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Honor Medallion Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife - Matte Black

Price:

11.99


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Honor Medallion Duty-Ready Assisted Rescue Knife - Matte Black

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This spring-assisted rescue knife is built for the moment when there’s no time to think. The matte black, partially serrated clip point snaps open with a thumb stud and settles into a solid liner lock. A glass breaker, seatbelt cutter, and pocket clip ride ready, while the embedded Army medallion and ARMY-marked blade keep the tribute quiet but clear. It’s an assisted opening knife that fits Texas glove-box duty, range bags, and everyday carry for those who respect real service.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

TD941AR

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

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Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.0
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Theme Army Tribute
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Honor Medallion Duty-Ready Assisted Rescue Knife - What It Is

This is a spring-assisted rescue knife built on an 8-inch matte black frame with a 3.5-inch partially serrated clip point blade and an Army medallion set into the handle. It’s not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a classic switchblade. It’s an assisted opening workhorse that uses a thumb stud and internal spring to help you finish the opening stroke fast, then locks up with a liner lock you can trust when things go sideways.

For Texas buyers who care how a blade moves as much as how it looks, that distinction matters. You’re getting a purpose-built assisted opening rescue knife with a glass breaker, seatbelt cutter, and a quiet Army tribute—all in one pocketable platform.

How This Assisted Opening Knife Actually Works

Mechanically, this is a side-opening assisted knife: you start the blade with the thumb stud, the spring takes over, and the blade snaps into place. That’s the core difference between this assisted opening knife and a true automatic knife. With an automatic or switchblade, a button or release sends the blade out under its own power. With this, you stay in the loop—thumb, tension, then assist.

Mechanism vs. Automatic Knife and Switchblade

A Texas collector who knows their hardware will spot the setup right away. There’s no firing button in the handle, no slider like you’d see on an OTF knife. Instead, you get a familiar folding layout with spring assist, a liner lock, and a thumb stud. That keeps the deployment fast but controlled, and keeps the knife squarely in the assisted opening category instead of the automatic knife or switchblade camp.

For buyers comparing all three—assisted opening, automatic knife, and OTF knife—this one sits in the sweet spot: quicker than a plain manual folder, less mechanically complex than an OTF, and without the button-driven switchblade action that some folks avoid for legal or personal reasons.

Rescue-Ready Build Details

The 3.5-inch partially serrated clip point blade gives you two working edges in one. The straight edge up front handles clean push cuts—boxes, straps, cloth—while the serrations near the handle bite into tougher material like rope, webbing, and heavy line. Stainless steel keeps maintenance simple, and the matte black finish cuts down glare.

The handle is metal, matte, and shaped with enough curve and texture to stay put in the hand. At the butt, you’ve got an integrated glass breaker and a seatbelt cutter cutout just behind it—both features you want on a real rescue knife, not just a tactical prop. A pocket clip keeps it high and tight on your pocket edge, glove box liner, or range bag.

Army Tribute Styling That Stays Work-First

This assisted opening knife wears its Army theme like a unit patch—present, not loud. The blade carries ARMY text and insignia, and the handle holds a round gold and black Army medallion set flush into the scale. Against the all-matte-black body, that medallion becomes the focal point without turning the knife into a showpiece you’re afraid to scratch.

Why the Medallion Matters to Collectors

For Texas knife collectors and military families, that embedded medallion moves this knife from "generic rescue tool" into "service tribute" territory. It fits right alongside challenge coins, unit patches, and other Army memorabilia—but it earns its place by being fully functional. This isn’t a wall hanger. It’s a rescue knife you carry, use, and hand to someone who understands both the job and the uniform.

Assisted Opening Knife Use in Texas Life

In Texas, an assisted opening knife like this lives a busy life. It rides clipped to your pocket while you’re running errands in San Antonio, sits in the console on the drive from Dallas to Killeen, and ends up on the tailgate cutting baling twine outside of Waco. The rescue features keep it honest: glass breaker and seatbelt cutter mean it has a real role in a truck, patrol car, or ranch vehicle.

Because this is an assisted opening knife—not a full automatic knife or OTF switchblade clone—it appeals to Texas users who want fast one-handed opening but prefer the familiar feel of a thumb-stud folder. You get that semi-manual, semi-assisted action that feels natural the first time you use it.

Texas Law, Carry Reality, and Knife Type Distinctions

Texas law has opened up considerably on blade length and automatic knives over the years, but serious buyers still pay attention to how their knife is classified. That’s where knowing the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade pays off.

This Honor Medallion piece is a side-opening assisted knife: folding construction, thumb stud start, spring-completion, liner lock. An automatic knife or switchblade typically uses a button or hidden release, and an OTF knife rides the blade inside the handle, deploying straight out the front via a slider or switch. Those differences aren’t just marketing—they’re mechanical, and they can matter when you’re choosing what to clip on before heading from the ranch into town.

Texas buyers who keep up with carry law like knowing which drawer each knife belongs in. This one goes in the assisted opening drawer, right next to your other spring-assisted EDC folders—not in the automatic knife or OTF switchblade tray.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this like an automatic knife or an OTF switchblade?

No. This is an assisted opening knife, not a true automatic knife or OTF switchblade. With this mechanism, you put your thumb on the stud, start the blade moving, and then the internal spring helps snap it open. An automatic or switchblade typically uses a button or similar control to fire the blade from a closed position without you pushing it along the path. An OTF knife, on the other hand, sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, often with a thumb slider. This Honor Medallion knife stays in the side-opening assisted category.

How does a knife like this fit Texas carry law?

Texas has grown friendlier to knives over the years, including automatic knives, but many buyers still prefer an assisted opening knife for everyday carry because it behaves like a fast manual folder. As always, Texas buyers should check current state and local laws, especially for restricted locations, but from a mechanism standpoint this is an assisted opener, not a button-fired automatic or OTF switchblade. That makes it a comfortable choice for pocket carry across most day-to-day Texas scenarios.

Is this a serious collector piece or more of a glove-box tool?

It’s both—and that’s the point. The Army medallion and ARMY-marked blade give it collector appeal, especially for veterans, active-duty soldiers, and families around bases like Fort Cavazos. At the same time, the spring-assisted deployment, partially serrated blade, glass breaker, and seatbelt cutter make it a true rescue tool that belongs in a truck, duty bag, or range kit. Texas collectors who actually use their knives will appreciate that this one can live in the field, not just in the display case.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Earns Its Place in a Texas Collection

Texas collectors don’t lack for choices when it comes to assisted opening knives, automatic knives, OTF knives, and every flavor of switchblade. What earns this Honor Medallion knife a slot in the drawer is the combination of mechanism, mission, and tribute. The spring-assisted action is clean and predictable, the rescue features are fully realized, and the Army medallion ties the whole piece to real service without turning it into a novelty.

If you’re the kind of buyer who knows the difference between an OTF knife and a side-opening automatic, and you want an assisted opening knife that feels at home in Texas trucks, on Texas ranges, and in Texas collections, this one fits. It’s a working rescue knife first, an Army tribute always, and a quiet nod to those who prefer their gear to say more with how it’s built than how it’s advertised.