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Golden Vein Quick-Strike OTF Knife - Gold Damascus

Price:

42.99


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Sunstrike Dagger Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Gold Damascus

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/4969/image_1920?unique=fa772bc

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This OTF knife doesn’t ask for attention—the gold Damascus dagger blade takes it. The Sunstrike rides slim in pocket, front-switch ready, with a sure-footed black G10 handle and secure pocket clip. It’s the kind of out-the-front automatic Texas folks carry when they want fast, clean deployment and a little show when the blade clears daylight. For the collector who knows the difference between an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic, and a switchblade, this one earns its slot.

42.99 42.99 USD 42.99

SB122GDM

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Blade Color Gold
Blade Finish Damascus
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material G10
Button Type Front switch
Theme Gold Damascus
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon pouch

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Golden Vein Quick-Strike OTF Knife - Gold Damascus

The Golden Vein Quick-Strike is exactly what it looks like: a true out-the-front automatic knife built around a gold Damascus dagger blade and a no-nonsense black G10 handle. The blade rides inside the handle until you thumb the front switch, then it tracks straight out the nose in one clean line. That’s an OTF knife. Not a side-opening automatic, not a generic “switchblade” — a front-action mechanism purpose-built for fast, controlled deployment.

What Makes This OTF Knife Different from Other Automatics

Most automatic knives Texans see in the wild are side-openers: button on the side, blade swings out like a regular folder. This Golden Vein doesn’t swing; it slides. The blade is housed in the handle and driven straight forward when you run the textured front switch. That’s the defining trait of an OTF knife, and it’s what separates it from other automatic knives and common switchblade slang.

The dagger-style profile adds another layer of intent. At 3.75 inches of gold Damascus-pattern blade and 9.25 inches overall, it sits in that sweet spot: large enough to feel like a real tool, slim enough to ride easy in the pocket. The central groove and clean spine lines keep it balanced visually and in the hand, while the plain edge keeps sharpening straightforward.

Front-Switch, Out-the-Front Mechanism

The front switch is the heart of this OTF. Your thumb finds the grid-textured slider naturally along the centerline of the handle. Push forward and the blade snaps out the front; pull back and it retracts into the handle. It’s a straight-line motion, different from the button-and-pivot action you’d expect on a traditional automatic or old-school switchblade. That mechanical honesty is what collector-minded Texans look for when they say they want a real OTF knife.

Handle, Grip, and Everyday Control

The handle is matte black with G10 grip inserts that give it a planted, confident hold without chewing your pocket. Gold hardware ties into the Damascus blade, reinforcing the tactical-luxury theme without turning it into jewelry. A pocket clip keeps the knife oriented and accessible, while the lanyard hole gives you one more way to stage it for quick retrieval in a truck, pack, or range bag.

OTF Knife Carry in Texas: How This One Fits Your Day

Texas buyers don’t just want to know what an automatic knife does; they want to know how it rides in real life. Closed, this OTF knife sits at about 5.375 inches, which means it fits cleanly in a front pocket, inside a boot, or clipped along the seam of a pair of jeans. The included nylon pouch gives you an option for bag or belt carry when you’d rather not flash the clip.

A gold Damascus blade in a black handle isn’t shy, but the profile is slim and straight. That makes it practical for everyday tasks: opening feed bags, slicing tape, cutting cord, or breaking down boxes. The dagger look leans tactical, but in a Texas context, this OTF knife settles into the same jobs any solid EDC blade would handle — just with a faster, cleaner deployment and more visual flair.

Texas Law, Automatic Knives, and OTF Reality

Texas has moved away from the old fear of the word “switchblade.” Modern state law treats automatic knives, including OTF knives, as mainstream tools in most situations. As always, local ordinances, specific locations, and restricted premises can have their own rules, so a responsible Texas collector checks current law rather than relying on campfire stories.

From a legal and practical standpoint, what matters is that this is an automatic, out-the-front knife with a locking blade in a full-size configuration. That’s different from a small assisted opener and different from the loose, catch-all “switchblade” label you still hear in movies. Texas buyers who know the difference tend to keep themselves out of trouble and in better company.

Automatic vs OTF vs Switchblade in Plain Texas English

Here’s the simple breakdown a Texas collector actually uses:

  • Automatic knife: You hit a button or switch, the blade deploys under spring power. That includes side-openers and OTF knives.
  • OTF knife: A type of automatic where the blade comes straight out the front of the handle, like this Golden Vein Quick-Strike.
  • Switchblade: Old slang that gets thrown at almost any automatic knife, side-opening or OTF. Not mechanically precise, but you’ll still hear it.

This piece is best and most accurately described as an automatic OTF knife. Calling it a switchblade might get the idea across, but it doesn’t do the mechanism justice — and Texas collectors care about that distinction.

Collector Appeal: Gold Damascus with Working Knife Bones

Collectors in Texas don’t mind a little flash, so long as there’s function underneath. The gold Damascus pattern on this dagger blade is the first thing that hits the eye. It reads as tactical luxury: bold, patterned steel with a finish that stands out in a case or on a table. The contrast with the black G10 handle and gold hardware threads the needle between showpiece and working gear.

From a collection standpoint, this OTF knife fills a clear niche: a front-switch, dagger-profile automatic with a distinctive finish that still respects the lines of a real-use tool. It’s not a fantasy prop; it’s a modern out-the-front automatic with everyday dimensions and recognizable ergonomics. For someone building out a Texas-focused automatic knife or switchblade-adjacent collection, this is the gold-accent, tactical-themed slot that doesn’t feel redundant.

Where It Sits in a Serious Drawer

Laid out next to side-opening automatics, traditional switchblades, and assisted openers, the Golden Vein Quick-Strike stands on the strength of its mechanism and finish. You’ve got the straight-line OTF track, the front switch, and a dagger blade that looks ready for work, all dressed in a gold Damascus pattern that sparks conversation without needing an explanation. That balance is what earns it space with serious Texas buyers who already own more knives than they admit.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

Is this a true OTF knife or just another automatic?

This is a true OTF knife. The blade travels straight out the front of the handle when you run the front switch, then retracts the same way. That makes it an automatic OTF, not a side-opening automatic and not just a generic switchblade. If you’re specifically hunting for a front-action piece for your Texas collection, this one checks that box mechanically.

Can I legally carry this automatic OTF knife in Texas?

Texas law has become far more friendly to automatic knives, including OTF designs like this one. In most everyday situations, a Texas adult can own and carry an automatic or OTF knife that used to fall under the old “switchblade” label. That said, some locations and circumstances remain restricted, and knife laws can change. A serious Texas buyer verifies the current statute and knows where they’re headed before they clip any automatic knife into their pocket.

Why add this OTF if I already own other switchblades?

If your drawer is full of side-opening automatics and classic switchblades, this piece brings a different experience. The straight-out OTF mechanism, dagger profile, and gold Damascus finish give you a distinct category representative: a modern, tactical-style out-the-front automatic that still plays well with the rest of your Texas collection. You’re not just adding another button-folder; you’re adding a different mechanical story.

In the end, the Golden Vein Quick-Strike OTF Knife is for the Texan who can tell an automatic from an assisted opener by sound alone, and who likes their blades to say something without shouting. It’s a gold Damascus dagger in a black G10 suit, built around a front-switch out-the-front mechanism that does exactly what it’s supposed to do. If you’ve been looking to round out your Texas automatic lineup with a proper OTF knife that knows the difference between show and work, this one fits right in.