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Boardroom Cleaver Assisted Pocket Knife - Wood Handle

Price:

8.99


HERITAGE ASSIT OPEN
HERITAGE ASSIT OPEN
9.99 9.99
Iridescent Rescue Edge Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Titanium
Iridescent Rescue Edge Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Titanium
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Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife - Reddish Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8034/image_1920?unique=9817b78

11 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening knife brings a cleaver-style blade into true everyday carry territory. The Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife pairs a broad satin-finished cleaver blade with a polished steel frame, warm reddish wood handle inlay, and a solid frame lock. Spring-assisted deployment snaps it open fast without being a switchblade or OTF knife, making it a clean, pocketable choice for Texas buyers who like a little kitchen-style utility in their daily carry.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

ZK216PW

Not Available For Sale

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 2.75
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Cleaver
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Gloss
Handle Material Wood
Theme None
Safety Frame lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Frame lock

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Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife – What It Really Is

The Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife is a spring-assisted folding pocket knife built around a cleaver-style blade and a polished wood-and-steel handle. It’s not an automatic knife in the switchblade sense, and it’s not an OTF knife that shoots straight out the front. This is a side-opening assisted folder: you start the motion with the thumb stud, and the spring does the rest, locking up with a solid frame lock.

At 8 inches overall with a 2.75-inch satin cleaver blade, it sits right in that sweet spot for everyday carry. The broad, straight edge gives you kitchen-knife-style cutting in a pocket-sized package, while the warm reddish wood inlay keeps it looking more gentleman than garage.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics: How This One Works

Mechanically, this piece is a classic assisted opening knife. The blade rides in the handle like any folding pocket knife. You nudge the thumb stud, and a torsion spring takes over, snapping the cleaver blade into the open position where the frame lock engages. It’s quick, predictable, and a world apart from a true automatic knife or a push-button switchblade.

Assisted vs. Automatic vs. OTF in Plain Texas English

Here’s the clean distinction. An assisted opening knife like this Modern Butcher needs you to start the blade with your thumb. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or lever to fire the blade from fully closed to fully open on its own. An OTF knife is a specific kind of automatic where the blade runs straight out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. This cleaver is firmly in the assisted camp: side-opening, user-started, spring-finished.

Frame Lock Confidence

The built-in frame lock uses part of the handle frame itself to lock the blade. Once that broad cleaver snaps open, the lock bar steps in behind the tang and holds it there. No wiggle, no guesswork. For a Texas buyer who’s actually going to cut with this knife, that lockup matters more than any marketing term.

Why an Assisted Opening Cleaver Blade Belongs in Texas Pockets

Texas days don’t all look the same. Some start with feed sacks and end with takeout. A cleaver-style assisted opening knife fits right into that mix. The straight edge and tall blade make short work of boxes, nylon straps, and quick food prep when you’re away from the kitchen. It’s the same basic geometry you trust on a cutting board, scaled down and tuned for your pocket.

The pocket clip keeps it riding ready in jeans or work pants, and that lanyard hole at the butt lets you tether it to a pack or hang it in the truck. When you reach for this knife, you’re not digging through a drawer of tactical drama – you’re pulling a simple cleaver-shaped EDC that opens fast, locks solid, and looks right at home in Texas hands.

Texas Carry Reality for Assisted Opening Knives

Under current Texas law, this assisted opening knife is treated as a standard folding knife, not as a prohibited switchblade or restricted OTF automatic. There’s no push-button automatic action here, just assisted opening. As always, Texans should check the latest state and local rules, but as a general carry piece, this type of assisted folder stays on the practical side of the law in most everyday situations.

Design Details Texas Collectors Notice

Collectors in Texas don’t just buy by the spec sheet. They buy by the story the knife tells in the hand. This assisted opening cleaver leans on a few clear notes:

  • Cleaver profile: That tall, straight-edge blade with a spine cutout reads modern utility at a glance.
  • Wood inlay handle: The reddish-brown scales soften the steel, giving it a gentleman’s EDC feel instead of pure tactical.
  • Satin steel finish: The blade and frame reflect light cleanly, nodding to kitchen tools and classic folding knives alike.
  • Functional hardware: Torx fasteners, pocket clip, and lanyard hole keep it firmly in the working-knife category.

In a drawer full of black G10 and stonewashed tantos, this assisted opening knife stands out for being quietly different: a kitchen-inspired cleaver shape, honest steel, real wood, and a mechanism that knows its lane.

Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, or Assisted Folder? Getting the Type Right

This site draws a hard line between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, a switchblade, and an assisted opener because Texas collectors care about those distinctions. The Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife is not a switchblade, even if it feels quick in the hand. It does not fire from a button, and it does not drive the blade out the front of the handle like an OTF knife.

Instead, it’s a spring-assisted folding pocket knife. You initiate the motion; the spring finishes it. That difference matters to Texas buyers who’ve been burned by sellers calling every fast-opening blade a “switchblade.” Here, the language matches the hardware: assisted opening, side-folding, frame-lock cleaver.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this assisted opening knife basically a switchblade or OTF?

No. An assisted opening knife like this cleaver still needs your thumb on the stud to start the blade moving. A switchblade or automatic knife uses a button or lever to fire the blade open from completely closed. An OTF knife goes a step further and sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. This Modern Butcher is a side-opening assisted folder – fast, but mechanically different from both an automatic knife and an OTF switchblade.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, assisted opening knives are generally treated like regular folding knives rather than prohibited switchblades or restricted OTF automatics. There’s no push-button automatic release here, just an assisted mechanism. That said, Texas buyers should always confirm the latest statutes and remember that certain locations and age limits can still apply. As a practical everyday carry, this assisted cleaver is built with Texas pocket use in mind.

Where does this knife fit in a serious Texas collection?

For a Texas collector who already owns a few automatic knives, maybe a dedicated OTF, and a lineup of traditional folders, this piece fills a specific gap: a cleaver-style assisted opening knife with gentleman styling. It’s the kind of everyday carry you clip on when you want cutting performance closer to a small kitchen knife, but you still want the speed of an assisted folder and the warmth of wood scales. It doesn’t try to replace your high-end switchblade – it complements it by handling the daily work without looking out of place at the dinner table or on a ranch porch.

Texas Collector Identity: Why This Assisted Cleaver Belongs With You

Owning the Modern Butcher EDC Assisted Knife says a couple of quiet things about you as a Texas knife buyer. You know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, a switchblade, and an assisted opener – and you actually care. You want a cleaver-style blade that feels familiar from the kitchen, but you want it tuned for pocket carry with a spring-assisted mechanism and a real frame lock.

In a state where blades are part of daily life, this assisted opening knife fits right in: polished enough to gift, practical enough to ride in work jeans, and honest enough in its mechanism to earn a place alongside your more exotic automatics. It’s a working Texan’s answer to the question, “What if my favorite kitchen cleaver could ride in my pocket?”