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Mystic Dragon Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Stonewash Red

Price:

10.99


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Dragon Scale Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Stonewash Red

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7226/image_1920?unique=c56c1ce

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This spring assisted knife brings a dragon’s edge to everyday Texas carry. One nudge on the flipper and the stonewashed clip point snaps open, locking tight with a liner lock that means business. The textured red dragon handle gives you real grip, not just artwork, while the pocket clip keeps it riding low and ready. At 3.5 inches of usable blade and an 8-inch overall profile, it’s fantasy-forward but built for real work by folks who know the difference between a spring assisted knife, an automatic, and an OTF.

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PWF01RD

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewashed
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Dragon Scale Spring Assisted Knife for Texas EDC

This is a true spring assisted knife, not an automatic and not an OTF. You start the motion with the flipper tab, the internal spring takes over, and that stonewashed clip point snaps into place with a solid liner lock. For Texas buyers who care about the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, this one sits squarely in the assisted opening lane: fast, one-handed, and still under your control.

How This Spring Assisted Knife Works in the Real World

The mechanism here is simple and honest. You press the flipper, the spring helps the blade clear the handle, and the liner lock holds it open. No button release like a side-opening automatic knife, no dual-action slider like an OTF knife, and no confusion about what it is. That’s exactly what many Texas carriers want: quick deployment without crossing into true switchblade territory.

The 3.5-inch clip point blade, with its stonewashed finish and tanto-influenced profile, gives you a good mix of piercing point and usable belly. It’s plain edged steel, easy to touch up, and long enough for most daily tasks without feeling like you’re hauling a full-size field knife in your pocket.

Mechanism Details for Collectors

On this spring assisted knife, the flipper tab and liner lock do the heavy lifting. The tab gives you positive purchase even with wet or gloved hands, and the liner lock settles in clean behind the tang with an audible click. Collectors who already own automatic knives and OTF knives will feel the difference immediately: assisted opening feels more like a strong, helped manual than a true switchblade.

Handle, Grip, and Pocket Reality

The aluminum handle wears a red dragon graphic over scale-like texture, and that’s more than decoration. Those scales give your fingers something to bite into when you bear down on a cut. The thumb ramp on the spine and the subtle jimping help lock your grip in place. A pocket clip keeps it anchored where you expect it, and the lanyard hole gives you options if you like a fob or tether.

Spring Assisted Knife vs Automatic vs OTF in Plain Texas English

Texas collectors don’t need marketing spin; they need straight talk. This knife is spring assisted: you start the blade, the spring finishes it. An automatic knife, often called a switchblade, uses a button or release—press it, and the blade fires from the side on its own. An OTF knife is a different animal altogether, with the blade sliding straight out the front of the handle on a track.

Why does that matter? Because when you’re building a Texas collection, you want one of each type for what they do best. The OTF knife shines when you want true out-the-front action. The automatic knife gives you button-fired speed from the side. The spring assisted knife, like this dragon-themed piece, delivers fast one-hand opening but still feels like a pocket folder you actively run.

Texas Carry Context for a Spring Assisted Knife

Texas law has loosened up over the years, and many knives that were once a gray area—automatic knives, switchblades, even some OTF knives—are now legal for adults to own and carry, with blade length and location restrictions always worth checking. A spring assisted knife generally sits even more comfortably in that landscape because you are initiating the opening yourself rather than pushing a release button.

That makes this piece a natural fit for Texas truck consoles, ranch pockets, range bags, and daily beltline carry. It’s quick enough for defensive urgency, honest enough for utility cuts, and visually loud in a way Texans won’t apologize for. The dragon art and stonewashed blade feel right at home from El Paso to Beaumont.

Everyday Texas Uses

On a workday, this spring assisted knife opens feed bags, slices cord, trims tape, and handles light field work. In town, it’s your box opener, envelope slitter, and parking lot companion on a late walk. The clip keeps it accessible in jeans, work pants, or shorts, and that 4.5-inch closed length rides comfortably all day without printing like a fixed blade.

Collector Value: Fantasy Meets Function

Collectors in Texas already have their safe queens—big autos, high-end OTF knives, and legacy switchblades. This spring assisted knife earns its slot for a different reason. The dragon art and scale motif give it a fantasy edge, but the build is all working folder: stonewashed steel, liner lock, flipper tab, and a pocket clip that begs for carry, not display-only treatment.

At 8 inches overall, it has the presence to sit alongside larger tactical automatic knives without looking out of place, yet it’s priced and built to be used. For a collector who likes to rotate blades, this one brings a bit of story to the pocket without demanding babying or strict safe storage like some delicate OTF mechanisms.

Why This Piece Belongs Next to Your Autos and OTFs

If your roll already holds a couple of out-the-front knives and a few classic side-opening automatics, this spring assisted knife adds variety to the way your blades behave. Flip open an OTF knife, press the button on a switchblade, then hit the flipper on this assisted opener—you’ll feel three distinct experiences. That tactile difference is part of what makes a Texas collection interesting.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Spring Assisted Knife

Is a spring assisted knife the same as an automatic or an OTF?

No. A spring assisted knife like this one needs you to start the blade with a flipper or thumb stud, then the spring helps it open. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or release to fire the blade from a closed position without you moving it first. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a slide-track, usually with a thumb slider. This dragon-scale piece is a spring assisted folding knife, not an automatic and not an OTF.

Can I legally carry this spring assisted knife in Texas?

Texas law is generally friendly toward modern folding knives, including many automatic knives and OTF knives, but you should always check current statutes and local rules. As a spring assisted folding knife with a 3.5-inch blade, this model is aimed squarely at everyday Texas carry. It’s the kind of knife Texans routinely drop in a pocket or clip to a waistband for daily use, staying mindful of any restricted locations like certain government buildings, schools, or posted venues.

Is this more of a display dragon knife or a real EDC?

The dragon theme gives it shelf appeal, but the mechanism and build say EDC. You’re getting a spring assisted knife with a functional clip point, a liner lock that actually holds, and a pocket clip that invites daily use. For a Texas collector, it works both ways: sharp enough and tough enough to ride along on the ranch, striking enough to stand out in a drawer full of black-handled tactical autos and plain OTF knives.

In the end, this dragon-scale spring assisted knife fits a certain kind of Texas buyer: someone who knows the difference between a spring assisted knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade—and chooses the assisted folder on purpose. It’s the piece you carry when you want your knife to open fast, work hard, and say a little something about you every time you flip it into place.