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City Snap Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Blue Blade

Price:

11.99


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Citylight Opener Spring-Assisted EDC Knife - Blue Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2477/image_1920?unique=ca44149

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This spring assisted knife was built for city pockets and Texas days. A quick-deploy flipper snaps the blue drop point blade into place, secured by a liner lock and backed by a grippy nylon fiber handle. At just 3 inches closed, it disappears until you need to cut, pry, or pop a bottle. Legal as a spring-assisted folder in Texas, it rides light with a pocket clip and lanyard slot. It’s the urban EDC for folks who know the difference between assisted and automatic.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

MTA882BL

Not Available For Sale

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 2.75
Overall Length (inches) 5.75
Closed Length (inches) 3
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Nylon Fiber
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Spring Assisted Knife Really Is

This is a true spring assisted knife, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife trying to pass as something it’s not. The blade stays closed until you nudge the flipper tab, then the internal spring takes over and snaps that blue drop point into place. You’re still starting the motion by hand, which keeps it squarely in that assisted opening category Texas buyers know and trust.

Closed, this spring assisted folder is just 3 inches long. Open, you get a 2.75-inch stainless steel drop point blade with a matte blue finish and a simple liner lock. It rides in a black nylon fiber handle with chevron texture, a pocket clip, and a bottle opener cut into the tail. Everything about it says compact EDC, not flashy switchblade or oversized tactical.

Spring Assisted Knife Mechanism vs Automatic and OTF

If you collect knives in Texas, you already know there’s daylight between a spring assisted knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife. This one is firmly in the first camp. A spring assisted knife needs you to start the blade moving with a flipper or thumb stud. Once you break that detent, the spring finishes the job and delivers a fast, positive open.

An automatic knife, by contrast, launches the blade from a fully at-rest position with a button or switch. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, riding on internal tracks. This piece doesn’t do either of those things. It’s a side-opening folder, spring assisted, with a visible pivot and a standard liner lock. That’s the honest mechanism story, and it matters when you’re buying for both collection and Texas carry.

How the Assisted Mechanism Works

The flipper tab on this knife is your starting point. A little pressure from your index finger breaks the detent, and a torsion spring inside the pivot rotates the blue blade the rest of the way. The snap is confident but controlled. There’s no button, no hidden release, and no front-firing system like you’d see on a true OTF knife. The liner lock engages the tang and holds it there until you push it aside to close.

EDC Form Factor and Carry Reality

At 5.75 inches overall, this spring assisted knife sits in that sweet spot where it’s big enough to work but small enough to disappear. The nylon fiber handle keeps the weight down, and the pocket clip anchors it in a jeans pocket without advertising itself. The lanyard slot at the tail gives you options for retention if you like a fob or just want faster indexing in a work bag.

Spring Assisted Knife for Texas Everyday Carry

Texas buyers don’t just care about how a knife opens; they care how it carries on a long day in real heat. This spring assisted knife was built for those pockets. The textured black handle gives you grip even when your hands are slick. The matte blue blade provides visibility when you’re cutting in low light around a ranch, shop, or jobsite parking lot.

Because it’s a spring assisted folder and not an automatic switchblade or OTF knife, it stays in a familiar comfort zone for most Texas carriers. You get quick deployment without the full-on automatic knife profile. That’s useful if you’re moving between the truck, the warehouse, and the office and want a knife that looks like a tool, not a conversation piece.

Texas Uses: From Jobsite to Tailgate

The integrated bottle opener in the handle tail tells you exactly where this knife lives: at the overlap of work and downtime. Cut strapping, open boxes, trim line, then crack a cold drink at the tailgate. It’s not a fighting knife or a hunting fixed blade. It’s an urban and suburban Texas EDC that does a little of everything without drama.

Texas Knife Law Context for Spring Assisted Knives

Texas knife law today focuses more on blade length and location than on the fine distinction between a spring assisted knife, an automatic knife, or a switchblade. Under current Texas law, most knives – including assisted opening knives and automatic knives – are broadly legal to own and carry, with extra rules for certain places and for what the law calls “location-restricted knives.” Always check the latest statute before you clip anything into your pocket.

This particular spring assisted knife keeps the blade under 3 inches. That shorter blade length tends to sit more comfortably with property policies, workplaces, and venues that get nervous around larger tactical folders, automatic knives, or aggressive-looking OTF knives. It looks like a work tool because that’s what it is.

Collector Value: Why This Spring Assisted Knife Earns a Slot

A Texas knife drawer full of nothing but big switchblades and OTF knives misses a lot of real-world carry. Serious collectors know you also need honest, affordable spring assisted knives that prove you understand the full spectrum of mechanisms. This piece brings a few things to the table that justify its space.

First is the color story. The high-visibility blue blade isn’t just for looks. In a glove box, tackle bag, or tool bucket, that blue steel jumps out where a stonewashed or black blade might disappear. Second is the integrated bottle opener and lanyard slot, which push it from simple assisted opener into multi-use pocket tool territory. Third is the compact, 3-inch closed profile. It’s the kind of spring assisted knife you actually carry, not just show.

Side by side with an automatic knife and an OTF knife in your collection, this one helps tell the complete mechanism story: button-fired autos, front-firing OTFs, and flipper-driven spring assisted folders. Any Texas collector who cares about the details will notice you’ve covered all three correctly.

Materials and Build Story

The stainless steel blade gives you straightforward corrosion resistance – important in Texas humidity, coastal air, and long truck-bed summers. The nylon fiber handle keeps weight and cost down while still giving you that chevron-textured grip. Hardware is simple and serviceable. This isn’t a museum piece; it’s the kind you won’t baby, which is exactly why many collectors like to have a few in rotation.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Knives

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

Mechanically, this is a spring assisted knife. You start the blade moving with the flipper, and the spring finishes the open. That’s different from a true automatic knife or switchblade, where a button or switch launches the blade from rest, and very different from an OTF knife, where the blade tracks straight out the front. Think of this as an in-between: faster than a manual folder, but still plainly a side-opening assisted design.

Is carrying this spring assisted knife legal in Texas?

As of the most recent Texas laws, owning and carrying a spring assisted knife like this is broadly legal for adults, and the under-3-inch blade length keeps it in a conservative, EDC-friendly range. The law mostly cares about where you carry and whether the blade falls into a “location-restricted knife” definition based on length. This piece stays well under typical thresholds. Still, Texas law can change, and local rules and private property policies vary, so every buyer should verify current statutes before relying on any knife for daily carry.

Why would a collector choose this over another similar folder?

A collector who already has automatic knives and OTF knives will reach for this spring assisted knife when they want something fast but low-profile. The blue blade gives it display value, the bottle opener and compact size give it real pocket time, and the honest assisted mechanism rounds out a mechanism-focused collection. It’s an easy way to show you understand the difference between assisted, automatic, and OTF without spending custom money.

Texas Identity, Pocket Reality

In Texas, a knife doesn’t earn respect just because it looks mean. It earns it by riding in the pocket, doing the job, and not pretending to be something it isn’t. This spring assisted knife does exactly that. It opens fast without claiming to be an automatic knife, carries small without OTF bulk, and works all day without drama. For the Texas buyer who knows the difference between an assisted opener, a switchblade, and an OTF, this is the kind of blue-bladed EDC that quietly proves you’ve done your homework.