Skip to Content
Monochrome Mirror Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Chrome

Price:

7.99


Skyfire Dragon Spring Assisted Knife - Rainbow Finish
Skyfire Dragon Spring Assisted Knife - Rainbow Finish
22.99 22.99
Night Claw Iridescent Talon Spring-Assisted Karambit - Rainbow/Black
Night Claw Iridescent Talon Spring-Assisted Karambit - Rainbow/Black
7.99 7.99

Mirrorline Velocity Spring Assisted Knife - Chrome

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2041/image_1920?unique=e28674a

5 sold in last 24 hours

This spring assisted knife is all business in bright chrome. Hit the flipper and the 3.5-inch clip-point blade snaps out with clean, controlled speed, then locks up solid with a liner lock. Stainless steel handle, jimped spine, and pocket clip make it an easy everyday carry across Texas. It’s not an automatic knife or an OTF switchblade—just a fast, reliable assisted opener for folks who know the difference and want a sleek piece that works as sharp as it looks.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

A101CH

Not Available For Sale

3 people are viewing this right now

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Chrome
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Chrome
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

You May Also Like These

What This Spring Assisted Knife Really Is

This is a spring assisted knife built for clean, quick work, not drama. You start the motion with the flipper or thumb stud, the internal spring takes over, and the blade finishes with a crisp, confident snap. That makes it an assisted opening knife, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. The difference matters to Texas buyers who know their gear and their laws.

Here you’re looking at a full stainless build with a mirror-bright chrome finish from end to end. Blade and handle match in a true monochrome look, so it carries like a modern industrial tool, not a toy. At 4.75 inches closed and 8.25 inches open, it hits that sweet spot between compact and full-hand secure—right where a good everyday spring assisted knife ought to sit.

Spring Assisted Knife Mechanism vs Automatic and OTF

A lot of sites muddle the language, calling every fast-folder a switchblade. This one isn’t. A switchblade or automatic knife opens at the push of a button with the spring doing all the work. An OTF knife—out-the-front—fires the blade straight out of the handle, usually with a slider or button. This piece is a side-opening spring assisted knife: you begin the opening, the knife finishes the job.

Mechanically, that means you rely on the thumb stud or the flipper tab to get the blade moving. Once you break the detent, the assist spring drives that 3.5-inch clip-point into locked position. The liner lock underneath snaps in behind the tang, giving you a solid, familiar lockup. You feel the difference in hand: faster than a plain manual folder, more deliberate than an automatic switchblade, and far simpler internally than most OTF knives.

Clip-Point Blade and Stainless Steel Build

The blade is a classic clip point in stainless steel—plain edge, no serrations, no tricks. Stainless gives you easy maintenance and decent toughness for everyday Texas use: opening feed bags, breaking down boxes, trimming cord, or slicing tape in the shop. The bright chrome finish ties into the handle for that true monochrome mirror look that caught your eye in the first place.

The handle stays in the same material family: stainless steel with matching chrome finish. Diagonal grooves and three circular cutouts lighten the frame and give you a touch of grip and style without trying too hard. Exposed liners and jimping along the spine give your thumb a positive spot when you bear down on a cut.

Deployment, Lockup, and Everyday Control

This spring assisted knife gives you two ways to get moving: thumb stud or flipper. Most Texas buyers end up favoring the flipper, because once it’s tuned, that little tab brings the blade out fast and forms a finger guard when the knife is open. The liner lock is simple, proven, and easy to close one-handed.

A pocket clip on the reverse side keeps it ride-ready. Closed, it disappears into a front pocket, a work vest, or a truck organizer. Open, you get full four-finger purchase on the 8.25-inch overall length, so you’re not fighting the knife to do simple jobs. The balance of weight-forward stainless steel and slim profile makes it feel more precise than the price point would suggest.

Texas Carry Reality: Spring Assisted Knife in a Lone Star World

In Texas, the law cares more about blade length and location than whether it’s an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a spring assisted knife like this one. With a 3.5-inch blade, this assisted opener sits under the 5.5-inch "location-restricted knife" threshold, which keeps it flexible for most day-to-day carry situations in the state.

Because it’s not an automatic switchblade and not an OTF knife, you also sidestep some of the baggage and confusion those terms still carry for folks who don’t keep up with how Texas law has changed. To most law-abiding adults here, this reads as a fast-opening pocketknife: a tool you clip in your jeans before you head to work, not a conversation-starter at a traffic stop.

Where This Knife Belongs in Texas Life

This spring assisted knife fits right into the rhythm of Texas living. It’s the piece you flick open to cut twine out by the barn, pop open feed bags in a stock trailer, or trim zip ties on a wiring job. In town, it’ll be your box opener, tape cutter, and loaner blade when somebody says, "Anybody got a knife?"

The full-chrome styling means it also looks at home clipped to slacks or tucked inside a briefcase organizer. It reads more like a polished tool than a tactical threat, which is exactly what some Texas buyers want—usable speed, low drama.

Collector Value: Where It Sits Beside Your Automatics and OTFs

If you already own an automatic knife or a couple of OTF knives, this spring assisted knife doesn’t try to replace them—it fills the gap. It gives you fast deployment in a simpler mechanism, at a price where you don’t mind putting it to work. The monochrome chrome finish also makes it a visual standout in a drawer full of black G10 and coated blades.

For a Texas collector, this can be your "clean stainless" category piece: all metal, all silver, simple clip point, assisted action, and a look that catches light the moment you open the case. It shows newcomers the difference between an assisted opener, a button-fired switchblade, and an OTF knife without you having to launch into a lecture. One flick and they feel it.

Why This Piece Earns a Slot

It earns its place by being honest about what it is: a spring assisted EDC knife with a modern chrome aesthetic and straightforward mechanics. Not a novelty, not a safe queen—just a reliable side-opener you can use hard without babying. In a Texas collection built on variety of mechanisms and styles, that straightforwardness is its own kind of value.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Knives

How is a spring assisted knife different from an automatic or OTF?

With a spring assisted knife, you start the opening—usually with a thumb stud or flipper—and the assist spring finishes it. An automatic knife or switchblade opens when you hit a button or actuator; the spring does all the work. An OTF knife pushes the blade straight out the front of the handle rather than swinging out from the side. This piece is a side-opening assisted knife, not an automatic switchblade and not an OTF.

Is a spring assisted knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

For most adults in Texas, yes. Current Texas law focuses on blade length and certain restricted locations. This spring assisted knife has a 3.5-inch blade, which is under the 5.5-inch threshold that defines a "location-restricted knife." That means, for a typical adult, it’s treated as a standard pocketknife in most everyday settings. As always, check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules that might apply to your specific situation.

Why would a collector choose this over another budget assisted knife?

Because it brings a clean, unified theme: full-chrome monochrome look, honest stainless build, and a true assisted mechanism that runs the way it’s supposed to. It doesn’t pretend to be an automatic or an OTF, and the bright mirror finish gives it presence in a case or on a table. For a Texas collector who likes to show the full range of modern folders—manual, assisted, automatic, OTF—this knife covers the assisted slot with style.

In the end, this spring assisted knife is for the Texan who knows what they’re carrying and why. You get a fast-opening, side-folding blade with a clear mechanical story, a lawful everyday blade length, and a chrome-finished look that stands out without shouting. It’s the kind of piece you can clip in your pocket at sunup, use hard all day, and still be glad to drop into the collection drawer at night—because it does exactly what a good assisted knife in Texas ought to do, no more and no less.