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Boneframe Skeleton-Balanced Butterfly Knife - Stainless Steel

Price:

10.99


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Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife - Matte Stainless

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5996/image_1920?unique=41779e5

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This butterfly knife is all bones and balance. The Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife pairs skeleton-hand stainless handles with a 4-inch clip point blade for smooth, manual flipping that locks into a clean, repeatable rhythm. At 5.5 inches closed and 9.25 inches open, it rides light but solid in a Texas pocket or range bag. Matte stainless steel throughout keeps it durable, tunable, and ready for collectors, flippers, and retailers who want a skeleton-themed balisong with real hand feel.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

BF310BST

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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
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

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Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 5.31
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless steel
Theme Skeleton
Latch Type Latch
Is Trainer No

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What the Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife Really Is

The Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife is a true butterfly knife — a manual balisong built around two rotating handles that swing around the tang to reveal a single, locking blade. No springs, no buttons, no sliders. It isn’t an automatic knife, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it isn’t a switchblade in the classic push-button sense. It’s a flipper’s tool and a collector’s piece built on simple pivots, a solid latch, and balanced steel.

Here, the story is in the bones. Skeleton-style stainless handles echo the look of a skeletal hand, while an equally skeletonized clip point blade keeps the weight trimmed for smooth, controlled flipping. Texas buyers who know their way around a balisong will feel the rhythm the first time it cycles from closed to locked.

Butterfly Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade Designs

A butterfly knife like this Gravebone Rhythm operates differently than any automatic knife, OTF knife, or side-opening switchblade you’ll see in a Texas display case. The deployment is entirely manual. You unlock the latch, rotate the two handles around the blade, and finish by locking one handle into place for a solid grip. The satisfaction is in the motion, not a spring.

An automatic knife uses a coiled spring and a button or lever to snap the blade out from the side. An OTF knife rides the blade in a channel inside the handle and sends it straight out the front when you work a switch. A classic switchblade is a side-opening automatic with that iconic button-and-bolster profile. This butterfly knife is none of those — and that’s the point. It lives in its own lane, where timing, control, and balance matter more than speed-of-deployment bragging rights.

Manual Balisong Action for Rhythm and Control

The Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife leans into that manual character. At 5.5 inches closed and 9.25 inches open, with a 4-inch stainless clip point blade, the proportions are tuned for smooth, repeatable flipping. The blade cutouts and skeletonized handles aren’t just for looks; they shift the weight toward a balanced center, making aerials, rollovers, and simple open-close drills feel predictable and stable.

Because there’s no automatic or OTF mechanism inside, you get straightforward tuning: pivot tension, latch feel, and lubrication are the main variables. That’s exactly how serious butterfly knife collectors and balisong flippers prefer it.

All-Stainless Build for Hard Use and Easy Tuning

This knife is full stainless steel — blade and handles. The matte finish keeps glare down and hides the fine marks that come with regular flipping or carry. Stainless construction means less coddling and more practice; it shrugs off sweat and pocket time in a Texas summer better than many coated or hybrid builds.

The clip point profile gives you a practical edge shape if you choose to carry it as a working knife where legal, while the plain edge keeps sharpening simple. For collectors, that straightforward geometry is part of the appeal: easy to maintain, easy to restore, and forgiving when a trick goes wrong on concrete.

Butterfly Knife Carry and Texas Reality

Texas has taken a more knife-friendly turn in recent years, and that’s good news for butterfly knife fans. A balisong like this is treated as a knife with a particular opening mechanism, not as a special forbidden class like you’ll still find in other states. For adult Texans, a butterfly knife often slots into the same conversation as an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade: can you carry it openly, and are there length or location limits you need to respect?

With its 4-inch blade, the Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife hits a practical sweet spot. It’s long enough for meaningful use yet compact enough to ride in a pocket, pack, or glovebox without feeling like a novelty sword. In a Texas context, that makes it a candidate for range days, ranch trips, garage tuning sessions, and show-and-tell at collector meets.

Texas Use Cases: From Tailgate to Workbench

This is not a dainty butterfly trainer. It’s a live-blade balisong that can pull light utility duty where appropriate. Opening feed bags, slicing cord, or acting as a backup cutter in a truck kit — it can handle those without complaint. But the real home for this knife in Texas is in the hands of someone who enjoys the flip itself: at a tailgate, on the porch, or around a shop bench while the smoker runs.

Because it isn’t an automatic or OTF switchblade, there’s no spring to gum up with dust or grit. That suits rural Texas life just fine. A wipe-down, a little oil, and it’s back to running smooth, no gunsmith-level teardown required.

Collector Value: Skeleton Style for the Balisong Drawer

Collectors don’t need another generic stainless butterfly knife. They need pieces that stand out without turning into circus acts. The Gravebone Rhythm does that with its skeleton-hand handle design and cutout blade. The visual theme is clear: bones and balance. No skull graphics, no neon. Just a gothic skeleton motif executed in matte stainless.

In a drawer already holding automatics, a couple of OTF knives, and a handful of classic switchblades, this butterfly knife adds a different silhouette and a different kind of motion. It’s a knife that invites handling. The more you flip it, the more you learn about its timing — and the more it earns its spot as a “reach-for-it” balisong instead of a display-only curiosity.

Why This Balisong Belongs Next to Your Autos and OTFs

Texas collectors often start with automatic knives or an OTF knife or two, then circle back to butterfly knives once they appreciate the mechanics. This piece makes that transition easy. It looks wild enough to draw attention, but underneath the skeleton styling you get straightforward steel, a familiar clip point profile, and a classic latch.

Set it beside a side-opening switchblade and an OTF double-action. You’ll have three very different deployment stories to show a friend in one simple lineup: spring-driven snap, track-guided launch, and pure manual rotation. As a teaching tool and a talking piece, this balisong pulls more than its weight.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Is a butterfly knife like an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

A butterfly knife is its own category. The Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife is a manual balisong; you physically rotate the two handles around the blade. An automatic knife uses a spring and a button or lever to fire the blade from the side. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front along internal rails. The word “switchblade” usually refers to those automatic side-openers, not to a butterfly knife. All four may share some legal questions in Texas, but mechanically they are very different animals.

Are butterfly knives legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas law has become far friendlier to knives, including butterfly knives, than it once was. Adults can generally own and carry a balisong like this, but you still need to respect any blade length rules, location-based restrictions, and changes in state or local law. A 4-inch butterfly knife such as the Gravebone Rhythm sits in a practical, everyday range, but it’s on you to stay current, especially if you’re comparing it to an automatic knife, OTF knife, or traditional switchblade for regular carry.

Is this butterfly knife more for flipping or for work?

This model is built first as a flipper’s knife and a collector’s balisong. The skeletonized blade and handles, the latch, and the overall balance are tuned for smooth manual action. It can handle light utility work, but if you need a hard-use work knife for daily cutting, an automatic or straightforward folding blade might be a better main tool. Think of the Gravebone Rhythm as your rhythm trainer and showpiece, and let your beater knife do the rough jobs.

Texas Identity in a Skeleton-Balanced Balisong

Owning the Gravebone Rhythm Butterfly Knife marks you as someone who doesn’t confuse every sharp object with a button as a switchblade. You know what a balisong is. You understand how a butterfly knife fits alongside an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a classic side-opening switchblade in a well-rounded Texas collection. This skeleton-balanced stainless piece brings a little gothic edge, a lot of smooth motion, and just enough reach to matter — the kind of knife a Texan flips on the porch at sundown, not because it’s trendy, but because it feels right in the hand.