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Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife - Black Oxide

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5916/image_1920?unique=984fd90

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This spring assisted knife is built for the Texan who likes their EDC with teeth. The Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife snaps open with a decisive, one-hand flick, locking a black oxidized clip point blade solidly in place. An embossed aluminum handle wrapped in grim reaper skull and red skeleton art gives you secure grip and loud personality. Liner lock, pocket clip, and weight-reducing cutouts keep it practical, while the gothic theme makes it a standout piece in any Texas collector’s rotation.

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DSA2006RD

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

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Blade Length (inches) 3.36
Overall Length (inches) 8.15
Closed Length (inches) 4.78
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Black oxidized
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3Cr13 stainless steel
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Skull
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife – What It Really Is

This isn’t an automatic knife, and it’s not an OTF knife pretending to be a switchblade. The Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife is a side-opening folding knife with a spring assist that helps you finish the opening stroke once you start it. You begin the motion with the flipper tab; the internal spring takes it home. For a Texas buyer who cares about mechanisms, that distinction matters.

Instead of a button-fired switchblade or a true out-the-front (OTF) knife that drives the blade straight out of the handle, this spring assisted knife uses a flipper and a liner lock, giving you fast, one-hand deployment without crossing into full automatic territory. The result is a gothic, skull-themed EDC that looks wild but behaves like a practical assisted opener.

Spring Assisted Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic and OTF

A spring assisted knife lives in that middle ground between a manual folder and a button-fired automatic knife. On this Grim Harvest Skull, you put light pressure on the flipper tab; once the blade passes a certain point, the internal torsion spring snaps the black oxidized clip point blade into lockup. You’re the one starting the action—that’s the key difference from a true automatic or classic switchblade.

An automatic knife or traditional switchblade uses a button or switch to fire the blade from a closed position with no need for you to start the rotation. An OTF knife goes a step further, sending the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track instead of pivoting from the side. This Grim Harvest stays firmly in the assisted opening knife camp: side-opening pivot, flipper tab, and liner lock, not an OTF track system or button-activated auto.

Clip Point Blade and Everyday Control

The 3.36-inch clip point blade in 3Cr13 stainless steel gives you a familiar working profile: strong spine, fine tip, and enough belly for everyday cutting. The black oxidized finish tones down glare and pairs with the paw-shaped blade cutout to keep the look aggressive. For a Texas collector who actually cuts things, this isn’t just a wall-hanger skull knife; it’s a usable EDC folder with real control.

Handle Design and Gothic Skull Theme

The aluminum handle is where the personality comes in. A large screaming skull, red skeleton figures, and a cracked stone background give it that grim reaper, biker-ready energy. Underneath the artwork, the ergonomics are honest: curved handle, finger grooves, and jimping along the spine and handle to keep your grip locked in. You’re not just holding a painting—you’re holding a tool that happens to look like it crawled out of a Texas roadside ghost story.

Assisted Opening Knife Carry in Texas Reality

For Texans, how a knife carries day-to-day matters as much as how it looks. This spring assisted knife rides in the pocket with a metal clip and a closed length of about 4.78 inches, so it fits easily in jeans or a work shirt. The spring assist gives you quick access when your off-hand is busy, without the full snap-and-surprise of a button-fired automatic knife.

Under Texas law, the big dividing line is often blade length and overall classification as a "location-restricted knife," not whether it’s a spring assisted, OTF knife, or switchblade-style automatic. Texas has some of the more permissive knife laws in the country, but you still need to know where longer blades are restricted—certain schools, government buildings, and similar locations. This Grim Harvest sits in a practical EDC size, making it easier to carry within typical Texas guidelines while still respecting posted restrictions and common sense.

Texas Use Cases: From Tailgate to Shop Bench

In Texas, a spring assisted knife like this sees as much cardboard, feed bags, and zip ties as it does conversations at the tailgate. The assisted opening mechanism gives you that fast, sure deployment when you’re juggling gear, while the liner lock keeps things secure under normal cutting pressure. This is not a delicate display switchblade. It’s a working assisted opener dressed in skulls.

How This Spring Assisted Knife Differs from OTF and Switchblade Designs

Texas collectors know that not every fast-opening blade is a switchblade, and every OTF knife is its own animal. This Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife is:

  • Not an OTF knife: The blade doesn’t ride a rail or shoot out the front—it pivots from the side like a traditional folder.
  • Not a button automatic or classic switchblade: There’s no button or toggle that fires the blade. You start the motion with the flipper.
  • Solidly a spring assisted knife: Mechanical assist helps complete the opening after your initial push.

That means you get the speed and satisfaction of a quick-opening blade with the familiar feel of a folding liner-lock knife. For some Texas buyers, that middle ground is the sweet spot: quick enough for real-world use, distinct enough from an OTF or switchblade to sit comfortably in a mixed collection.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Knives

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

No, and this is where words matter. A spring assisted knife like the Grim Harvest requires you to start opening the blade with a flipper or thumb stud; the spring just helps you finish. An automatic knife or classic switchblade uses a button or switch to launch the blade from a fully closed position with no initial push. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out from the front of the handle on a track, either by button or sliding switch. All three open fast, but the internal mechanics and how you start the action are different—and serious Texas collectors pay attention to that.

Are spring assisted knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law focuses more on blade length and where you carry than on whether the knife is spring assisted, automatic, or an OTF. Spring assisted knives like this are generally treated as folding knives, not special prohibited weapons. That said, any knife can become “location-restricted” if the blade length crosses certain thresholds, and schools, courthouses, and similar places have stricter rules. A collector-minded Texan checks current state law and local policies, then carries accordingly—assisted opener, switchblade, or otherwise.

Why would a Texas collector choose this assisted opener over a switchblade?

Because not every situation calls for a button-fired blade. A spring assisted knife gives you nearly the same speed with a more familiar, manual-first feel. The Grim Harvest adds something else: skull-heavy, gothic artwork that stands out in a drawer full of plain liners. It’s an everyday-capable assisted opening knife that also scratches that collector itch for themed pieces. In a Texas collection that might already include a couple of switchblades and maybe an OTF knife or two, this one earns its slot by combining fast, assist-driven deployment with unapologetic reaper styling.

Collector Value: A Skull Knife That Still Works for Texas EDC

Plenty of skull knives are more costume than cutter. The Grim Harvest Skull Spring Assisted Knife keeps the artwork loud while the mechanics stay honest: spring assisted side-opening action, liner lock, pocket clip, and a practical clip point blade in work-ready stainless. For a Texas buyer who knows the difference between a spring assisted knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, this piece sits comfortably in the assisted opener lane—fast, reliable, and distinct from your automatics.

In the end, this knife fits a particular kind of Texan: someone who can talk steel and lock types without raising their voice, who understands why mechanism categories matter, and who still appreciates a handle covered in grim reaper skulls. It’s not trying to be every knife you own. It’s trying to be the right spring assisted knife in a collection that already knows where OTFs and switchblades belong.