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Heritage Bayonet Push-Button Stiletto Switchblade - Red Wood & Silver

Price:

13.99


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Frontier Heritage Bayonet Switchblade Automatic Knife - Red Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2119/image_1920?unique=056b689

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This bayonet switchblade automatic knife rides that line Texas collectors love: classic Italian stiletto heritage with modern push-button reliability. A polished steel bayonet blade snaps out fast, locked in by a tried-and-true automatic mechanism with a safety switch for pocket peace of mind. Red wood scales and silver bolsters give it a dressy profile that still feels ready to work. It’s the piece you carry when you want folks to know you understand the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a true switchblade.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

SB198WD

Not Available For Sale

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 8.875
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.52
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Bayonet
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Push
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This Bayonet Stiletto Switchblade Really Is

This knife is a classic bayonet stiletto switchblade automatic knife, built on that old-world Italian profile but tuned for modern Texas carry. The long, narrow bayonet blade folds into the handle and jumps to attention with a push-button automatic mechanism. It’s not an OTF knife that drives the blade straight out the front, and it’s not an assisted opener that needs a nudge on a flipper tab. This is a side-opening switchblade automatic, plain and simple.

The polished steel bayonet blade, the red wood handle scales, the bright silver bolsters, and the pocket clip all work together to make it feel like a heritage piece that’s still ready to ride in a Texas pocket. It’s the kind of automatic knife a collector respects: honest about what it is, and clear about what it’s not.

Bayonet Switchblade Automatic Knife Mechanics

The heart of this knife is its push-button automatic switchblade mechanism. Press the button, and a spring drives the bayonet blade out from the side of the handle, locking it into place for use. Slide the safety switch and that button is blocked, giving you some extra insurance when you’re carrying it in a pocket or bag.

Unlike an OTF knife, where the blade travels in a track and exits straight out the front, this bayonet stiletto pivots around a pinned and screwed pivot like any folding knife. Unlike an assisted opener, you’re not preloading a spring with a thumb stud or flipper—you’re commanding the blade with a clean push of the button. That distinction matters to Texas collectors who care about the precise line between an automatic knife and every other folding mechanism.

Blade Profile and Steel Story

The 3.875-inch polished steel bayonet blade gives you a long, narrow profile with a centered point, ideal for controlled piercing and detail work. No serrations, no tactical theatrics—just a plain edge you can sharpen the way you like. At 8.875 inches overall opened and 5 inches closed, it’s full-sized without being overbearing.

The polished finish and straight spine echo the traditional Italian switchblade look that collectors know by heart, but the clean, unmarked blade face keeps it from feeling gaudy. This is a knife that looks good on a table at a Texas gun show and still feels right opening feed sacks behind the barn.

Handle, Safety, and Pocket Reality

The red wood handle scales sit between polished silver bolsters and a matching pommel, pinned and screwed for security. The grain in the wood adds warmth and a sense of age, even when the knife is straight out of the box. Along the spine, a single-sided pocket clip lets you carry it like a modern EDC instead of burying it in a jacket.

Beside the push button sits a sliding safety. Slide it on, and the button is blocked; slide it off, and the switchblade is live. For Texas buyers who understand that an automatic knife demands respect, that safety isn’t a gimmick—it’s what makes you comfortable clipping a stiletto switchblade inside your jeans on a long, hot day.

How This Switchblade Fits Texas Carry Life

Texas has grown up a lot when it comes to knife laws, and automatic knives are part of that story. A true switchblade automatic like this bayonet stiletto can now be owned and carried in Texas by adults, with a few common-sense limitations around certain locations and age. It’s no longer something you have to hide in a drawer just because it has a button on the side.

That makes a piece like this particularly attractive: it has the Italian-style stiletto look that used to live in rumor and movie scenes, but it’s now a legitimate part of Texas everyday carry culture. It’s not a box-cutter stand-in or a hard-use ranch knife; it lives in that overlap between style, history, and practical automatic function.

EDC Moments in a Texas Day

In the real world, this knife opens feed bags, trims loose straps, cuts tape, and handles light ranch or shop tasks. The 4.52-ounce weight feels substantial in hand without dragging your pocket down. The straight handle and narrow blade make it easy to control during simple utility work, and the push-button deployment means you can put it to work quickly when the other hand is busy.

Is it a pure tactical knife? No. Is it a gentleman’s switchblade that can still get sweaty and dirty on a South Texas afternoon? Absolutely.

Switchblade vs Automatic Knife vs OTF Knife

A lot of Texas buyers use these terms interchangeably, but this knife draws the lines cleanly. Every switchblade is an automatic knife, but not every automatic is a switchblade, and almost none of them are OTF knives. Here, the blade folds into the side of the handle and fires out with a push-button, which makes it a side-opening switchblade automatic knife.

An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front through a track in the handle—there’s no pivot at the bolster. An assisted opener looks like a regular folder but uses a spring to finish what your thumb or finger starts; there’s no button to fire the blade from a dead stop. This bayonet stiletto sits squarely in that classic switchblade category, with a mechanism Texas collectors immediately recognize.

Why Collectors Respect This Pattern

Italian-style stilettos have a long history in knife culture. The bayonet blade, the narrow handle, the bolsters, the button-and-safety layout—those are all visual signals that say "switchblade" to a trained eye. When you add red wood scales and a polished silver blade, you steer it away from pure movie prop and toward something a Texas collector can line up next to tactical autos, OTF knives, and old-school lockbacks and feel like it belongs.

This knife lets a collector show they know the difference between categories without having to say a word. The mechanism, profile, and hardware tell the story.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Bayonet Switchblade Automatic Knives

Is this more like an automatic knife or an OTF switchblade?

This is a side-opening switchblade automatic knife. You press the button, and the blade pivots out from the side on a hinge, powered by an internal spring. That makes it a true automatic knife and, more specifically, a switchblade. It is not an OTF knife; there’s no front-opening track, and the blade doesn’t travel in and out along the handle’s centerline. If you want an OTF, you’re looking for a different mechanism entirely—this one is for collectors who appreciate the classic stiletto switchblade pattern.

Are switchblade automatic knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades are generally legal for adults to own and carry, including side-opening designs like this bayonet stiletto, as long as you respect the usual restricted places and age rules that apply to weapons in general. It’s always wise to double-check the latest Texas statutes and any local ordinances, but for most grown Texas buyers, a switchblade automatic like this can be a lawful part of everyday carry instead of a hidden curiosity.

Is this switchblade more for collecting or everyday carry?

It comfortably straddles both. The red wood scales, polished silver bolsters, and bayonet blade give it strong collector appeal, especially for anyone building out a stiletto or switchblade-focused tray. At the same time, the pocket clip, safety switch, and solid 3.875-inch blade length make it practical enough to ride in a jeans pocket as an EDC automatic. If you’re the kind of Texas buyer who likes to actually use what you collect, this knife fits that philosophy neatly.

Why This Switchblade Belongs in a Texas Collection

Owning this bayonet switchblade automatic knife says a few things about its owner. It tells people you know the difference between a switchblade, an OTF knife, and a simple assisted opener—and you chose this pattern on purpose. It shows you appreciate heritage lines and warm materials like red wood, but you still demand modern touches like a safety switch and pocket clip for real Texas carry.

For the Texas collector who builds trays by mechanism and pattern—not just by color and price—this piece fills the classic Italian-style stiletto slot with a clean, usable, automatic knife. It’s the kind of switchblade you can clip to your pocket on the way to the feed store, lay out on a table at a Hill Country show, and feel like you brought the right blade for both conversations.