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Carbon Weave Slide-Action OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber

Price:

39.99


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Midnight Weave Slide-Action OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5122/image_1920?unique=0037f54

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This out-the-front knife runs a clean slide-action that snaps a spear point blade into play and tucks it away just as fast. Matte black hardware, carbon fiber weave inlays, and a glass-breaker pommel give it modern Texas EDC credibility. Pocket clip for jeans, deluxe sheath for the truck safe. For the buyer who knows the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF, and a switchblade, this one lands square in the OTF lane with authority.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB192CFDP

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

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Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Deluxe Sheath

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What This OTF Knife Really Is: Straight Talk for Texas Buyers

This is a true out-the-front knife, built around a slide-action that sends a spear point blade straight out the nose of the handle and pulls it back in just as clean. It’s not a side-opening automatic knife, and it’s not a loose catch‑all “switchblade” label. Mechanically, this Midnight Weave is a slide-driven OTF knife with single-action deployment and a tight, confident track.

Texas buyers who know their steel look for that distinction immediately. An automatic knife can open from the side, an OTF knife like this one sends the blade forward in line with the handle, and “switchblade” is just the old umbrella term that gets thrown around. This piece earns its keep by being unapologetically OTF, with a mechanism you can feel and hear every time it locks out.

OTF Knife Mechanism: Slide-Action You Can Feel Working

Start with the heart of it: the slide. The top-mounted actuator rides in a precise channel along the spine of the handle. Push it forward, and the internal spring drives the spear point blade down a rail system, out the front, and into lockup with a sharp, satisfying click. Pull it back and the same system draws the blade home, fully enclosed inside the handle until you call on it again.

Single-Action, Not a Fidget Toy

This OTF knife is single-action, meaning the spring does the heavy lifting in one direction, not both. You’re getting fast, decisive deployment and manual return through the slide. It’s built to work when you need it, not to be cycled mindlessly all afternoon. That keeps the internal parts honest and the track tight—exactly what a serious Texas collector expects from a working automatic knife.

Blade and Hardware Built for Use, Not Display

The matte-finished spear point blade splits the difference between piercing control and everyday slicing. A plain edge keeps it easy to maintain with a stone or ceramic rod in the garage. Torx hardware holds the frame together in a way any mechanically-minded Texan will appreciate, and the glass-breaker pommel at the tail end gives you one more functional reason to keep it close in the truck, on the ranch, or in town.

Carbon Fiber and Matte Black: Modern Tactical Without the Flash

The first thing that catches your eye is the carbon fiber weave. Not printed, not fake—actual weave inlays set into a matte black frame. The pattern picks up light the way a street at dusk does: subtle, not screaming for attention. For a Texas buyer, that matters. This isn’t a showy switchblade from a flea market; it’s a modern tactical OTF knife that looks right next to a blacked-out pistol or a clean EDC rotation.

Grip, Profile, and Pocket Reality

The handle runs straight and true, with just enough milling to give your fingers purchase without grabbing your pocket on the draw. The spine-mounted pocket clip carries deep and discreet, so this automatic knife disappears against a belt or the edge of a front pocket. When it comes out, the two-tone blade and carbon panels read as deliberate, not accidental—exactly the kind of detail a collector notices at arm’s length.

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

Texas collectors care about terms because terms point to mechanics. Here’s where this knife lands:

  • OTF knife: Blade travels straight out the front of the handle on a guided track. That’s this knife.
  • Automatic knife: Any knife where a spring opens the blade when you hit a button, slide, or lever. This OTF is a specific type of automatic knife.
  • Switchblade: Old-school catch-all word that people use for both side-opening automatics and OTF knives. Accurate enough at a bar top, too sloppy for a Texas collection label.

So when you log this one in your inventory, call it what it is: a slide-action OTF automatic, spear point, carbon fiber, single-action. That tells another Texas collector everything they need to know in one line.

Texas Law, Texas Carry, and This OTF Knife

Texas used to have fussy restrictions on automatic knives and what folks called switchblades. Those are gone now. Under current Texas law, an automatic knife—including an OTF knife like this one—is legal to own and carry, with just a few location restrictions and common-sense limits. The law doesn’t care whether your automatic opens from the side or out the front; it treats them the same.

Where the difference shows up is in how you carry and use it. An OTF knife shines in straight-line deployment from pocket to work: pull, orient, slide, and the blade is already aligned with your grip. Whether you’re cutting hose in the barn, breaking down boxes in a Houston warehouse, or keeping a capable tool in the console on I‑35, this format fits the Texas way of doing things—fast, simple, and reliable.

Collector Value: Why This OTF Belongs in a Texas Drawer

In a serious collection, not every piece has to be rare. Some earn their slot because they represent a mechanism or style done right at a working man’s level. This Midnight Weave OTF knife is that kind of piece. It hits four things that make Texas collectors nod:

  • Clear identity: It is unapologetically an OTF automatic, not a vague “tactical switchblade.”
  • Recognizable materials: True carbon fiber weave over a matte black frame gives it a modern signature.
  • Honest mechanism: Slide-action, single-action OTF with snappy deployment and clean retraction.
  • Real-world carry: Pocket clip, sheath, glass-breaker, and a blade shape made to work.

If you’re building out a Texas-focused automatic knife lineup—side-openers, OTF knives, and a few oddball switchblade patterns—this one sits comfortably in the OTF column, holding its own next to pricier pieces without pretending to be something it’s not.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

Is this an OTF knife, an automatic knife, or a switchblade?

Mechanically, it’s an OTF knife—out-the-front, slide-actuated, with a spear point blade running on an internal track. Because a spring drives the blade into lockup when you hit the slide, it’s also an automatic knife. Folks will casually call it a switchblade, but if you’re talking to another Texas collector, “slide-action OTF automatic” is the accurate way to introduce it.

Is an OTF knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF knives and what people call switchblades—are legal for adult Texans to own and carry, with specific location-based restrictions (like certain government buildings and secure areas) still applying. The law does not split hairs between side-opening automatics and OTF knives, so this piece rides in the same legal lane as a standard automatic knife. As always, it’s on you to stay current with any local updates and respect posted restrictions.

Where does this fit in a collection that already has automatic knives?

If your drawer is heavy on side-opening automatics, this OTF knife fills the straight-line deployment slot. The carbon fiber weave and matte black finish give it a modern tactical look that pairs well with blacked-out pistols and contemporary EDC gear. It’s the piece you hand a fellow Texan when they ask about the difference between an automatic knife and an OTF—they’ll feel it the first time they run the slide and hear that firm click into lockup.

In the end, this Midnight Weave Slide-Action OTF Knife feels right at home in Texas: straightforward, mechanically honest, and built to work. If you’re the kind of buyer who can explain the difference between an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic, and an old-school switchblade without raising your voice, this one will fit your pocket—and your collection—just fine.