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Gilded Vein Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Aluminum

Price:

12.99


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Gilded Vein Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Aluminum

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This Gilded Vein quick-deploy automatic knife is a push-button side-opener, not an OTF or assisted, and it behaves exactly like a Texas EDC should. The gold Damascus-etch drop point snaps open from the black aluminum handle, then stays put behind a top safety switch until you call on it. At just over four ounces with a pocket clip and clean lines, it’s the kind of automatic knife a Texas collector carries when they want a little shine backed by real function.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

SB164GDM

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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) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 4.09
Blade Color Gold
Blade Finish Damascus
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Button
Theme Gold Damascus
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip Yes

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Gilded Vein: What This Automatic Knife Really Is

The Gilded Vein Quick-Deploy is a true side-opening automatic knife. Push-button, spring-driven, folding. It is not an OTF knife and it is not an assisted opener, and that clarity matters if you’re a Texas buyer who’s tired of every spring-loaded blade being called a switchblade. Here, you’re looking at a button-fired automatic that opens from the side like a standard folder, then locks up with a safety you can trust in a Texas pocket.

Visually, the story is that liquid-gold Damascus-style blade: a gold-finished drop point with a flowing pattern that looks poured, not printed. Mechanically, the story is simple—press, deploy, lock. No sliders, no flippers, no hidden levers. Just a straightforward automatic knife tuned for everyday carry.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Push-Button, Not OTF

Mechanism comes first. This Gilded Vein runs a side-opening automatic action. A coiled spring inside the pivot holds the blade under tension. When you press the silver button in the handle, that tension takes over and drives the blade open in one clean move. That’s the definition of a classic automatic knife: closed until you intentionally hit the button, then fully deployed without needing to swing it open by hand.

This is where the distinction from an OTF knife matters. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front through a channel in the handle, usually with a thumb slide. This Gilded Vein is a folding automatic, not an out-the-front. It rotates out on a pivot like any pocket folder. Collectors who care about that difference—automatic knife versus OTF versus assisted—will recognize this as a proper push-button auto with no confusion.

Switchblade, Automatic, OTF: Where This One Fits

Most Texas collectors still use the word switchblade in conversation, but in the product world that usually means an automatic knife that opens under spring power at the press of a button or switch. By that standard, this is a switchblade-style automatic knife, but not an OTF switchblade. It’s a side-opening automatic with a safety switch on the spine and a tidy 3.25-inch blade that folds into the handle like any conventional folder.

Gold Damascus Look, Everyday Texas EDC Reality

The gold Damascus-etch blade is what stops people at the shelf, but the rest of the build is what keeps it in a Texas pocket. You’ve got a 3.25-inch plain-edge drop point in steel, long enough to be useful around the ranch, shop, or warehouse without turning every task into overkill. The overall length at 8 inches open gives you real purchase in the hand, while the 4.75-inch closed length rides like a normal pocket knife.

The matte black aluminum handle keeps the weight down to about 4.09 ounces, with drilled circular cutouts along the scale to knock off a little more heft and add visual rhythm. Jimping at the spine and butt gives your thumb and palm some bite when you bear down. A pocket clip on the reverse side finishes the package, because an automatic knife that isn’t set up for pocket carry doesn’t make much sense for a Texas EDC life.

Safety Switch and Carry Confidence

Up top near the pivot sits a sliding safety switch. That’s your insurance. With the safety engaged, that push button is blocked and the blade stays put, even if your jeans, seat belt, or center console press against it. Disengage it, and the automatic mechanism is live, ready to fire the blade into the open position when you press the button. Serious collectors know this safety detail separates a carry-worthy automatic knife from something that just looks good in photos.

Texas Automatic Knife Perspective: Law, Carry, and Context

Texas has been steadily friendlier to blades over the last decade, and that includes automatic knives. You still want to keep an eye on local rules and any special restrictions in certain locations, but as a rule, a side-opening automatic knife like this Gilded Vein is no longer the taboo pocket piece it once was. That gives Texas buyers room to choose the mechanism they actually want—automatic, OTF knife, or assisted—without building a collection in the shadows.

Where this particular automatic fits is in that everyday Texas carry lane: glove box between job sites, clipped in the pocket at the feed store, or sitting in a valet tray beside your keys. It’s not a belt-hung hunting fixed blade and it’s not a double-action OTF tactical poker; it’s a quick-deploy automatic knife with enough flash to be noticed and enough practicality to be useful.

Collector Value: More Than Just a Gold Blade

Collectors in Texas already have black-on-black tactical autos and basic stainless folders. The Gilded Vein earns its drawer space by pairing that gold Damascus theme with a straightforward, reliable automatic mechanism. The circular handle cutouts, the spine and butt jimping, the button-and-safety layout—those are real design choices, not decoration for decoration’s sake.

The steel blade with its Damascus-style pattern may not be hand-forged pattern-welded tool steel, but it carries the visual language of Damascus in a way that plays well in a tray of modern automatics. This is the kind of automatic knife you hand to someone when they ask what the fuss is about switchblades in Texas now: they hit the button, watch that gold blade snap into place, feel the lockup, and understand immediately.

Size, Balance, and Everyday Use

With an overall length of 8 inches and a 4.75-inch closed profile, the Gilded Vein lands squarely in full-size pocket knife territory—large enough for a full grip, small enough to disappear alongside a phone and wallet. At just over four ounces, it rides light for an aluminum-handled automatic, especially with those drilled holes helping balance. The drop point offers a useful belly for slicing and a fine-enough tip for detail work, which makes it a practical choice for daily chores even if you bought it for the gold Damascus look first.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

This is a side-opening automatic knife—a push-button folder that opens under spring power from the side. In casual talk, many Texans would call it a switchblade, but it is not an OTF knife. An OTF sends the blade straight out the front with a slide or trigger; this one pivots out like a normal folder, just with automatic deployment instead of manual or assisted.

Is this kind of automatic knife legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has moved toward allowing automatic knives, including what most people call switchblades, but you should always verify the current statute and remember that certain places can still restrict blade types. From a design standpoint, this Gilded Vein is a standard side-opening automatic, not a double-edged dagger or novelty oddity, which generally fits better into modern Texas carry rules. When in doubt, check the latest Texas knife statutes or talk to a lawyer, not a rumor thread.

Why choose this over an OTF or assisted opener?

The Gilded Vein gives you clean, one-button deployment with the familiarity of a folding profile. Compared to an OTF knife, you get a simpler mechanism that’s easier to pocket without worrying about front-channel debris. Compared to an assisted opener, you don’t have to start the blade manually—the spring does the whole job. Add the gold Damascus-etch blade and black aluminum handle, and you end up with an automatic knife that stands out visually without asking you to baby it.

For a Texas collector, the Gilded Vein Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife is the piece you carry when you want to enjoy that switchblade snap without mixing up your mechanisms or your facts. It’s an automatic knife that knows it’s not an OTF, wears its gold Damascus theme proudly, and still feels right at home clipped in a Texas pocket. That combination of clear function and bold style is what earns it a spot in a serious collection, not just a selfie.