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Dragon Pulse Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Black

Price:

8.99


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Dragon Pulse Rescue-Ready Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2324/image_1920?unique=072c447

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This assisted opening knife is built for Texans who like a little dragon fire in their pocket but still care how a mechanism runs. Spring-assisted deployment snaps the matte black drop point into play with a thumb stud and liner lock you can trust. The purple-black dragon handle, deep-carry clip, glass breaker, and cord cutter make it a natural EDC around Texas job sites and backroads. It’s not an automatic, not an OTF—just a fast, honest assisted opener that earns space in a real collection.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

A967DPE

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Dragon Pulse Assisted Opening Knife Built for Texas Hands

The Dragon Pulse Rescue-Ready Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Black is a true assisted opener, not an automatic knife and not an OTF switchblade dressed up with fantasy art. Spring tension does the work once you nudge the thumb stud, the liner lock holds it solid, and that matte black drop point blade gets the everyday cutting done without drama. The dragon theme on the handle might catch your eye first, but the mechanism is what keeps it in your pocket.

What Makes This Assisted Opening Knife Different

This knife runs on a spring-assisted opening system. That means you start the blade with the thumb stud, and an internal spring takes it the rest of the way. It’s still a folding knife you control, not a push-button automatic knife and not an OTF knife that rides on rails inside the handle. For Texas collectors who care about the mechanics, this is a clean assisted design with a familiar liner lock, spine jimping for thumb purchase, and a deep-carry pocket clip that tucks the dragon artwork out of sight until you need it.

The drop point blade, matte black finish, and plain edge keep it firmly in the working EDC camp. No gimmicks in the grind, just a practical profile that sharpens easily and slices clean. Where some folks throw around the word switchblade for anything that opens fast, this one stays honest: it’s an assisted opening knife with purposeful rescue features and a fantasy handle that doesn’t get in the way of real use.

Dragon Art Meets Real EDC and Rescue Utility

The purple and black dragon handle is the story customers remember, but the hardware is where Texas buyers earn their confidence. Finger grooves and texturing lock the grip into your hand, even when sweat, dust, or oil enter the picture. On the tail end, you’ve got a glass breaker and an integrated cutter ready for seatbelts, cord, or webbing. That combination makes it more than just a conversation piece—it’s a glovebox or work-truck companion that still pulls its weight in a toolbox or on a job site.

Collectors who already have a drawer full of automatic knives, OTF knives, and side-opening switchblades will recognize the value here: a budget-friendly assisted opening knife with a standout dragon theme that still checks the boxes on function. It opens quickly, locks reliably, and clips deep. It looks wild on the handle side and all business on the blade side.

Mechanism Details for the Collector

The deployment is thumb-stud plus spring assist. You break the detent, the spring carries the blade to full lockup, and the liner lock engages against the tang. No sliders like an OTF knife, no button actuation like a traditional automatic knife or classic switchblade. That means fewer moving parts and a familiar field-strip feel for anyone who’s tuned up liner-lock folders before. It carries tip-down with a deep-carry clip, making it easy to conceal the bright purple handle when you prefer to keep the dragon for yourself.

Handle, Hardware, and Everyday Build

The handle scales carry the dragon illustration across a purple-black canvas, but the underlying shape is pure practical EDC: curved spine, finger groove, and a tail that covers the glass breaker and cord cutter. The screws and pivot are simple, serviceable hardware you can tighten with common tools. For a Texas buyer who rotates between high-end automatics, OTF knives, and working assisted knives, this one slides into the role of everyday beater with just enough style to stay interesting.

Assisted Opening Knife Carry in Texas

Texas law has opened the door for a broad range of knives, but knowing what you’re carrying still matters—especially when you’re choosing between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a traditional switchblade. This Dragon Pulse rides comfortably as an EDC in jeans, work pants, or a jacket pocket. The deep-carry clip hides most of the handle, while the glass breaker and dragon tail sit close to the seam where they won’t snag easily.

Because it’s an assisted opener, deployment is deliberate. You apply pressure to the thumb stud; the knife doesn’t jump open on its own. For many Texans, that’s the right middle ground between a manual folder and a true automatic knife. You get quick one-handed access on ladders, in feed stores, or at the tailgate, without taking on the extra complexity of an OTF system or the full switchblade stigma that still lingers in some people’s minds, even under modern Texas law.

Understanding Assisted Opening vs. Automatic vs. OTF

Collectors in Texas already know there’s a world of difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife—but not every seller bothers to spell it out correctly. The Dragon Pulse sits squarely in the assisted camp. You start it manually, the spring finishes. No button, no slider, no full-auto leap from the handle.

An automatic knife or classic switchblade, by contrast, goes from closed to open at the push of a button or release. The spring does all the work from the beginning. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails, usually with a thumb slider controlling both deployment and retraction. Those are mechanically more complex and live in a different price and maintenance bracket. This piece gives you speed without that complexity—and without blurring the lines on what it really is.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this like an automatic knife or OTF switchblade?

No. This Dragon Pulse is an assisted opening knife, not a push-button automatic knife and not an OTF switchblade. You begin the opening stroke with the thumb stud, and a spring helps the blade snap the rest of the way. There is no button to press and no front-deploying mechanism. For Texas collectors, that distinction matters. It carries and maintains like a standard liner-lock folder, just with faster, spring-assisted deployment.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is very permissive on knives these days, including assisted opening knives, automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades, with most restrictions tied to blade length and certain locations rather than the exact opening mechanism. This assisted opener sits in the same general legal conversation as other modern folders, but every buyer should check current Texas statutes and any local rules, especially if you’re around schools, courthouses, or restricted venues. Know your blade length, know where you’re headed, and you’ll be on solid ground.

Where does this fit in a serious Texas collection?

If your collection already holds high-dollar automatics, OTF knives, and vintage switchblades, this Dragon Pulse doesn’t try to compete on rarity or complexity. It earns its slot as a character piece: a rescue-capable assisted opening knife with bold purple-black dragon art and honest working features. It’s the knife you toss into the truck console or onto the workbench without worry, but still enjoy every time the light hits that dragon handle. For a Texas buyer who values both function and story, that balance is exactly the point.

Why This Dragon Pulse Belongs in a Texas Pocket

Texas buyers who know their knives don’t confuse an assisted opener with an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or an old-school switchblade—and they don’t fall for marketing that does. The Dragon Pulse Rescue-Ready Assisted Opening Knife - Purple Black plays it straight. It’s a spring-assisted, liner-lock EDC with real rescue features and a dragon theme that stands out without getting in the way. It rides deep in your pocket, works hard when called on, and tells anyone who sees it that you know exactly what you’re carrying and why.