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Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber

Price:

62.99


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Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Dagger Knife - Black Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5335/image_1920?unique=8e73686

15 sold in last 24 hours

This out-the-front knife is built for presence, not pretense. The Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Dagger Knife pairs a double-edged centerline blade with a full four-finger knuckle brace and carbon fiber inlays that lock your grip in place. A side thumb slide drives the automatic OTF action—clean, repeatable, and unmistakable. In Texas, it moves from display case to go-bag without changing its character, the kind of OTF knife a collector carries when they actually mean it.

62.99 62.99 USD 62.99

SB253BK

Not Available For Sale

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  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

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Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Zinc Alloy
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip No
Sheath/Holster Nylon Case

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Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Dagger Knife for Texas Collectors

The Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Dagger Knife is exactly what it looks like: a purpose-built out-the-front knife with a centerline dagger blade and a full knuckle-guard frame. It’s not a side-opening automatic, it’s not a generic switchblade catch-all—it’s a true OTF knife built around control, presence, and a locked-in grip.

Texas buyers who know their steel will see the story right away. The blade runs straight out the nose of the handle on a push-slide, the four-finger guard adds impact and retention, and the carbon fiber inlay keeps it from feeling like a cheap novelty. This is the kind of OTF knife that earns space next to your other automatics and the classic switchblades in the same drawer.

What Makes This an OTF Knife, Not Just a Switchblade

Mechanically, this is a classic out-the-front automatic knife. The blade travels straight forward out of the top of the handle, instead of swinging out from the side on a pivot. A side-mounted thumb slide controls a spring-driven internal carriage that shoots the blade into position and retracts it when you’re done.

That’s the heart of the distinction. All OTF knives are automatic knives, and in everyday Texas talk many folks lump them in with switchblades. But collectors know the difference. A traditional switchblade or side-opening automatic flips sideways like a folder with a spring assist. An OTF knife like this one runs on rails down the centerline. When you want a blade that presents straight ahead of your knuckles, OTF is the mechanism you reach for.

Double-Edged Dagger Profile for Direct Work

The blade is a double-edged dagger with a central groove and weight-reducing holes near the spine. Both edges are sharpened for true thrusting geometry, giving you symmetrical penetration and clean withdrawal. For a Texas buyer building out a defensive or tactical row in the collection, that symmetry is the point: this is not a box cutter that happens to be automatic, it’s a fighting-style OTF knife by design.

Side Slide Actuator You Can Run Under Stress

The side slide actuator sits where your thumb naturally falls along the spine-side of the handle. It’s ridged for traction, and the throw is positive without being stiff. That’s what you want from a serious automatic OTF knife: enough resistance to stay put in a pocket or case, light enough that deployment doesn’t become a wrestling match. Press forward, blade snaps to full lock. Pull back, blade disappears into the handle, ready for the next time.

Knuckle-Guard Frame, Carbon Fiber Inlay, and Texas Use

The frame is a four-finger knuckle-guard design in matte black zinc alloy, with integrated spikes under each finger ring. That’s not just for looks. It gives you impact options when the blade is closed and retention when the blade is out. In a defensive grip, your hand is locked in; the knife stays oriented even if things get rough.

Carbon fiber patterned inlays break up the black and add both texture and visual value. For a Texas collector, those panels are where this piece steps up from a simple knuckle OTF novelty into something you actually set on a display shelf. Under the lights, the carbon weave catches just enough to draw the eye to the handle before the blade steals the show.

No Pocket Clip, Built for Case, Bag, or Truck Console

There’s no pocket clip here. That’s a deliberate choice. A knuckle-guard OTF knife like this isn’t meant to disappear in slacks; it lives in a nylon case, a go-bag, or the center console of a Texas truck. You get a full-zip nylon case that protects the finish and keeps it from rattling around with other gear. When you need it, you unzip, thumb the slide, and the dagger blade is exactly where you expect it to be.

