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Micro Grid Quick-Flip Keychain Butterfly Knife - Satin Steel

Price:

4.99


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Micro Grid Pocket-Flip Butterfly Knife - Satin Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/741/image_1920?unique=43e21cb

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This micro butterfly knife rides your keyring but flips like a real balisong. Stainless steel handles with a raised grid texture give honest grip, while the satin drop point blade handles everyday cuts cleanly. A simple T-latch keeps it secure until you’re ready to flip, fidget, or work. On a Texas key set, it disappears until needed, then opens with smooth, balanced motion—a small balisong for folks who know the difference between a gimmick and a tool.

4.99 4.99 USD 4.99

BF105XSNS

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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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 1.625
Overall Length (inches) 3.75
Closed Length (inches) 2
Weight (oz.) 1.28
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Satin
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Latch Type T-Latch
Is Trainer No

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What this micro butterfly knife really is

This is a true butterfly knife, just scaled down for keychain duty. Two stainless handles swing around a pivot to reveal a satin-finished drop point blade, then lock together again with a simple T-latch. It’s a classic balisong mechanism, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. You open it with your hands and a little rhythm, not a button or a spring.

On a Texas key ring, this micro butterfly knife disappears until you need it. At 2 inches closed and 1.28 ounces, it rides beside your truck key without clanking around, then flips open with clean control when there’s a package to cut, cord to trim, or just a spare moment to work through a few smooth reps.

Butterfly knife mechanics in a pocket-size Texas format

The heart of this design is simple: balisong geometry, honest materials, no gimmicks. The dual stainless handles pivot around torx-style hardware, giving that familiar butterfly knife swing even in a compact package. A T-latch at the tail keeps the handles together in pocket or on your keychain ring so it’s not flopping around when you don’t want it to.

That makes it very different from an automatic knife or an OTF knife. Those rely on internal springs to throw the blade open with a button or slider. This keychain butterfly knife uses your hands, your timing, and the clean action of those pivots. For Texas collectors, that’s half the appeal—mechanism you can feel, not just watch.

Micro balisong balance you can actually use

The raised square grid along both handles isn’t decoration. It’s traction. That texture gives your fingers something to bite into when you’re learning flips or just easing the blade open for a quick light cut. Even at 3.75 inches overall, the balance lands right where you expect on a real balisong—centered and predictable.

The satin steel finish across blade and handles keeps things low-profile and practical. No paint to chip, no loud colors to draw attention—just clean stainless that holds up to a Texas summer, a truck console, and years of tossing your keys on the counter.

Plain-edge drop point for everyday cutting

The 1.625-inch drop point blade keeps the edge profile honest: enough belly for slicing, enough straight edge for push cuts, and a tip that doesn’t feel fragile. It’s not a combat piece; it’s a working edge for everyday chores. Box tape, plastic straps, a loose thread—this butterfly knife handles the small stuff that actually shows up in a Texas day.

Keychain butterfly knife vs. automatic and OTF in real carry

For Texas buyers who know their mechanisms, this micro butterfly knife fills a different lane than an automatic knife or an OTF knife. An automatic or switchblade pushes side-open speed with a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front with a slider. This balisong gives you manual control and a fidget-friendly open-close cycle that’s half tool, half habit.

On a keychain, that matters. You’re not worried about an accidental button press or a slider catching on something. The T-latch and folded handles keep the blade tucked away until you decide otherwise. That makes this keychain butterfly knife an easy grab in pockets, purses, and center consoles across Texas, without the drama of a full-size OTF knife.

Texas carry reality for a keychain butterfly knife

Texas law has opened the door for more knife types in recent years, but serious collectors still pay attention to blade length and type. This micro butterfly knife keeps the blade short and the profile friendly, making it a more approachable carry choice than a big automatic knife or aggressive switchblade build.

As always, Texas buyers should check current state and local rules before clipping any knife to a belt or keyring, especially around schools, certain venues, or posted locations. The advantage here is subtlety: a small stainless balisong on your keys reads more like a tool than a statement piece.

How Texas collectors actually use it

Most Texas collectors won’t call this their primary working knife. They’ll keep a larger folder, OTF knife, or side-opening automatic in the truck or on the belt. This keychain butterfly knife fills a different job: constant companion, conversation starter, and backup edge that’s always there when the main blade is back on the dresser.

It’s also a training and fidget tool. The shorter blade and stainless handles let you practice openings and closings without feeling like you’re wrestling a machete at the gas pump. Around the house, at the workbench, or killing time between runs, it’s an easy piece to keep in motion.

Materials and build that earn collector respect

Stainless steel from tip to tail is the through-line here. The blade runs a clean satin finish, resisting fingerprints and hiding pocket scuffs. The matching stainless handles carry the same satin look, letting the raised grid pattern do the talking instead of logos or paint.

Torx-style pivots signal serviceability. For the Texas buyer who’s taken apart a balisong or tuned an automatic knife, that hardware says this is a real mechanism, not toy hardware. The T-latch fits that story—simple, proven, and easy to understand, especially for collectors who already own a full-size butterfly knife or two.

Specs built around true keychain carry

  • Blade length: 1.625 inches, plain-edge drop point
  • Overall length: 3.75 inches open
  • Closed length: 2 inches, true keychain size
  • Weight: 1.28 ounces, light enough for daily keys
  • Construction: all stainless steel with satin finish

Every measurement supports one mission: stay out of the way until needed, then behave like a real butterfly knife when called on.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Keychain Butterfly Knives

How is this keychain butterfly knife different from an automatic or OTF?

This is a manual balisong, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. The blade sits between two handles and rotates out on pivots when you swing the handles, then locks up as the handles come together. An automatic or traditional switchblade uses a button and a spring to snap the blade out the side, while an OTF sends the blade straight out the front on rails. With this butterfly knife, you’re in charge of every bit of the motion—that’s the point.

Is a small butterfly knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has become more knife-friendly, but the smart move is to keep an eye on current statutes and local rules. This micro butterfly knife keeps the blade short and the design low-profile, which many Texas carriers prefer for everyday use. Still, laws can change, and certain locations—schools, courthouses, posted properties—set their own limits. When in doubt, check the latest Texas code or talk to a knowledgeable local dealer before making it your daily keychain companion.

Why would a Texas collector add a micro balisong to the lineup?

Because it fills a gap. Most collections already have a proud switchblade, a hard-use automatic knife, maybe an OTF knife for the pure mechanical satisfaction. This keychain butterfly knife brings that same collector energy to a smaller stage. It’s a stainless, satin-finished balisong that actually gets carried, not just displayed. The raised grid texture, torx pivots, and clean T-latch make it a legitimate mechanism in a size you’ll use daily, not just loan out for show-and-tell.

Why this micro butterfly knife belongs on a Texas key ring

A Texan who knows their knives can spot the difference between a novelty trinket and a real piece of gear. This keychain butterfly knife lands firmly in the second camp. It’s a compact balisong built with stainless steel, solid pivots, and a plain-edge blade you’ll actually cut with, not just flip in the mirror.

It doesn’t try to replace your favorite OTF knife, automatic knife, or full-size switchblade. It complements them—living on your keys, handling the light work, and scratching that fidget itch when the day slows down. For a Texas collector, that’s the kind of honest, everyday piece that earns its spot without having to shout about it.