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Blackout Strike Stealth OTF Knife - G10 Black

Price:

47.99


Shadow Vector Double-Edge OTF Knife - G10 Black
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Midnight Breach Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - G10 Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/6005/image_1920?unique=9ccc740

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This OTF knife is built for Texans who like their gear fast, quiet, and dead certain. A double‑action thumb slide snaps the D2 tanto blade straight out the front, then buries it just as clean. Textured G10 scales and a deep‑carry clip keep it locked to your hand and your pocket. It rides light enough for everyday Texas carry, but the glass breaker and piercing tip remind you it’s a serious tactical tool for folks who know their mechanisms.

47.99 47.99 USD 47.99

SB319LBKTP

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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
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.75
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 4.64
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material D2
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material G10
Theme Tactical
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This OTF Knife Really Is — No Guesswork Required

The Stealth Tanto Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - G10 Black is exactly what it says it is: a true double-action out-the-front knife, not a side-opening automatic, not an assisted folder someone decided to call a switchblade. You push the thumb slide forward and the D2 tanto blade drives straight out the front. Pull it back and that same mechanism hauls the blade home. Simple, fast, and honest about what it does.

For Texas buyers, that clarity matters. When you pick up this OTF knife, you’re holding a purpose-built tactical tool that deploys in a straight line, locks solid, and disappears back into the handle with the same control. No flipper tab, no spring-loaded side swing, no marketing fog—just a clean OTF mechanism that does its job every time.

Inside the Mechanism: How This OTF Knife Works

Mechanically, this knife is a double-action OTF through and through. The side-mounted thumb slide rides in a machined track along the G10 handle. As you push forward, it tensions an internal spring and cams a carrier that drives the D2 blade straight out. Hit the end of the track and the blade locks. Pull the slide back and the mechanism reverses, pulling the blade back into the handle under control—not just letting it fall.

This is where an OTF knife parts ways with a typical automatic knife or switchblade. A side-opening automatic fires from a pivot, swinging the blade out like a standard folder under spring pressure. Most folks call that a switchblade, and in casual talk they’re not wrong. But an OTF like this doesn’t swing; it travels on a rail. The straight-line deployment changes how it carries, how it pierces, and how it feels when you’re working around tight spaces or gloves.

D2 Steel and the American Tanto Edge

The blade here is D2, a tool steel Texans trust for edge retention and toughness. It takes a working edge and holds it through cardboard, rope, and the usual farm, shop, or range chores. The American tanto profile gives you two working zones: a fine tip for controlled piercing and a secondary straight edge for power cuts. On a tactical OTF knife, that geometry matters. When the blade comes straight out of the handle, that reinforced tip is the first thing to meet the world.

G10 Grip and Everyday Control

The handle is squared, matte, and made from G10—lightweight, rigid, and grippy without chewing your hands up. Texturing along the flats keeps the knife anchored whether you’re in a Houston summer or a Panhandle winter. With the slide low on the body and the pocket clip on the reverse, this OTF knife settles into your pocket like a regular EDC, not a novelty piece.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade in Plain Texas English

Here’s where a lot of sites lose Texans: they throw “automatic knife,” “OTF knife,” and “switchblade” into one pot and stir. This knife earns its keep by being clear about what lane it runs in.

  • OTF knife: Blade comes straight out the front of the handle. That’s this knife. Double-action, thumb-slide driven, linear deployment.
  • Automatic knife: Usually side-opening. You hit a button or switch and the blade swings out from a pivot under spring tension.
  • Switchblade: The older catch-all term, mostly for side-opening automatics. Some folks use it for any automatic knife, but mechanically it’s not the same as an OTF.

This piece sits squarely in the OTF category, but a Texas buyer comparing automatic knives and switchblades will find the same kind of instant, powered deployment here—just in a straight line instead of a swing.

Texas Carry Reality for an OTF Knife

Texas has come a long way on blade laws. Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades are no longer singled out the way they used to be, and OTF knives ride in that same boat. The bigger concern today is blade length and location, not whether it’s an OTF, a side-opening automatic knife, or an old-school switchblade.

This OTF knife runs a 4-inch blade, which keeps it under the 5.5-inch threshold that triggers the “location-restricted” rules for bigger blades. That makes it a practical choice for everyday Texas carry in most normal places—truck, ranch, jobsite, or out running errands. You’re still responsible for knowing where you are and what applies, but the size and design here are aimed squarely at realistic Texas EDC use, not just drawer-queen collecting.

How It Rides in a Texas Pocket

At 9.75 inches open and 5.75 inches closed, this OTF knife gives you real working length without feeling like a sword hilt sticking out of your jeans. The deep-carry clip tucks it down in the pocket, black-on-black against denim or work pants. At 4.64 ounces, it’s substantial enough to feel like a tool, not a toy, but light enough you’ll forget it’s there until you need it.

For Texans who split their time between the city and the lease, that balance matters. You can carry it to work, then use the same knife to cut cord, open feed bags, or handle campsite chores when you head out of town.

Collector Value: Why This OTF Belongs in a Texas Drawer

A serious Texas knife collector doesn’t need another generic black knife. What they appreciate is when the details line up: true double-action OTF mechanism, D2 steel, G10 scales, a purposeful tanto profile, and a clean, all-black finish that doesn’t shout for attention. This OTF knife checks all those boxes without pretending to be something it’s not.

For collectors who already own side-opening automatic knives and traditional switchblades, this piece fills a different slot. It’s the modern tactical OTF you actually carry, not the fragile showpiece you only bring out to impress someone. The glass breaker pommel, the torx construction, the lanyard option—these are working details that make it feel at home in Texas trucks, barns, and range bags.

Built for Use, Not Just Display

The all-matte, all-black finish keeps reflections down and wear marks honest. You’ll see this OTF knife age with you: edge rehoned, clips scuffed, G10 polished smooth where your hand naturally lands. That kind of patina reads different in Texas. It says the knife wasn’t just bought; it was used, and used on purpose.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

Is an OTF knife like this the same as an automatic knife or switchblade?

Mechanically, no. This is a true out-the-front knife: the blade runs in a channel and deploys in a straight line using a thumb slide. A typical automatic knife—what most people call a switchblade—swings open from the side on a pivot. Under Texas law, OTF knives, automatic knives, and switchblades now share similar treatment, but from a collector’s standpoint they’re three distinct mechanisms. This piece lives firmly in the OTF lane.

Is this OTF knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades, including OTF knives, are generally legal to own and carry. The key limit most Texans need to watch is blade length and certain restricted locations. With a 4-inch blade, this OTF knife sits under the 5.5-inch mark that triggers “location-restricted” rules for larger blades. That makes it a practical everyday option for most Texas environments, but you should always verify current statutes and local rules before you clip it on.

Why choose this OTF knife over another tactical folder?

If you already own good folders and a few automatic knives, this OTF adds something different to the lineup: straight-line, double-action deployment with a reinforced tanto tip and D2 steel in a low-profile, all-black package. It’s faster to access than a standard flipper, rides flatter than many thick tactical folders, and gives you that distinct OTF experience without sacrificing real-world Texas utility. In a drawer full of similar blades, this one earns its spot by doing one thing very well—clean, confident, out-the-front deployment on demand.

In the end, this OTF knife is for the Texan who already knows their way around automatic knives and switchblades and wants a working out-the-front to round out the stable. It’s built to ride in a Texas pocket, work hard without drama, and quietly tell anyone paying attention that you didn’t buy the first thing labeled “tactical.” You bought the right mechanism for the job and let the knife speak for itself.