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Color Splash Quick-Assist Pocket Knife - Matte Black Blade

Price:

8.99


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Neon Drip Fast-Deploy Assisted Pocket Knife - Matte Black Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7051/image_1920?unique=39c0054

6 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening knife brings Texas-ready function with gallery-floor attitude. A matte black drop point blade rides on a smooth spring assist for quick, one-handed deployment, backed by a solid liner lock and pocket clip. The pop art color-splatter handle turns everyday carry into a statement piece. It’s the kind of pocket knife a Texas buyer picks on purpose—because you know the difference between a novelty and a real EDC that just happens to look loud.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

PK153610

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • 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) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 7.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 4.6
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Theme Pop Art
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Assisted Opening Pocket Knife Really Is

This is a spring assisted opening pocket knife built for everyday carry, not a novelty toy. The blade is a matte black drop point, riding on an assist that takes your thumb start and finishes the open smoothly. Liner lock keeps it honest, pocket clip keeps it handy. The color-splash pop art handle is loud, but the mechanism is pure working EDC. In Texas terms: this is a knife you actually carry, it just looks like it belongs in a downtown gallery.

Assisted Opening Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade

Texas buyers care about how a knife opens, and this one is an assisted opening knife, not a full automatic knife or classic switchblade. With an assisted opener, you start the motion with a thumb stud or flipper, and the spring assist takes it home. An automatic knife or switchblade fires from a button or release with no blade start from you. That distinction matters under the law and in the hand. This assisted knife gives you fast deployment with a little more control and a little less legal drama than a push-button automatic or OTF switchblade.

How the Assist Mechanism Works

The spring assist on this pocket knife is tuned for one-handed use without being jumpy. You nudge the flipper tab or thumb stud, the internal spring kicks in, and the matte black blade snaps into lockup. It’s quick, but it still feels like a folding knife you’re in charge of, not an OTF knife jumping straight out the front or a side-opening automatic that fires with a button press.

Liner Lock Confidence

The liner lock is visible along the handle spine, sliding into place behind the tang when the blade opens. It’s a simple, proven lock that most Texas collectors know by heart. Easy to close one-handed, reliable enough for real cutting, and familiar if you’ve owned more than one assisted opening pocket knife in your life.

Texas Carry Reality: Assisted Opening Knife in the Real World

Texas has grown friendlier toward blades over the years, but a savvy buyer still pays attention to how a knife is classified. This assisted opening knife rides in your pocket like any other folding EDC. It’s not an out-the-front (OTF) knife, and it’s not a traditional switchblade. For most Texas carriers, that makes day-to-day use simpler—less explaining, more cutting. Opening packages, breaking down cardboard, or cutting cord at the lease, this blade does the work while the color-splash handle keeps it easy to spot if you set it down.

Why Some Texans Prefer Assisted Over Automatic

Plenty of collectors here own automatic knives and the occasional OTF, but not every situation calls for a push-button switchblade. An assisted opening pocket knife gives you most of that speed with less chance of spooking folks who don’t speak knife. You start the open, the assist finishes it—clean, fast, and under control.

From Office to Tailgate

The matte black blade keeps things discreet, while the pop art handle is the tell that this isn’t a gas station throwaway. In a Texas office, it’ll still pass for a regular EDC if you’re not waving it around. At a tailgate, that color splash becomes a conversation starter when another collector spots it and realizes it’s a spring assisted knife with a little style instead of another plain black folder.

Design Story: Pop Art Meets Practical Assisted Knife

The first thing you see isn’t the mechanism—it’s the handle. Bright splashes of red, yellow, blue, green, and white run across a glossy grip like fresh paint on a wall. That pop art theme rides opposite a serious matte black blade, giving this assisted opening knife a split personality in the best way. One side says utility, the other side says you don’t buy knives just to lose them in a drawer.

Blade and Build Details for Collectors

The blade is a plain-edge drop point, matte black finished for low glare. At about 3.25 inches of cutting edge and a pocketable closed length, it lands squarely in the everyday carry pocket knife range. Jimping near the spine gives your thumb a place to settle in, and the ergonomic curve of the handle locks into the hand. Steel hardware, flipper tab, and a pocket clip back up the spring assisted mechanism with the kind of details a Texas collector notices without needing them spelled out.

Why This Piece Belongs in a Texas Collection

Every serious collection has a few knives you carry because they say something about you. This assisted opening pocket knife is one of those. Mechanically, it’s straightforward: spring assist, liner lock, pocket clip, folding design. Visually, it stands apart from the tactical crowd. If your knife roll already holds a couple of OTF knives, a proper automatic, and at least one old-school switchblade, this is the piece that adds color without lowering your standards.

Texas Context: Laws, Labels, and Real Use

Knife laws in Texas have opened up for larger blades, but terminology still matters. A lot of folks call any fast opener a switchblade, but a Texas collector knows better. This is an assisted opening pocket knife, not an OTF knife and not a push-button automatic knife. That difference can matter when you’re explaining what you’re carrying to someone who doesn’t live online reading statutes for fun. It’s a folding EDC that just happens to open fast.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

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

No. An assisted opening knife like this one needs you to start the blade moving with a thumb stud or flipper. The internal spring only helps once you’ve begun the open. A true automatic knife or switchblade fires from a button or release with the blade at rest—no initial nudge from you. An OTF knife adds a different twist, sending the blade straight out the front with a slider or button. All three are fast, but they’re not the same thing in the hand or in the eyes of the law.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is generally friendly to folding everyday carry knives, including assisted opening designs, especially at pocketable sizes like this one. The big dividing lines tend to be blade length and how the knife is used, not whether it’s spring assisted versus manual. That said, laws can change and local rules vary, so a serious Texas buyer checks current state and local regulations rather than relying on someone else’s memory.

Why would a Texas collector choose this assisted knife over a full automatic?

A lot of collectors here already own at least one automatic knife or OTF, but those don’t always fit every pocket or every room. An assisted opening knife like this gives you similar speed with more social cover. Mechanically, it’s simpler to maintain than some OTF switchblades, and visually, that pop art handle makes it a standout piece instead of just another black tactical. For many Texas buyers, this is the knife you actually carry while the rare switchblades and automatics stay in the safe.

For the Texas Buyer Who Knows Their Knives

This piece is for the person who can explain the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF switchblade without reaching for a search bar. You want a pocket knife that opens fast, rides easy, and says something about your taste when you set it down. The matte black blade covers the work, the color-splash handle covers the style, and the spring assist bridges the gap between slow folders and full automatics. In a state full of folks who carry every day, this is the kind of assisted knife that tells other Texans you know what you’re doing.