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Vented Halo Flip-Balanced Butterfly Knife - Gold

Price:

14.99


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Skins Iridescent Butterfly Knife - Rainbow TiNi
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Lone Star Vented Flip-Control Butterfly Knife - Gold

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3117/image_1920?unique=f61f341

9 sold in last 24 hours

This butterfly knife is built for flippers who care about balance as much as looks. The vented gold handles cut weight for faster rotation, while the polished spear-point stainless blade keeps it useful beyond the trick table. A simple end latch locks it down when you’re done. It’s the kind of balisong a Texas collector keeps near the front of the roll: flashy enough for show, tuned enough to flip, and honest enough to work when it has to.

14.99 14.99 USD 14.99

BF195GD

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Metal
Theme None
Latch Type Latch
Is Trainer No

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Vented Gold Butterfly Knife Built for Real Texas Flippers

This is a true butterfly knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade pretending to be something it’s not. Two vented gold handles rotate around a full-length tang, swinging open and closed by hand. No springs, no buttons, no sliders—just honest balisong action tuned for smooth flipping and everyday cutting.

Texas buyers who know their steel will spot the balance play right away: those circular vents along the handles aren’t decoration. They cut weight, shift the center of mass, and give this balisong a clean rotation that feels faster than it looks. The polished spear-point stainless blade stays straightforward and practical, so you get both showpiece appeal and working-edge usefulness in one knife.

Butterfly Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic and OTF Designs

A butterfly knife lives in its own category. Where a side-opening automatic knife or classic switchblade uses a spring to snap open with a button press, this balisong opens because you move it. You unlock the latch, let gravity and wrist control do their work, and the handles swing around the blade. No coil springs, no leaf springs, no thumb studs—just pivot, tang, and timing.

An OTF knife, by contrast, drives the blade straight out the front of the handle using a slider or switch. That’s a completely different animal. This vented gold butterfly knife keeps the blade nested between two handles that rotate around it, giving you a long, smooth arc of motion instead of a sudden mechanical deployment. For a Texas collector, that’s part of the appeal: the mechanism is visible, honest, and skill-based.

Flip Balance in a Vented Balisong

The series of round cutouts in the gold handles matter. By removing material, they lighten the handles, shifting how this butterfly knife carries momentum. That gives you a quicker rotation and cleaner stops—ideal for learning aerials, rollovers, and basic fan tricks without fighting front-heavy weight.

Pair that with a full tang and solid pins and you get a balisong that feels more expensive than it is. It’s not trying to be a tactical automatic or an OTF switchblade stand-in; it’s unapologetically a flipper’s butterfly knife, tuned for fun and basic utility.

Blade and Build: Stainless Spear-Point Practicality

The polished stainless spear-point blade keeps things simple: plain edge, clean grind, and a profile that pierces and slices without drama. For a Texas buyer, that means it’ll open boxes, cut cord, and handle day-to-day tasks if you choose to carry it, while still looking sharp in a display case.

The polished gold-tone metal handles give it that auric showpiece look, but the real value is in the symmetry and pivot alignment. When you open it, both halves track evenly along the blade, which is what separates a usable butterfly knife from a wobbly novelty.

Texas Carry Reality for a Butterfly Knife

Texas law has opened up a lot for knife carriers, but it still pays to know what you’re holding. This vented gold butterfly knife is not an OTF knife and not a side-opening automatic switchblade. It’s a manual balisong that you swing open by hand. In Texas, that distinction matters mostly when you’re talking to someone who doesn’t know knives; you’ll know exactly how to explain it.

The standard handle-end latch keeps the knife locked closed in a pocket or bag, so it’s not rattling open or advertising itself. At this size, it rides well in a jeans pocket or range bag, more in line with an EDC folder than a dedicated combat piece. Around Texas, that makes it at home everywhere from a ranch workbench to a garage flip session, with common sense guiding when and where you bring it out.

Collector Value: Why This Gold Balisong Earns a Slot

Most Texas collectors already have a few automatic knives and at least one OTF knife or classic switchblade. What keeps this butterfly knife from getting lost in that crowd is the combination of look, balance, and price-friendly build. Those bright gold vented handles pop in any case or drawer, and they’re not just for show—they translate into a noticeably lighter, quicker flip.

For retailers, that makes this an easy display win: it catches the eye, flips well enough to demo, and gives customers a clear story about what makes a butterfly knife different from an automatic or an OTF. For individual collectors, it’s a low-risk way to add a dedicated flipper to a collection dominated by push-button blades.

Display-Ready, Session-Ready

Line this balisong up next to black tactical autos and dark OTF knives, and the gold shines like a marquee light. Open it up, and the vent pattern and symmetry take over. Close it again, latch it, and it sits clean and compact, ready for the next flip session.

This isn’t a safe-queen only piece, though. The stainless blade and sturdy hardware mean you can actually carry and use it in Texas without babying it. It’s the sort of butterfly knife you hand to a friend who’s curious about flipping—confident it’ll both impress and hold up.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Butterfly Knife

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

No. A butterfly knife is its own thing. This vented gold balisong is a manual knife: you unlatch it and swing the handles around the blade with your hand and wrist. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and a button or lever to snap open. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front with a slider or switch. Mechanically and legally, this is a manual butterfly knife, not an automatic or OTF.

Are butterfly knives legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas law has become far more knife-friendly, and butterfly knives fall under the broader category of knives rather than being singled out like automatic knives once were. As long as you’re mindful of location restrictions and any blade-length limits that apply to specific places, a balisong like this vented gold butterfly knife is generally legal to own and carry in Texas. It’s always smart to check the latest statutes or talk to a local attorney if you’re unsure, but in Texas, a manual butterfly is no longer the legal outcast it once was in other states.

Why would a Texas collector add this if they already own autos and an OTF?

Because it fills a different role. Your automatic knife and OTF switchblade cover fast, push-button deployment. This butterfly knife covers skill-based flipping and visual flair. The vented gold handles make it stand out in any Texas collection, and the flip-balanced build gives you something to practice and show off that isn’t just another button press. It’s a conversation piece, a training platform, and a usable cutter—all without overlapping the feel of your autos.

For Texans Who Know the Difference

This vented halo of a butterfly knife speaks to a certain kind of Texas buyer—the one who can tell a side-opening automatic from an OTF knife at a glance, and who appreciates a balisong for what it is, not what it’s confused with. The gold handles, the vented balance, the straightforward stainless spear point: none of it is rushed, none of it is pretending. It’s a clean, honest butterfly knife that belongs in the roll of anyone in Texas who values knowing their mechanisms as much as owning them.