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Lone Star Slide-Action OTF Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

Price:

39.99


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Lone Star Slide-Action Out-the-Front Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5148/image_1920?unique=694b116

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This Lone Star slide-action OTF knife is pure Texas in your pocket. A top-mounted slide launches the single-action out-the-front blade, then locks it back down when the work is done. The black stonewash clip point with partial serrations chews through rope, strap, and box tape, while the Texas flag aluminum handle rides proud on the pocket clip. It’s the automatic-style OTF you carry when you know the difference between a novelty switchblade and a real Texas-ready tool.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB194TXCS

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 8.52
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme Texas Flag
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This Lone Star Slide-Action OTF Knife Really Is

This Lone Star Slide-Action Out-the-Front Knife is exactly what it claims to be: a single-action OTF knife with a Texas flag aluminum handle and a work-ready blade that comes straight out the front of the handle. You’re not looking at a side-opening automatic knife, and it’s not a flipper or spring-assisted folder dressed up with Texas graphics. This is a true out-the-front mechanism built for buyers who know the difference and care about it.

The blade runs on a top-mounted slide, not a button hidden behind marketing jargon. Push the slide forward, the blade snaps out. Pull it back, the blade retracts and locks. It’s a clean, honest OTF knife with Lone Star attitude, made for Texans who want their everyday tool to match their state pride.

Out-the-Front Knife Mechanics: How the Slide-Action Works

With automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades all getting tossed into the same online bucket, the mechanism is where serious buyers separate truth from fluff. This knife is a single-action out-the-front knife. That means the spring drives the blade out when you push the slide, but you manually reset it by pulling the slide back. You get positive, confident deployment without the complication of a double-action system.

The slide runs along the spine of the Texas flag aluminum handle, right where your thumb expects it. The path is grooved and the jimping around the handle edges gives you extra traction, even when your hands are slick from sweat, oil, or field work. The stonewash black clip point blade rides in a tracked channel and locks up solid at full extension—no lazy wobble, no half-hearted deployment.

Single-Action OTF vs. Side-Opening Automatic

A side-opening automatic knife snaps open from the side like a classic switchblade, with the blade pivoting out of the handle. This OTF knife drives the blade straight forward through the nose of the handle. Different motion, different balance, different feel in the hand. If you’re looking for that straight-line, in-line thrust and a compact carry footprint, this out-the-front design is what you want.

Blade, Edge, and Work Reality

The 3.75-inch steel blade wears a black stonewash finish that hides use marks and doesn’t glare under bright Texas sun. The clip point gives you a sharp, precise tip for detailed cuts and piercing, while the partial serrations near the handle take over when you hit rope, nylon straps, or thick cardboard. At 9 inches overall and over 8 ounces, this isn’t a dainty letter opener. It’s a full-size OTF knife meant to see real work.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade: Where This One Sits

Texas collectors know the terms get abused. This Lone Star slide-action is an out-the-front automatic knife, which makes it a type of switchblade under most legal definitions. But in collector language, “switchblade” usually calls up the image of a side-opening stiletto. This isn’t that. It’s an OTF knife built around a slide actuator instead of a push button.

So you’ve got three overlapping ideas:

  • Automatic knife: Blade deploys with a spring when you activate a button or slide. This knife qualifies.
  • Out-the-front knife: Blade exits the handle through the front, not the side. That’s exactly what this is.
  • Switchblade: Legal umbrella term that covers both side-opening automatics and many OTF knives.

This Lone Star Slide-Action Out-the-Front Knife gives you the OTF feel and function, the automatic spring-driven deployment, and it will still get called a switchblade by people who don’t live in the details. You will know better, and that’s part of the appeal.

Texas Law, Texas Pride: Carrying This OTF Knife in the Lone Star State

Texas has come a long way on knife law. Under current Texas statutes, automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades are all legal to own and carry for most adults, with blade length restrictions largely rolled back. That said, local regulations, schools, and certain government buildings still have their own rules, so a smart Texan checks the details before pushing their luck.

This knife’s size and presence lean more toward work belt, ranch truck console, or duty-ready pocket than dress slacks. The Texas flag aluminum handle makes its intentions clear—this is not a discreet gentleman’s folder. For many Texas buyers, that’s the whole point. You’re carrying your state colors on an out-the-front tool that can cut feed bags, slice tie-downs, or handle day-to-day EDC tasks from Amarillo to Brownsville.

Practical Texas Carry Scenarios

On a ranch, the single-action OTF deployment means one-handed access when the other hand is full of wire or rope. In a work truck, the partial serrations and stout clip point make it a go-to for quick strap cuts and emergency seat belt work. For the collector who rotates carry, it’s the knife you clip on when you’re headed to a Texas gun show, knife meet, or backyard cookout and want your out-the-front automatic to match the flag flying over the driveway.

Collector Value: Why This Texas Flag OTF Earns a Slot

A collector drawer full of anonymous black-handled automatics starts to blur together. This Lone Star Slide-Action OTF Knife stands out because it’s tied to place, not just mechanism. The distressed Texas flag graphic, the bold “The LONE STAR State” text, and the top-slide OTF mechanism make it immediately recognizable in a lineup of automatic knives and switchblades.

The Texas flag aluminum handle gives it display appeal; the stonewash black blade and partial serrations give it honest work appeal. That balance is what makes it more than a novelty piece. It’s the OTF you can actually carry and mark up with real use, without feeling like you’re abusing a safe queen.

How It Fits in a Serious Texas Collection

If you collect by mechanism, this sits squarely in your out-the-front section alongside double-action OTF knives and side-opening automatics for comparison. If you collect by theme, it drops into your Texas or Americana row, right next to Bowie-inspired fixed blades and Lone Star etched folders. Either way, it brings something specific: a true OTF knife that wears its Texas identity on the handle instead of hiding it in the paperwork.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Out-the-Front Knife

Is this really an OTF, or just an automatic dressed up as one?

This is a real out-the-front knife. The blade travels straight out the nose of the handle along a guided channel, driven by a spring when you push the top-mounted slide. A side-opening automatic knife pivots the blade out from the side, more like the classic switchblade image. This Lone Star knife is an OTF automatic—different motion, different feel, and designed for buyers who actually care about that distinction.

Is carrying this OTF knife legal in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives, OTF knives, and most switchblades are legal to own and carry for adults, with prior bans removed. There are still restrictions in certain places—schools, courts, some government buildings, and private property with posted rules—so it’s on you to stay informed. Mechanism alone doesn’t make this illegal in Texas, but you should always know your local and situational limits before clipping on any automatic knife.

Who is this Lone Star OTF really for—user or display collector?

It’s aimed at the Texas buyer who lives in both worlds. The Texas flag aluminum handle and “LONE STAR State” branding give it display value, but the stonewashed black clip point blade, partial serrations, and stout single-action slide make it a usable out-the-front tool. If you want a pure safe-queen showpiece, there are fancier knives. If you want a Texas-proud automatic OTF you won’t baby, this one fits the pocket.

In the end, the Lone Star Slide-Action Out-the-Front Knife is for Texans—and Texas-minded buyers—who know the difference between a side-opening automatic, a switchblade by law, and a true OTF knife by feel. It carries Texas colors honestly, works like a real tool, and speaks the language of collectors who don’t need a lecture to recognize the right mechanism when it snaps into place.