder show pieces. It’s the knife you idly flip while you read the mail or watch the evening settle in.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

How does a butterfly knife compare to an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

A butterfly knife is fully manual. You swing the two handles around the tang to open and close it. An automatic knife or switchblade opens when you hit a button or switch that releases a spring-loaded blade from the side. An OTF knife rides in a channel and comes straight out the front when you push a slider. This brushed stainless butterfly knife doesn’t hide anything inside—no springs, no internal tracks, just pivots and your own timing.

Is a butterfly knife like this legal to own and carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, a butterfly knife is generally treated as a knife, not as a prohibited switchblade or restricted automatic knife. For most adults, owning and carrying a butterfly knife like this is legal, subject to the same overall knife and location rules that cover other blades. Laws can change and local rules can differ, so a serious buyer should always confirm the latest Texas statutes and city ordinances, but you’re not dealing with an OTF knife or automatic switchblade classification here.

Why add this specific butterfly knife to a collection already heavy on automatics?

Because it fills a different role. Your automatic knives and OTF knives give you quick deployment. This brushed stainless butterfly knife gives you balance, repetition, and a clean, all-metal feel that’s built for practice. The simple construction, brushed finish, and predictable weight make it a dependable everyday flipper you won’t baby—exactly the kind of piece a Texas collector actually uses instead of just talking about.

In the end, this butterfly knife belongs to the Texan who knows the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a switchblade—and chooses this piece on purpose. It’s honest brushed stainless, a straightforward balisong mechanism, and a balanced feel that holds its own beside more complicated knives. Add it to your lineup, and it’ll quietly prove why a good butterfly knife still deserves a spot in a serious Texas collection.