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Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife - Pink ABS

Price:

3.99


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Neon Mirage Discreet Comb Knife - Pink ABS

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3131/image_1920?unique=6d56c47

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The Neon Mirage discreet comb knife rides in a pocket or purse looking like a simple pink grooming tool, until it isn’t. Separate the two halves to reveal a 4.25-inch ABS spear-point blade and a flat tail that doubles as a window breaker. At 6.25 inches overall, this hidden comb knife stays light, quiet, and easy to carry across Texas, giving collectors and self-defense shoppers a covert option that doesn’t scream tactical but still earns a place in the drawer.

3.99 3.99 USD 3.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 6.25
Closed Length (inches) 2.0
Blade Color Pink
Handle Finish Matte
Concealment Type Comb

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What This Hidden Comb Knife Really Is

The Neon Mirage discreet comb knife is exactly what it looks like at first glance: a bright pink plastic comb that disappears into a purse, pocket, or console. The difference is what happens when you separate the two halves. Inside that everyday grooming tool is a slim, spear-point ABS blade backed by a flat tail built for striking or breaking glass. It’s a hidden comb knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade — and that distinction matters if you care about how you carry in Texas.

Hidden Comb Knife vs Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, and Switchblade

This piece is a fixed ABS blade concealed inside a comb-shaped sheath. There’s no spring, no button, no automatic opening. You pull the two sections apart, and the blade is simply there in your hand. That’s the core mechanical difference between a hidden comb knife and an automatic knife or a switchblade.

An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and a release (button, lever, or similar) to snap the blade open from a closed position. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle under spring or dual-action pressure. This Neon Mirage doesn’t do any of that. It’s a concealed fixed blade in a comb disguise — a covert self-defense and novelty tool that happens to brush your hair until you need it to do something else.

Mechanism and Build: How the Neon Mirage Works

Simple Draw, No Moving Parts to Fail

The mechanism here is almost stubbornly simple. The comb half acts as a sheath. The inner half is the handle and blade. You grip, pull, and the 4.25-inch ABS spear-point blade is ready. No liner lock to hunt for, no flipper tab, no spring timing to worry about. In a world full of automatic knives and OTF knives with complex guts, this hidden comb knife is just two molded ABS pieces that separate cleanly and go back together the same way every time.

All-ABS Construction and Everyday Carry Reality

The all-pink ABS build keeps weight down and signal low. At 6.25 inches overall, it rides light in a backpack pocket, glove box, or makeup bag. The matte finish doesn’t flash under light, and the comb teeth do their job well enough that it passes the quick-glance test. The tail end is flattened and reinforced into a window breaker or skull-crusher style striking point, giving this hidden comb knife more utility than its playful color suggests.

Texas Carry Context: Where This Hidden Comb Knife Fits

Texas knife law has opened up a lot over the years, and collectors in this state pay attention to how a blade is carried and deployed. Because this is a hidden comb knife with a fixed ABS blade and no automatic opening mechanism, it doesn’t fall into the same bucket as a spring-loaded automatic knife or a true switchblade. There’s no button, no out-the-front deployment, just a concealed blade inside a grooming tool.

That said, Texans who know their gear also know that concealment draws attention from the law faster than mechanism sometimes. This comb knife is built for discreet self-defense carry and novelty value, not for getting past rules you already know you should follow. Treat it like any other concealed knife in Texas: understand the setting, respect posted rules, and don’t confuse it with a legal shield just because it looks innocent.

Why Texas Collectors Care About a Hidden Comb Knife

Collector Value in Non-Tactical Clothing

Most collections in Texas are heavy on steel: automatic knives with hard snap, OTF knives with precise tracks, and classic side-opening switchblades. A hidden comb knife like the Neon Mirage brings something different to that line-up. It’s covert, inexpensive, bright, and unapologetically non-tactical. That contrast is the draw. It sits in a display or drawer right next to your autos and OTFs and reminds you that not every defensive tool has to look like it came off a SWAT belt.

Conversation Starter With Actual Utility

For retailers and show tables, this comb knife is the piece people pick up first. They recognize the comb, flip it around, and then spot the seam and the striking tail. Once they see the hidden blade, they understand the pitch: low-cost, light, discreet, and easy to carry in a bag across Texas without broadcasting that you’re carrying a knife. It’s novelty that still makes sense — a backup option, glove box stash, or gift for someone who wants a layer of self-defense without diving into full tactical styling.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Hidden Comb Knives

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

No. This Neon Mirage is a hidden comb knife with a fixed ABS blade. There is no spring, no button, and no automatic deployment. You separate the comb sheath from the inner handle, and the blade is already extended. A switchblade or automatic knife snaps open from a folded position using a spring; an OTF knife drives the blade out the front of the handle through a track. This piece doesn’t do either, which is exactly why some Texas buyers prefer it as a low-profile option.

Is a hidden comb knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

As of recent Texas law changes, most knives are broadly legal to own and carry, including automatic knives and switchblades, with extra rules tied more to location and blade length than mechanism. This hidden comb knife uses a non-metallic ABS blade and has no automatic action, so it doesn’t fit the old automatic or switchblade definitions. But concealed carry in sensitive places (schools, secured areas, certain events) is still restricted. Texas buyers should treat this as a real knife, not a toy, and follow the same location-based rules they’d use with any other defensive blade.

Why would a serious Texas collector bother with a plastic comb knife?

Because collections tell a story. You’ve already got the automatic knives dialed in. You know your OTF knife makers and which switchblade patterns you trust. A hidden comb knife like the Neon Mirage adds the covert chapter to that story — everyday objects turned into tools. It’s inexpensive, visually loud in color but quiet in intent, and it shows the softer, undercover side of self-defense culture. That balance between form, disguise, and purpose is exactly the kind of thing a seasoned Texas collector appreciates.

In the end, the Neon Mirage discreet comb knife isn’t trying to replace your main automatic knife, outshoot your OTF knife action, or stand toe-to-toe with your favorite switchblade. It’s built to live in the background of your Texas day — in the car, in the bag, on the dresser — ready when you want a covert option that doesn’t look like a knife until you need it to be one. For the Texan who knows their mechanisms and chooses on purpose, that quiet capability is reason enough.