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Redflow Precision Training Butterfly Knife - Anodized Red

Price:

8.99


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Crimson Drillflow Training Butterfly Knife - Red Anodized Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8803/image_1920?unique=cf6baef

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This training butterfly knife is built for Texas-sized practice sessions without the bloodshed. A blunt, holed trainer blade and spring-loaded latch let you lock it open or closed and focus on clean flips, not bandages. Red anodized steel handles with cutouts keep it lively in the hand and easy to track in motion. If you know the difference between an automatic, an OTF knife, and a true butterfly, this balisong trainer earns its spot as your safe everyday flipper.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

BF1042RD

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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
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

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Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 4.78
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Steel
Theme None
Latch Type Spring loaded
Is Trainer Yes

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What This Training Butterfly Knife Really Is

This is a true training butterfly knife, built for folks who want to flip hard without earning fresh scars. It’s a balisong-style folder with two red anodized steel handles that rotate around a blunt trainer blade, then lock up with a spring-loaded latch. No edge, no point, just the same weight and motion as a live butterfly knife so you can drill your openings and aerials in peace.

In Texas, plenty of buyers toss around terms like automatic knife, OTF knife, and switchblade as if they’re all the same. They’re not. This piece is none of those. It’s a manual butterfly trainer: you move the handles, gravity and wrist work do the rest, and the blade never had a sharpened edge to begin with. That accuracy matters to collectors who care what they’re actually buying.

Training Butterfly Knife Mechanics for Texas Flippers

The mechanism on this training butterfly knife is simple and honest. Two skeletonized handles pivot around the blade with pin-and-screw construction. You swing the handles open, the blunt trainer blade tracks with them, and the spring-loaded latch snaps into place to lock it either open or closed. No springs, no buttons, no hidden assist — unlike an automatic knife or switchblade, every bit of motion is yours.

Blunt Trainer Blade That Moves Like the Real Thing

The 3.875-inch steel blade is shaped like a spear point but finished as a trainer: matte silver, plain edge profile, rounded tip, and a line of circular holes to cut weight. Those holes aren't for show; they tune the balance so flips feel closer to a live butterfly knife. You get the same muscle memory you’d build with a sharp balisong, but without shredding your fingers every time you miss a catch.

Spring-Loaded Latch for Confident Lockup

At the base of the handles, a spring-loaded latch keeps this training butterfly knife either securely open for practice or closed for carry. That latch is one of the quiet workhorses on any balisong. It keeps the handles from wandering mid-trick and gives you a consistent starting and ending point. Unlike an OTF knife that rides on an internal track, this is old-school mechanical honesty: steel, pivots, and a simple latch that does its job.

How It Differs from an Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, and Switchblade

If you’re buying knives in Texas, you’ve seen the confusion. Everything with a button gets called a switchblade, and plenty of side-opening automatic knife designs get lumped in with OTF knives. This training butterfly knife lives in its own lane.

  • Versus an automatic knife or switchblade: Those are spring-driven side-openers. You hit a button or release, and the blade snaps out from a single pivot. This trainer has no spring-assist at all — the motion comes from you flipping the handles.
  • Versus an OTF knife: An OTF knife rides inside the handle and shoots straight out the front on a track. This training butterfly knife carries its blade between two handles that split apart and swing around it. Nothing exits the handle end.

For a Texas collector, that distinction isn’t trivia. It’s the difference between a novelty automatic, a pocket OTF, and a true balisong trainer built to sharpen your skills instead of your fingertips.

Texas Carry Reality for a Training Butterfly Knife

Texas law has loosened up over the years, and that’s been good news for folks who carry everything from a small automatic knife to a full-size switchblade. A training butterfly knife sits in an even calmer space: it has the form of a balisong, but with a dedicated practice blade that’s intentionally blunt.

That doesn’t mean you ignore common sense. A 9.125-inch overall length with 5.5 inches closed still reads as a real knife silhouette to anyone who sees it. In most Texas towns, it’ll ride just fine in a pocket or bag for backyard flipping, shop practice, or range downtime. It’s the kind of piece a collector can toss in a gear bag without worrying about cutting through anything — or anyone — by accident.

Where a sharp OTF knife or automatic might call for a sheath, this trainer is more forgiving. No edge to nick your hand, no point to punch through jeans. It’s a solid option for teaching a younger flipper the basics under supervision, before you trust them with a live blade.

Collector Value: Why This Training Butterfly Knife Belongs in a Texas Drawer

Every serious Texas knife collector eventually learns the same lesson: you don’t practice new tricks with your favorite live balisong. That’s where a training butterfly knife like this earns its keep. At 4.78 ounces, with red anodized steel handles and skeletonized cutouts, it has enough weight and balance to feel like a legitimate balisong, not a toy.

The skeletonization on both the blade and the handles isn’t just cosmetic. Those oval and circular cutouts help dial in rotational feel so rollovers, fans, and aerials behave predictably. You can chase the smoothness you expect from a premium butterfly knife, while keeping blood off your shop rags.

For a Texas buyer who already owns an automatic knife or keeps an OTF knife in the truck, this trainer fills a different role. It’s the safe stand-in for all the high-end pieces you don’t want to drop on concrete or chip on a bad catch. You flip this one hard, you carry the others sharp.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Training Butterfly Knives

Is a training butterfly knife the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. A training butterfly knife is a manual balisong-style knife with a blunt practice blade. You move the handles yourself to open and close it. An automatic knife or switchblade uses internal springs to snap a sharp blade out from the side. An OTF knife drives a sharp blade straight out the front on a track. This piece just mimics the motion and balance of a butterfly knife so you can learn tricks without an edge.

Are training butterfly knives legal to own and practice with in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can generally own and carry a wide range of knives, including automatics, OTF knives, and butterfly knives, with some location-based restrictions. A training butterfly knife with a blunt blade typically falls on the more permissive side of that landscape, since it’s built for practice rather than cutting. That said, you should still respect posted restrictions and local rules, and remember this is not legal advice — check the latest Texas statutes and your local ordinances before you carry.

Why should a Texas collector bother with a trainer instead of another live blade?

Because torn-up knuckles and chipped blades get old fast. A training butterfly knife lets you push new tricks, faster flips, and riskier catches without wrecking a prized balisong or your hands. It also gives you a safe way to introduce friends or younger family members to butterfly knife handling. For a Texas collector who already owns an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a sharp switchblade or two, a solid trainer is the quiet workhorse that keeps the rest of the collection in better shape.

In the end, this training butterfly knife is for the Texan who knows exactly what they’re buying: not an automatic, not an OTF, not a switchblade, but a purpose-built balisong trainer. Red anodized steel, spring-loaded latch, blunt holed blade — it’s a tool for skill, not show. If your drawer already holds the sharp stuff, this is the piece you reach for when it’s time to practice like you mean it and come away without a single bandage.