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Civic Snap Retail-Ready Automatic Knife Set - Black Blade

Price:

62.99


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Civic Snap Counter-Ready Automatic Knife - Black Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7071/image_1920?unique=32298e7

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This automatic knife was built for the countertop and the pocket. The Civic Snap Counter-Ready Automatic Knife - Black Blade is a side-opening automatic knife with a push-button deployment, black-coated drop point blade, and bright aluminum handles in assorted colors. It rides deep on a pocket clip, carries light, and brings glass-breaker utility without looking tactical-overdone. For Texas buyers who know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, this set hits the sweet spot between practical EDC and retail-ready appeal.

62.99 62.99 USD 62.99

SB978X12

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Push button
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes

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What the Civic Snap Automatic Knife Really Is

The Civic Snap Counter-Ready Automatic Knife - Black Blade is exactly what it looks like: a side-opening automatic knife built for everyday carry and smart retail display. Push-button deployment, folding design, black-coated drop point blade, and bright aluminum handles. No mystery, no confusion with an OTF knife, and no loose talk calling everything a switchblade.

This is an automatic knife in the classic sense: the blade is folded into the handle, held closed by spring tension, and released by a button on the side. It opens fast, locks up solid, and rides on a pocket clip. The retail-ready 12-piece display turns that mechanism story into something a Texas shop can put right on the counter and watch walk out the door.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Side-Opening, Not OTF

Mechanically, this Civic Snap is a traditional side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF knife. When you hit the push button, the blade swings out from the side on a pivot, like a regular folding knife with a spring behind it. That makes it different from an OTF knife, where the blade shoots straight out the front of the handle. Both are automatic knives, but they are not the same animal, and a Texas collector cares about that distinction.

Push-Button Deployment You Can Feel

The button sits right where your thumb expects it. A firm press sends the black-coated drop point blade snapping into place with a predictable, repeatable action. It is not a flipper, not an assisted opener, and not a manual folder dressed up with marketing language. This is a true automatic knife with an honest spring-driven snap.

Everyday Blade Geometry, Tactical Finish

The drop point profile gives you control at the tip and belly for real cutting tasks—opening boxes, cutting cord, quick utility work. The black-coated blade keeps reflections down and pairs cleanly with the bright handles. It looks tactical enough to catch the eye, but the plain edge keeps it firmly in the everyday carry lane.

Texas Carry Reality for an Automatic Knife

In Texas, the law finally caught up with the way folks actually carry knives. Automatic knives and even what most people call switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you stay inside the general prohibited locations and common-sense limits. That means a side-opening automatic knife like this Civic Snap can live in your pocket, ride on your belt, or sit in your truck without drama for most everyday situations.

This is not a giant fighting knife or some oversized novelty. It is a pocketable automatic knife with a clip, making it at home in jeans, ranch work pants, or a shop apron. For Texas retailers, that makes this 12-piece set an easy upsell near the register: legal for most customers, useful for almost all of them.

OTF Knife vs. Automatic Knife vs. Switchblade in Texas Terms

Here is where a Texas buyer perks up: words matter. An automatic knife is any knife where the blade opens by a button, spring, or other mechanical assist. A switchblade is the classic slang term most folks use for an automatic knife, but collectors tend to reserve it for that iconic push-button, side-opening style. An OTF knife is a different breed—still an automatic knife, but the blade runs on rails straight out the front.

The Civic Snap sits squarely in the side-opening automatic knife camp. It is what most Texans would have once called a switchblade, but it does not pretend to be an OTF knife. That honesty in mechanism is part of what makes it a clean buy for both collectors and first-time automatic knife owners.

Why That Distinction Matters on the Counter

When a customer asks for a switchblade, they might mean any automatic knife. When a collector asks, they want to know if it is an OTF knife, a side-opener, or just an assisted opener. With the Civic Snap, you can answer straight: this is a side-opening automatic knife with a push button, not an OTF and not a spring-assisted folder. That clarity closes sales and builds trust.

Retail-Ready Automatic Knife Set for Texas Shops

The Civic Snap assortment is designed for the Texas retailer who wants automatic knives that move. Twelve pieces in a compact cardboard counter display, each with a black-coated blade and an aluminum handle in bright colors—red, green, blue, orange, and black. The card calls them folding knives, but the push-button deployment and spring action tell the real story: automatic knives ready for your counter.

Color That Sells, Hardware That Works

The bright handles draw the eye; the hardware closes the deal. Each knife carries a pocket clip, a glass-breaker or impact pommel, and a lanyard hole. That makes them easy to clip in a pocket, stash on gear, or tie off in a truck. Customers get to pick their color while still walking away with a serious, usable automatic knife.

Small Footprint, Big Margin

On a Texas counter crowded with lighters, keychains, and impulse gadgets, a clean 12-piece automatic knife display stands out. The Civic Snap set turns a little square of space into a recurring revenue stream. These are the knives folks grab while they are paying for ammo, feed, or a six-pack—legal, useful, and distinct from more complex OTF knife offerings behind the counter.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

This Civic Snap is a side-opening automatic knife. You press the button on the handle and the blade swings out from the side on a pivot. That makes it a true automatic knife, and what many people would casually call a switchblade. It is not an OTF knife; the blade does not shoot straight out the front. If you are collecting mechanisms, this one belongs in the side-opening automatic category.

Is this automatic knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and what folks used to call switchblades are generally legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you avoid certain locations and situations spelled out in the statutes. This Civic Snap automatic knife falls into that legal automatic knife category. For specific questions or edge cases, a Texas buyer should always check the latest state law and any local restrictions, but for everyday Texans, this is a carryable pocket automatic.

Why would a Texas collector add this to the rotation?

Because it checks three boxes at once: it is a clean side-opening automatic knife with straightforward mechanics, it comes in a color spread that makes for a satisfying set, and it is built to be used, not babied. A collector can snag the full range from the retail-ready box, keep a couple for carry, and still have variations to trade or gift. It will not replace a high-end OTF knife or a historic switchblade, but it earns its keep as a working Texas automatic.

Texas Collector Value in a Colorful Automatic Knife

For the serious Texas knife buyer, the Civic Snap Counter-Ready Automatic Knife - Black Blade is not about flash; it is about having an honest, well-built automatic knife that knows what it is. Side-opening mechanism, black-coated drop point, aluminum handle, pocket clip, glass-breaker pommel—each detail has a job. The fact that it comes in a compact 12-piece display just makes it easier to pick your color and your purpose.

If you are the kind of Texan who can explain the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade without reaching for your phone, this set fits your world. It is a working man’s automatic that happens to sell well, carry easy, and snap open with that unmistakable sound collectors never quite get tired of hearing.