Steel and Construction Worth a Spot in the Drawer

The dagger blade is stainless steel with a matte silver finish, set off against the black handle. Torx hardware along the frame keeps the internals secure, and the zinc alloy body gives you the weight and solidity a knuckle-guard design demands. This isn’t a featherweight EDC; it’s a deliberate, presence-forward automatic OTF built to feel substantial in the hand.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade in Plain Texas Terms

If you’re buying in Texas, you’ve seen every term—automatic knife, OTF knife, switchblade—thrown around like they mean the same thing. They’re related, but they’re not identical.

  • Automatic knife: Any knife that opens its blade fully with a spring when you hit a button, lever, or slide. That includes side-opening switchblades and OTF knives.
  • Switchblade: In common speech, this usually means a side-opening automatic that swings open from a folded position. Think classic Italian stilettos and American button-lock autos.
  • OTF knife: A specific type of automatic where the blade runs straight out the front of the handle along its centerline, like this Carbon Veil knuckle-guard OTF.

This piece is all three by broader definition—automatic, sometimes called a switchblade, and clearly an OTF knife—but its true identity is that out-the-front dagger with integrated knuckles. That’s how a serious Texas collector will list it.

Texas Law, OTF Knives, and Real-World Carry Context

Texas has moved toward knife freedom in recent years, and that matters if you’re eyeing an automatic OTF knife with a knuckle-guard frame. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and what folks call switchblades are broadly legal to own and carry for adults, but brass knuckles and knuckle-style weapons were historically restricted. Laws have changed over time, and local rules or specific contexts can still matter.

This Carbon Veil knuckle-guard OTF knife straddles that line: it’s both an OTF automatic knife and a knuckle-guard impact tool. That makes it perfect for home display, range bags, private ranch carry, and collection use, but it also means a responsible Texas buyer double-checks current statutes and local regulations before dropping it into a daily pocket or walking into certain venues. When the law treats something like a weapon enhancement, not just a blade, it’s worth knowing where you stand.

Nothing here is legal advice. Texas buyers should confirm the latest knife and knuckle laws, especially if they plan to carry this OTF knife outside the house or off the property.

What Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knives Like This

How is this OTF different from my other automatic or switchblade knives?

Your side-opening automatic swings the blade out from a folded position along a pivot. A traditional switchblade does the same, just with a button or leaf spring setup. This Carbon Veil is an OTF knife, so the blade is housed inline with the handle and shoots straight out the front on internal rails. Add the knuckle-guard handle and strike spikes, and you’ve got a very different tool: more forward-focused, more control in a punch grip, and more purpose-built as a defensive or tactical piece than a simple pocket auto.

Are OTF knives and knuckle-guard knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas has largely lifted older bans on automatic knives and what were once regulated as switchblades, so OTF knives themselves are broadly legal to own and carry for adults. The wrinkle is the knuckle-guard frame. Texas historically treated knuckles as a separate weapon category, and while laws have loosened over time, you still need to pay attention to current statutes, local rules, and specific environments like schools, courthouses, and certain workplaces. Most Texas collectors treat a knuckle OTF like this as a home, ranch, or range piece first, and a public carry item only after confirming the law applies in their favor.

Where does this fit in a serious Texas collection?

Think of this Carbon Veil as your bridge piece between traditional switchblades and modern tactical automatics. It’s an OTF knife with a true dagger blade, plus a knuckle-guard frame and carbon fiber inlays that display well. It won’t replace your slim EDC autos, and it’s not trying to. It gives your collection that one overtly defensive, presence-heavy automatic that visitors notice first in the case, and that you drop into a go-bag when you want something with both bite and backbone.

Built for the Texas Buyer Who Knows Their Knives

The Carbon Veil Knuckle-Guard OTF Dagger Knife isn’t a starter piece. It’s for the Texas buyer who already owns a few side-opening automatics, maybe a classic switchblade or two, and wants a true out-the-front knife with a more aggressive frame. The knuckle-guard handle, the dagger blade, the carbon fiber inlay—all of it says this belongs to someone who understands the difference between an OTF knife, an automatic knife, and a switchblade, and chooses accordingly.

If that sounds like you, this isn’t just another black tactical blade. It’s the one OTF you keep loaded in the case, sitting between the pretty Italians and the work-worn autos, reminding you that in Texas, knowing exactly what you’re carrying matters just as much as carrying it.