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Divided Banner Patriot OTF Knife - Flag Aluminum

Price:

36.99


California Ready Compact OTF Knife - Olive Green
California Ready Compact OTF Knife - Olive Green
20.99 20.99
Divided Banner Double-Action OTF Knife - CSA/USA Flag Aluminum
Divided Banner Double-Action OTF Knife - CSA/USA Flag Aluminum
36.99 36.99

Divided Heritage Double-Action OTF Knife - CSA USA Flag

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/9227/image_1920?unique=a69b101

11 sold in last 24 hours

This full-size OTF knife is a double‑action automatic built for Texans who know exactly what that means. A spine-mounted thumb slide sends the black tanto blade snapping out the front, then draws it back in just as quick. The aluminum handle wears a bold CSA/USA flag graphic, with a pocket clip, glass breaker, and nylon sheath rounding out the carry. It’s a hard-hitting out‑the‑front automatic for collectors who care how a knife opens, not just how it looks.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB112LDSFTP

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.375
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 9.16
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme USA Flag
Double/Single Action Double action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath

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What This OTF Knife Actually Is

This is a full-size, double-action out-the-front automatic knife with a tanto blade and a CSA/USA flag wrap on the handle. In plain terms: you run the thumb slide on the spine, and the blade rockets straight out the front of the handle, then retracts the same way. That makes it an OTF knife first and foremost. It’s automatic, yes, but it is not a side-opening switchblade. The mechanism is linear, not folding.

Texas buyers who care about the difference between an OTF knife, a generic automatic knife, and a switchblade will feel right at home here. This design wears its story on the outside and shows its mechanism the second you touch that thumb slide.

OTF Knife Mechanism: Double-Action, No Guesswork

The heart of this piece is the double-action out-the-front mechanism. On a single-action automatic knife, you usually fire the blade automatically but reset it by hand. On this double-action OTF knife, the same thumb slide controls both deployment and retraction. Forward for out, back for in—no separate release, no two-step routine.

How This OTF Differs from a Switchblade

A true switchblade is a side-opener: the blade pivots out from a hinge like a regular folding knife, just powered by a spring and a button. This knife doesn’t pivot at all. The blade rides on rails inside the handle and travels in a straight line out the front. That makes it a dedicated out-the-front automatic knife, not just another switchblade with fancy art.

Control, Tanto Geometry, and Real Use

The American tanto blade brings a strong piercing tip and a defined secondary point, making it better suited for tough, straight-line cuts and punch-style tasks than a simple drop point. Paired with the matte black finish and the weight of a full-size OTF, this knife wants to work from the front pocket of a pair of jeans, a truck console, or a ranch bag when you need fast, one-handed action.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade: Where This One Stands

Collectors in Texas know the language gets sloppy online. Everything with a spring gets called a switchblade or an automatic knife, and the OTF knife gets lumped in like a cousin at a family reunion. This piece cuts through that.

Mechanically, all OTF knives are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTF, and not every automatic is what people mean when they say switchblade. This knife:

  • Is an out-the-front automatic knife with a thumb-slide actuator
  • Is not a side-opening switchblade with a pivot and a button
  • Is built for fast, straight-line deployment, not just show-and-tell

If you’re building a collection that actually tracks mechanism—OTF, side-opening automatic, assisted opener, and so on—this one fills the dedicated OTF slot with a very specific visual statement.

Texas Law, Texas Carry, and This OTF Knife

Texas has come a long way on knife law. As of current statutes, adults in Texas can legally own and carry automatic knives and switchblades, including out-the-front knives, with length and location restrictions largely relaxed. That means this full-size OTF automatic knife is generally legal to own and carry for most Texans, with the usual common-sense caveats about prohibited places and local rules.

In real Texas carry terms, this knife lives well in the front pocket, clipped inside the waistband, or riding in its nylon sheath. The glass-breaker pommel makes sense for truck and ranch carry—tucked into a door pocket or console where the double-action OTF deployment can be reached quickly. It’s not a gentleman’s folder; it’s a work-size automatic built for folks who aren’t afraid of a little weight in the hand.

Why Size Matters to Texas Buyers

With a 3.75-inch blade and a 9.375-inch overall length, this is a full-size OTF knife, not a novelty. At 9.16 ounces, you’ll feel it. That weight gives the double-action automatic mechanism a confident snap, and it plants the handle solidly in your palm when the tanto tip is doing what it was made to do.

Build Details for the Collector’s Eye

The handle is aluminum, finished matte, and wrapped with overlapping CSA and USA flag imagery. That divided heritage design is what separates this knife visually from the wall of anonymous black OTF knives out there. Torx fasteners line the handle, a deep-carry style pocket clip rides the reverse side, and the glass-breaker tip completes the silhouette.

Mechanism and Hardware, Up Close

The thumb slide is spine-mounted and sized for a sure stroke with or without gloves. The blade runs on internal tracks, and the double-action automatic system is tuned for positive in-and-out travel. The American tanto edge is plain, not serrated, with venting cutouts along the blade that add character and shave a little weight without turning it into a toy.

To a Texas knife collector, this is not just another automatic knife. It’s a large, tactically styled OTF knife with a clear personality, sitting beside your side-opening switchblades and assisted openers as the out-the-front representative in the lineup.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

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

Mechanically, it’s an out-the-front automatic knife. The blade travels straight out the front of the handle, powered by an internal spring and controlled by the thumb slide. That makes it an OTF knife and an automatic knife at the same time. When most people say switchblade, they’re thinking about a side-opening automatic with a pivot and a button. This is a different breed—same family, different build.

Is this OTF knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades, including OTF knives, are generally legal for adults to own and carry, with restrictions mostly tied to specific locations (schools, certain government buildings, and so on). Blade length rules have been loosened significantly. That said, any Texas buyer should double-check the most recent state statutes and local ordinances before treating this OTF knife as an everyday carry. Laws can and do change, and a serious collector keeps up.

Where does this knife fit in a serious collection?

This piece earns its place in a Texas collection as the full-size, double-action OTF slot with a strong visual statement. You’ve got your classic side-opening switchblade, maybe a few assisted openers, maybe a push dagger or two. This knife fills the modern tactical OTF role with enough weight, blade length, and mechanism presence to stand on its own. The CSA/USA flag art makes it a conversation starter, but the real value is that when someone asks, you can say exactly what it is: a large, double-action OTF automatic knife with a tanto blade and a divided-heritage Texas-friendly attitude.

Texas Collector Identity and the Divided Heritage OTF

Owning this knife says you’re not just buying whatever the internet calls a switchblade this week. You picked a true OTF knife because you know how it moves, not just how it looks. You understand the difference between an out-the-front automatic knife, a side-opening switchblade, and an assisted opener—and you care enough to keep them straight.

In Texas, that matters. We carry knives we can explain. This divided-heritage, flag-wrapped OTF knife isn’t shy about what it is or where it belongs: in the pocket, the truck, or the case of someone who knows their mechanisms, knows their laws, and doesn’t need three paragraphs to say why they chose an OTF over anything else.