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Damascus Shadow Assisted Opening Knife - Black Wood

Price:

15.99


GUN ASST KNF USA FLAG
GUN ASST KNF USA FLAG
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USA PUNISH ASST KNF BL
USA PUNISH ASST KNF BL
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Midnight Damascus Flipper Assisted Opening Knife - Black Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8016/image_1920?unique=f37f9a9

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This assisted opening knife brings Damascus‑style attitude to a slim, all‑black Texas pocket carry. A 3.75" spear point stainless blade rides on a spring‑assisted flipper, locking up with a liner lock for fast, controlled deployment. The 4.25" wood handle fills the hand without bulk, with jimping, pocket clip, and lanyard hole ready for real EDC use. For Texans who know the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and a switchblade, this is the quiet worker that earns its spot in the rotation.

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PWT380BK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.25
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Wood
Theme Damascus
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Assisted Opening Knife Really Is

This Midnight Damascus Flipper Assisted Opening Knife is a modern assisted opening knife built for everyday Texas pocket carry. It’s a side-opening folding knife with a spring-assisted mechanism, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. You start the motion with the flipper tab, the spring finishes it, and a liner lock holds that 3.75" spear point blade solidly in place.

For Texas buyers who’ve seen every folder called a “switchblade,” this piece does its job honestly. It’s an assisted opener: manual start, spring help, straightforward lockup. No button, no out-the-front track, just a clean, fast one-hand deployment that works as hard as you do.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics for Texas Carriers

The heart of this knife is its assisted opening system. Press down on the flipper tab and the internal spring brings the stainless steel blade the rest of the way. That’s the key distinction from a true automatic knife, where a button or switch drives the whole deployment, and from an OTF knife, where the blade rides straight out the front on a track.

Here, you’ve got a side-opening folding blade on a pivot with a liner lock. The assisted opener gives you speed and control without the jumpy snap some switchblade designs have. That’s exactly what many Texas carriers want: something that opens quick, feels predictable, and goes back in the pocket just as smoothly.

Blade, Steel, and Everyday Work

The 3.75" spear point blade is stainless steel with a dark, tactical finish. It’s a plain edge made for slicing, not serrated show. The profile gives you a strong tip without being fragile, and enough belly for cardboard, package straps, and ranch or shop chores.

The so-called Damascus theme is visual here—etched pattern and styling—rather than a layered forge-welded steel billet. For a Texas buyer, that means you’re getting the look of Damascus patterning with the easy-care reality of stainless steel. It sharpens up fine, shrugs off pocket sweat, and doesn’t demand babying.

Handle, Grip, and Pocket Reality

Closed, this assisted opening knife runs about 4.25", with a slim wood handle that carries flat and light. The matte wood scales give you a warm, natural feel in hand, and the subtle finger grooves help the grip lock in without turning the handle into a tactical caricature.

Jimping along the spine gives your thumb a natural rest, especially on finer cuts. A pocket clip keeps it riding where you can reach it, and the lanyard hole lets you tie on a bit of cord or leather if you want a more secure draw. It’s the sort of understated setup a Texas collector who actually uses their knives can appreciate.

Automatic Knife vs OTF vs Assisted: Where This One Belongs

Texas buyers who collect across automatic knives, OTF knives, and classic switchblades don’t like fuzzy terms, and neither do we. Let’s put this assisted opening knife in its proper lane.

  • Assisted opening knife (this knife): Side-opening folder. You nudge the flipper, spring helps it finish, liner lock secures it. No button, no out-the-front track.
  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Typically side-opening with a button or switch that drives the blade out under full spring power. Many Texans use "automatic knife" and "switchblade" interchangeably for that style.
  • OTF knife: Blade runs straight out the front of the handle on rails or a channel, usually driven by a thumb slide or switch. Whole different mechanic from a side-opener.

This black Damascus-themed folder gives you assisted speed in a side-opening platform, not the full auto punch of a traditional switchblade or the inline travel of an OTF knife. If you like owning all three, this one fills the assisted slot in the collection without any confusion.

Texas Carry and Use: How This Knife Fits Your Day

In Texas, a knife like this is at home in a lot of pockets. At 8.75" overall when open, it’s big enough to feel like a real tool but not so oversized that it prints hard in jeans or work pants. The assisted opening makes it easy to draw, pop open with the flipper, cut your line or tape or zip tie, and slide it back into the pocket clip without drama.

For a Houston commuter, it’s a discreet EDC that happens to have a more tactical profile. For a Panhandle ranch hand, it’s the knife that breaks down feed bags and cuts cord. For a Hill Country weekend, it’s the one you clip into your shorts and forget until it’s time to cut sausage, rope, or packaging. It’s an assisted opening knife first and foremost, not a conversation piece you’re scared to scratch.

Texas Law Context for This Assisted Opener

Texas law has eased up over the years, especially with what the state calls "location-restricted knives." While automatic knives and switchblades used to be a flash point, modern Texas statutes focus more on blade length and certain sensitive locations than on whether a folding knife is assisted or automatic. An assisted opening knife like this sits in a more comfortable zone for many carriers who just want a fast one-hand folder without worrying about terms like "switchblade."

That said, serious collectors and everyday carriers alike should always check the current Texas Penal Code and any local rules where they live or work. Laws change, and it’s on the owner to stay current.

Why a Texas Collector Makes Room for This Assisted Opening Knife

A Texas collector doesn’t need another drawer filler. This assisted opening knife earns its keep by combining a few specific things: the tactical all-black look, the Damascus-style theme, the practical flipper-assisted deployment, and the wood handle that feels more like a tool than a toy.

It’s priced and built for use, which makes it an easy "go ahead and carry it" choice next to the high-dollar automatic knife or rare OTF you’d rather keep in the safe. The WARTECH branding tells you it’s built as a working assisted opener, not a custom showpiece you’re scared to bang around.

For the collector who likes to explain the difference between an assisted opening knife, a true automatic switchblade, and a purpose-built OTF knife, this is a clean example of the assisted category. Simple liner lock, spring assist, flipper tab, pocket clip—nothing extra, nothing missing.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is an assisted opening knife the same as an automatic or OTF knife?

No. An assisted opening knife like this one needs you to start the blade with the flipper; the spring only helps finish the motion. A traditional automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or switch to drive the blade from fully closed to fully open on its own. An OTF knife runs the blade out the front of the handle along a track, usually with a thumb slide. All three can ride in a Texas pocket, but they’re different mechanisms and different collecting lanes.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

As of recent Texas law, assisted opening knives are generally treated like other folding knives, not singled out the way switchblades once were. The state cares more about blade length and restricted locations than whether the folder is assisted. Still, every Texas buyer should confirm the latest Texas statutes and any local ordinances, especially if they’re also carrying automatic knives, OTF knives, or larger blades that may fall under "location-restricted" rules.

Why would a Texas collector choose this assisted opener over another knife?

A Texas collector reaches for this knife when they want an everyday cutter that looks tactical, nods to Damascus patterning, and deploys quickly—without stepping into full automatic knife territory. It’s slim, it’s all black, it has a real wood handle instead of plastic, and the price point makes it a guilt-free user. In a collection that already has OTF knives, automatic switchblades, and traditional slipjoints, this assisted opening knife fills that "carry it, don’t baby it" slot.

In the end, this Midnight Damascus Flipper Assisted Opening Knife is the kind of straightforward Texas pocket knife a collector respects: it says what it is, opens how it should, and doesn’t pretend to be an OTF knife or a switchblade. If you like your drawers organized by mechanism—assisted openers here, automatic knives there, OTFs and fixed blades in their own rows—this one has a clear spot waiting with its own story to tell.