Skip to Content
Nebula Dragon Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - Purple/Blue

Price:

10.99


Shonen Strike Anime Replica Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - White
Shonen Strike Anime Replica Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - White
10.99 10.99
Desert Sentinel Finger-Loop Assisted Opening Knife - Desert Tan
Desert Sentinel Finger-Loop Assisted Opening Knife - Desert Tan
13.99 13.99

Nebula Claw Quick-Deploy Assisted Pocket Knife - Purple Blue

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7283/image_1920?unique=83b3915

4 sold in last 24 hours

This spring-assisted pocket knife brings a dragon’s claw to your pocket, not your wall. The Nebula Claw’s talon-style stonewash blade snaps open with a flipper and locks firm with a liner lock, giving Texas buyers fast, one-handed action without crossing into automatic or OTF territory. Purple-blue dragon scales, red pivot, and a pocket clip make it part fantasy, part work knife—ready for boxes, camp chores, and daily carry. The kind of assisted knife a Texas collector keeps within easy reach.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

PWT427PP

Not Available For Sale

2 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
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock

You May Also Like These

Nebula Claw Assisted Pocket Knife for Texas Buyers

This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade trying to be something it’s not. The Nebula Claw is a spring-assisted pocket knife with a flipper opener and a liner lock, plain and simple. You start the action with your finger, the spring takes it home, and the talon blade is ready to work. For a Texas collector who knows their mechanisms, that clarity matters more than any marketing name.

The 3-inch stonewash talon blade gives you plenty of edge without taking over your pocket. Closed, this assisted knife rides at about 4.5 inches, carried by a tip-down pocket clip that disappears in denim or work pants. It’s fantasy-forward in the art, but the mechanics are everyday real.

How This Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife Actually Works

A true automatic knife fires on a button or release—press, and the blade moves under its own power. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. A switchblade is the broader automatic family people like to argue about. This Nebula Claw doesn’t do any of that, and that’s the point.

Here, you’ve got a flipper tab anchored to a coil spring. You nudge the tab, the spring engages, and the blade snaps into lockup. It’s fast, sure, but it still starts with you. That keeps it in assisted opening territory, not automatic or OTF. For Texas buyers who want reliable speed without wandering into the wrong legal bucket, this mechanism hits the mark.

Flipper Tab and Liner Lock Details

The flipper tab is exposed when the assisted pocket knife is closed, giving you a consistent landing spot for your index finger. A light pull, and the spring takes over. Once open, the liner lock drops in behind the tang of the blade, with a visible cutout in the handle to release it. It’s a proven folding-knife system, easy to understand and easy to maintain.

Talon Blade Shape and Stonewash Finish

The talon-shaped blade curves down with a hooked tip, like a claw. That geometry bites into rope, tape, and cardboard, and gives you controlled draw cuts when you choke up near the jimping on the spine. The stonewash finish helps hide the scratches that come from real carry, not just display, so this spring-assisted knife still looks right after a month in a Texas truck console.

Texas Carry Reality: Assisted Knife vs Automatic vs OTF

Texas law has loosened up on knives over the years, but knowledgeable buyers in this state still like to know exactly what they’re carrying. This Nebula Claw is a folding, spring-assisted pocket knife—opened by a flipper, not by a button and not out the front. That separation from a true automatic knife or OTF knife is part of its appeal.

In most Texas towns, an assisted opener like this rides comfortably in a front pocket at the feed store, the office, or a Saturday gun and knife show without drawing the same kind of attention an aggressive OTF switchblade might. You still need to mind posted rules in schools, courts, and secured venues, but for day-to-day Texas carry, this assisted pocket knife stays on the practical side of the line.

Everyday Texas Tasks It Handles Well

That talon blade and spring assist make short work of warehouse tape, feed sacks, and shipping straps. Around camp, it’ll cut cord, whittle tinder, and open freeze-dried food bags without complaint. It’s not a hunting fixed blade, not a true combat piece—just an honest assisted opening pocket knife that fits what most Texans actually do with a daily carry blade.

Collector Value: Dragon Art on a Working Assisted Knife

Plenty of dragon knives are wall hangers. This one’s a pocket piece first. The purple-blue dragon scales laid across the aluminum handle give it a cosmic, fantasy look, but the frame, liner lock, and pocket clip are pure working-folder DNA. That blend is what makes it interesting in a Texas collection already crowded with black-on-black tacticals.

Where an OTF knife might be the centerpiece and a big automatic switchblade might be the conversation starter, this spring-assisted pocket knife earns its spot as the unexpected favorite user. It’s the one you hand a friend when they say, “Got something cool but not crazy?”

Why a Serious Collector Might Add It

If your case already holds side-opening automatics, a couple of OTFs, and the obligatory Italian-style switchblade, this Nebula Claw fills the assisted opening slot with more personality than another plain G10 flipper. The red pivot, purple-blue dragon art, and talon blade shape give it a distinct identity while the mechanism stays familiar. It’s a good reference point when you’re explaining to someone new how assisted knives differ from automatic and OTF designs.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Assisted Pocket Knife

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

This is a spring-assisted pocket knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not what collectors usually mean by a switchblade. You start the blade with the flipper; the spring only finishes what you begin. There’s no button-press auto and no blade shooting straight out the front. For a Texas buyer who cares about mechanisms and law, that distinction is the whole story.

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

Texas law generally treats assisted opening knives differently than true automatic switchblades and OTF knives, and the state has become far more permissive overall. That said, laws can change, and local rules or restricted locations still matter. The safe move is to confirm current Texas statutes and your local ordinances, then treat this as what it is: a folding, spring-assisted pocket knife, not an automatic or OTF. When you describe it accurately, you make better decisions about where and how you carry.

Where does this knife fit in a serious Texas collection?

This Nebula Claw belongs in the assisted opening lane, right alongside your workhorse flippers and EDC folders. It’s not trying to replace your flagship OTF knife or that one heirloom automatic switchblade. Instead, it fills the niche of a visually loud, mechanically honest assisted opener you’re not afraid to use. The dragon art draws the eye; the spring assist and liner lock keep it grounded in everyday function. That balance is exactly what many Texas collectors appreciate.

Closing: A Texas Collector’s Assisted Knife With a Story

In a Texas drawer where you’ve already sorted automatics from OTFs and switchblades from simple folders, this Nebula Claw spring-assisted pocket knife finds its place without fuss. It’s a flipper-driven, liner-lock EDC with a talon blade and cosmic dragon scales—fantasy on the handle, practical in the hand. You know what it is, what it isn’t, and where it fits in your rotation.

That’s the satisfaction here: owning a knife you can describe in one steady sentence—assisted opening, side-folding, everyday-ready—while the purple-blue dragon and red pivot do all the showing off. Very Texas: clear on the facts, comfortable with a little flair.