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Desert Operator Push-Button Automatic Knife - Coyote G10

Price:

75.99


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Desert Intention Push-Button Automatic Knife - Coyote G10

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This push-button automatic knife rides that fine Texas line between hard-use tool and everyday carry comfort. One press fires the dark stonewashed D2 blade into place; a slide safety and ribbed thumb rest keep it honest in your pocket and in your hand. The coyote G10 handle locks into your grip when you’re working fence, running errands, or backing up your ranch bag. It’s the kind of side-opening automatic a Texas buyer reaches for because they know exactly what it is—and what it isn’t.

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Desert Intention: A True Push-Button Automatic Knife for Texas Carry

The Desert Intention Push-Button Automatic Knife - Coyote G10 is a side-opening automatic knife built for people who actually use their blades. One press on the button and the dark stonewashed D2 blade snaps out clean and locks up solid. This isn’t an OTF knife that shoots straight out the front, and it’s not a spring-assisted folder that just helps you finish the open. It’s a true automatic knife, the kind many folks casually call a switchblade, but with the control and safety a Texas carrier expects.

From the coyote G10 handle to the slide safety lock, this automatic knife is meant to disappear in your pocket until you need it, then show up with authority.

How This Automatic Knife Works (And How It Differs From OTF and Switchblade Talk)

Mechanically, this Desert Intention is a side-opening automatic knife: the blade pivots out from the side like a regular folder, but a coil spring and push button do the work. You press the button, the spring drives the blade open, and the lock engages. Simple, decisive, and fast.

Side-Opening Automatic vs. OTF Knife

Plenty of sites toss around “switchblade” and “OTF knife” like they’re the same thing. They’re not. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. This Boker does not. It’s a folding automatic knife, with a traditional pivot and a side swing. Same instant deployment, different mechanics entirely.

Collectors will appreciate that distinction: this is built on a proven side-opening automatic platform, not the more complex internals you see in most double-action OTF knives.

Automatic Knife vs. Assisted Opener

Assisted openers need you to start the blade with a thumb stud or flipper; the spring just finishes the travel. This knife doesn’t wait on you. The push-button does it all. That’s the honest line between an automatic knife and an assisted knife, and this one stays firmly on the automatic side.

Blade and Build: Dark Stonewashed D2 That Can Take Texas Work

The blade on this automatic knife is D2 tool steel with a dark stonewashed finish. D2 brings high wear resistance and edge retention, making it a strong match for ranch chores, fence cutting, or daily utility. That stonewash hides scratches and reflects less light, which suits the tactical, desert-operator look.

Ergonomics With a Purpose

The handle wears coyote G10 scales with diagonal grip grooves, finger recesses, and a solid index guard. Add the ribbed thumb rest and jimping at the butt, and you get an automatic knife that settles into your hand instead of squirming out when you bear down. It’s the kind of grip that feels right whether you’re breaking down boxes in Houston or trimming rope at a Hill Country lease.

Safety Lock and Pocket Reality

The black slide safety with a red dot indicator gives you pocket confidence. Slide it on, and the automatic knife stays quiet, even bouncing around in a truck console. Slide it off, and the push button is ready to go. That balance of speed and security is what separates a good automatic from a drawer queen.

Texas Carry, Texas Law: Where This Automatic Knife Fits

Texas has taken a clear, knife-friendly turn with state law. Under current Texas statutes, an automatic knife like this side-opening Boker—what many would call a switchblade—is legal to own and carry for adults in most everyday situations. The big legal dividing line now is blade length and location, not whether it’s an OTF knife, a switchblade, or an assisted opener.

This Desert Intention is sized for practical EDC. It’s compact enough to ride in a jeans pocket, ride in a ranch truck, or clip in a work bag without drawing attention. As always, Texas buyers should remember that some restricted locations (like certain schools, government buildings, and posted venues) may have tighter rules regardless of mechanism, so it’s worth knowing the local signs even when state law has your back.

Collector Value: Why This Automatic Knife Earns a Slot in a Texas Drawer

For a Texas collector who already owns a few OTF knives and maybe a traditional switchblade pattern, this Desert Intention fills a different gap. It’s a modern, side-opening automatic knife built for the field first and the display case second.

  • Mechanism clarity: A clean, push-button automatic that shows exactly how a side-opener should behave.
  • Work-ready steel: D2 tool steel with a dark stonewash that looks better the more you use it.
  • Purposeful colorway: Coyote G10 and dark hardware fit right in with modern Texas tactical and ranch gear.
  • Confidence in hand: Ergonomic grooves, thumb rest, and slide lock make it a tool you can trust, not baby.

In a collection that might already include flashy OTF knives and classic Italian-style switchblades, this automatic knife stands out as the quiet workhorse—the one that actually sees daylight.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

This is a side-opening automatic knife. You press the button, a spring drives the blade out from the side, and it locks. It is not an OTF knife—the blade does not travel straight out the front on a rail. Many folks use “switchblade” as a catch-all term for automatics, and by that loose language this fits, but technically it’s a push-button, side-opening automatic folder.

Is this automatic knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including side-opening automatics and OTF knives—are generally legal for adults to own and carry, with the key limitations tied to blade length and specific restricted locations, not the mechanism itself. This automatic knife is built as an everyday carry piece for Texas buyers who understand those lines. Laws can change, and local rules can vary, so a quick check of up-to-date Texas statutes before you clip it in your pocket is always smart.

Why choose this over an OTF knife or assisted opener?

If you want instant deployment with fewer moving parts than most OTF knives, a side-opening automatic like this Boker makes sense. It gives you true automatic action, a strong lock, and familiar folding-knife ergonomics. Compared to an assisted opener, you get full push-button deployment instead of having to nudge the blade yourself. For a Texas collector or working carrier, it’s the middle ground between the mechanical showpiece OTF and the more modest assisted folder.

Closing the Loop: A Texas Automatic for People Who Know Their Knives

The Desert Intention Push-Button Automatic Knife - Coyote G10 doesn’t try to be everything at once. It’s not pretending to be an OTF knife, and it doesn’t blur the line with assisted openers. It’s a straightforward automatic knife with solid steel, honest ergonomics, and a finish that looks at home on a West Texas lease or an Austin job site.

For the Texas buyer who cares how a knife works as much as how it looks, this piece hits that sweet spot: you know what’s in your pocket, you know what to call it, and you know it’ll do what you ask without a lot of talk.