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Metalliglide Safe-Edge Butterfly Knife Trainer - Rainbow Steel

Price:

10.99


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Prism Flow Butterfly Knife Trainer - Rainbow Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/4995/image_1920?unique=7bb731d

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This butterfly knife trainer puts rainbow steel on full display without putting your hands at risk. The blunt, faux-edge blade and rounded tip let you drill openings, aerials, and flow work until muscle memory kicks in. All-steel, textured handles keep the weight honest and the grip secure, while the latch and channel construction give it that familiar Texas flip-and-lock feel. For the collector who knows the difference between a live balisong and a true trainer, this one earns its reps.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

BF1698RB

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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) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.625
Weight (oz.) 5.82
Blade Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Iridescent
Blade Style Normal Straight
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Steel
Theme Rainbow
Latch Type Latch
Is Trainer Yes

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What This Butterfly Knife Trainer Really Is

This piece is a true butterfly knife trainer — a balisong built for practice, not cutting. You get the same two-handle, pivoting butterfly mechanism Texans love in a traditional butterfly knife, but with a blunt, unsharpened trainer blade and a rounded tip. No edge, no point, no confusion. It’s meant for flips, drills, and flow work until your hands know the motion cold.

Where an automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and a button, this butterfly knife trainer relies on your hands and timing. You open and close it with wrist and finger control, not a trigger. It’s closer to a butterfly-style manual folder than any OTF knife or side-opening automatic, and that’s the whole point: clean repetition without the drama or danger of a live edge.

Butterfly Knife Trainer Mechanics, Done the Right Way

The mechanism here is classic butterfly. Two channel-style steel handles rotate around pivot pins to expose or cover the blade. A latch at the base locks the handles together when you want it closed or in a specific open position. That’s the same mechanical story as a live butterfly knife — only the working end is a safe trainer blade instead of a cutting edge.

Trainer Blade vs. Live Blade

The blade on this trainer is steel, but deliberately non-lethal: plain faux edge, no sharpened bevel, and a rounded tip. It keeps the weight and balance similar to a real butterfly knife while taking the fear out of missed catches. A switchblade or automatic knife gives you instant deployment; a trainer like this gives you instant feedback. If you fumble, you’ll feel it — but you won’t slice a knuckle open.

All-Steel Build and Realistic Weight

Both blade and handles are steel with a textured, faceted finish. At 5.82 ounces, this butterfly knife trainer carries honest heft, much closer to a full-duty balisong than a flimsy toy. The 4.25-inch trainer blade and 9.5-inch overall length mimic real dimensions, so when you eventually step up to a live blade, your timing and muscle memory will already be tuned.

Where This Butterfly Knife Trainer Fits in a Texas Collection

Texas knife folks tend to own a little of everything: an automatic knife or switchblade for quick one-handed work, maybe an OTF knife for the novelty and straight-line deployment, and a few solid folders and fixed blades. A butterfly knife trainer like this fills a different slot. It’s the safe way to build skill with the balisong mechanism without bleeding all over the garage or back porch.

The rainbow steel finish makes it a natural showpiece. Spinning this trainer on a tailgate, in a shop, or out by the pit draws eyes the way a plain black OTF knife never will. It’s not pretending to be tactical. It’s honest about what it is: a practice butterfly knife that’s fun to watch and satisfying to flip.

Why Not Just Practice With a Live Blade?

Some folks learn on a sharpened butterfly knife and treat the scars as tuition. A serious Texas collector knows better. You don’t risk cutting tendons just to learn basic openings. This trainer lets you hammer new combos, aerials, and behind-the-back catches until they’re second nature. Once you’ve got that down, moving to a live switchblade, automatic, or sharp butterfly knife is a choice, not a gamble.

Texas Law, Training, and Practical Carry Context

Texas has some of the more knife-friendly laws in the country, but knowing the difference between a trainer, an automatic knife, and a true switchblade still matters. This piece is a butterfly knife trainer with no sharpened edge, built specifically for practice and flipping. That sets it apart from a live balisong, an OTF knife with a double-action mechanism, or a push-button automatic designed for cutting tasks.

A Texas buyer can keep this trainer on a workbench, in a range bag, or on a coffee table for idle-hand practice without treating it like a defensive tool. It’s not the knife you grab when you need to cut hose, open feed bags, or slice cord — that’s where your working automatic knife or stout folder comes in. This one lives in that in-between space: part skill builder, part conversation piece.

Rainbow Steel in a Texas Setting

Most Texas switchblade and automatic knife buyers lean black, stonewash, or natural handle materials. This rainbow steel butterfly knife trainer heads the other direction. The iridescent finish catches sunlight on a ranch porch, picks up neon at a Houston bar, and flashes under arena lights when you’re killing time at a rodeo. It’s a knife you practice with, but it’s also a piece you don’t mind leaving out because it looks like it belongs in a collector’s pile.

Why Collectors Separate This From Their Automatics and OTF Knives

A serious collector in Texas usually keeps categories straight. Automatic knife here, OTF knife there, traditional switchblade in its own row, butterfly knives in another. This butterfly knife trainer earns its slot because it lets you enjoy the balisong mechanism daily without the risk or maintenance that come with a sharpened edge.

Compared to an OTF knife, which uses a sliding control to launch the blade straight out the front, this trainer is all about rotation and rhythm. Compared to a side-opening automatic knife or switchblade, which focuses on speed to first cut, the trainer focuses on smoothness to first clean combo. It’s a different kind of satisfaction — less about utility, more about mastery.

Collector Value and Longevity

All-steel construction means this trainer can take years of drops, missed catches, and garage-floor landings. The channel handles resist flex, the pivot pins hold their line, and the latch gives you that familiar click every time you close up. Over time, the rainbow finish will pick up its own wear pattern, turning a flashy new knife into a seasoned practice partner with a story in every scuff.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knife Trainers

Is a butterfly knife trainer the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. A butterfly knife trainer is its own animal. Mechanically it’s a butterfly knife — two handles rotating around a pivot to open or close the blade. The “trainer” part means the blade is blunt and usually rounded at the tip. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and button to snap the blade out the side. An OTF knife fires straight out the front with a slider or switch. This trainer does none of that. It opens by hand, gives you the same feel as a live balisong, and removes the cutting edge from the equation.

Are butterfly knife trainers legal to own and practice with in Texas?

Texas law is generally friendly toward knives, and a butterfly knife trainer like this sits on the safer end of the spectrum. It’s a practice tool with no sharpened edge and a rounded tip. That said, knife laws can change and local rules can vary, especially in schools, government buildings, and certain venues. A Texas buyer should always check current state law and any local restrictions before carrying or flipping a trainer in public. Treat it with the same respect you’d give a live automatic knife or switchblade when it comes to where you use it.

Is a trainer like this worth owning if I already have automatics and OTF knives?

If you enjoy the mechanics of knives as much as the cutting, yes. Your automatic knife and OTF knife are for work and quick deployment. A butterfly knife trainer is for skill. It gives your hands something to learn and your collection something different to show — a safe way to play with motion and timing. In a Texas drawer full of sharp steel, one dedicated trainer says you’re not just buying blades; you’re building competence.

For the Texas collector who can tell an automatic knife from a switchblade and both from an OTF knife at a glance, this rainbow steel butterfly knife trainer is an easy add. It respects the mechanics, keeps the danger out of the practice, and brings a little color to a lineup that’s probably heavy on black and satin. It’s not here to replace your working blades. It’s here to keep your hands honest and your flips smooth — the kind of piece a collector reaches for when there’s time to kill and skill to sharpen, edge or no edge.