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Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife - Purple

Price:

3.99


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Nightlife Mirage Covert Comb Knife - Purple

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3132/image_1920?unique=2ea2adf

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This covert comb knife rides under the Texas radar as a simple purple grooming tool until you split the handle and bring the ABS blade into play. The Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife keeps a pointed tip, impact pommel, and familiar comb profile in one pocket-sized piece. It’s built for nightlife, travel, and low‑profile carry when you’d rather not flash steel but still want an option close at hand.

3.99 3.99 USD 3.99

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 6.25
Closed Length (inches) 2.0
Blade Color Purple
Concealment Type Comb

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Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife for Texas Carry

This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. The Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife is a hidden blade disguised as a purple comb, built for Texans who like their edge low-profile and their intent their own business. It looks like a regular plastic comb on the bar, in the truck console, or in a travel bag—until you separate the sheath and the handle and bring out the pointed ABS blade inside.

How This Hidden Comb Knife Actually Works

Mechanically, this comb knife is about concealment, not springs. There’s no automatic deployment, no OTF slider, and no switchblade button waiting to fire the blade out of the handle. Instead, the comb body acts as a sheath. One side is the comb with its teeth; the other side is the handle and rigid ABS blade. Slide them apart and the everyday comb turns into a compact self-defense tool with a pointed tip and impact pommel.

That distinction matters to Texas collectors who already own side-opening automatic knives and OTF knives. Those are defined by how the blade deploys—spring-driven and fast. This comb knife is defined by where the blade hides. It’s a manual draw with a disguised profile, not a true automatic or switchblade, which is exactly what some Texas buyers want for certain settings.

Blade and Build Details

The blade is molded ABS—rigid enough for thrusts, strikes, and directed pressure, with shallow groove texturing along the spine to aid control. The handle section carries a matte finish and slight contouring for grip. At the base, a pointed pommel gives you a focused striking point for emergency glass breaks or directed impact without relying on the edge at all.

Everyday Object, Covert Intent

Closed, the overall length is about 6.25 inches, riding like any regular comb. Opened, the blade length runs about 4.25 inches within that same footprint. There’s no steel to polish or lock to tune. This is a hidden knife first and a grooming tool second—a simple, lightweight piece that does its job without needing much from you.

Why a Comb Knife Belongs in a Texas Kit

Texas has room for big belt knives, hard-use automatic knives, and serious OTF knives—but not every place you go welcomes obvious steel. A covert comb knife like this fills the gap between going unarmed and walking into a club, concert, or rideshare with a visible blade on your pocket.

Drop it in a purse, slip it into a back pocket, or keep it in a center console. To anyone else, it reads as a bright purple grooming comb. To you, it’s a hidden knife with a pointed ABS blade, ready for quick, close-range work when space is tight and attention is the last thing you want.

Texas Nights, Low-Profile Carry

A lot of Texas life happens after dark—live music, crowded bars, busy parking garages, festivals, and late runs down I-35 or I-10. In those settings, a full-size automatic knife or aggressive switchblade look can draw more attention than you want. This comb knife tucks into that world like it was made for it. You can lay it out on a bathroom counter or bar top, and it still just looks like you’re tending to your hair.

How It Differs from Automatic Knives, OTF Knives, and Switchblades

Texas collectors are particular about terminology, and rightly so. An automatic knife uses a spring to snap the blade open from the side when you hit a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. A switchblade is the broader legal term that often captures those automatic styles in statutes.

This Neon Mirage piece doesn’t function like any of those. There is no automatic mechanism. There’s no button, switch, or OTF track. You separate the comb sheath manually from the handle and expose a fixed ABS blade that’s been hiding inside a very ordinary shape. In other words, it’s a hidden knife disguised as a comb, not an automatic knife pretending to be something else.

Collector Use vs. Working Blade

Because it uses ABS instead of steel, this isn’t the knife you reach for when you’re dressing a deer or cutting hay string on a West Texas fence line. It’s a niche, situational tool and a conversation piece in a Texas collection that already has the serious workhorses covered. Think of it as the clever card in the deck—something you can show fellow knife people when you’re talking about concealment designs.

Texas Context: Laws, Logic, and Common Sense

Texas law has opened up considerably for knives, including many automatic knives and traditional switchblades, but that doesn’t mean every venue or situation welcomes a visible blade. Even where it’s legal to carry an OTF knife or side-opening automatic, private property rules and security checks can still bring extra scrutiny.

A hidden comb knife like this sits in the grey area of practicality rather than pure statute talk. It’s small, non-folding, and manually drawn. That doesn’t make it a toy, and it doesn’t mean you can ignore posted rules, but it does mean you can move through most everyday Texas routines without flashing hardware. As with any knife—automatic, OTF, switchblade, or disguised—buyers should check current Texas regulations and respect local restrictions, especially around schools, courthouses, and secure facilities.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Hidden Comb Knives

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

None of the above. There’s no spring, no side-opening button, and no out-the-front track. You slide the comb sheath off the handle to reveal a fixed ABS blade. That makes it a hidden knife disguised as an everyday object, mechanically closer to a small fixed blade in a hard sheath than to an automatic knife or switchblade. For Texas collectors who care about the differences, this one sits in the covert novelty and self-defense corner, not in the true automatic or OTF category.

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

Texas is generally knife-friendly, including with many automatic knives and OTF knives, but legal details can shift over time. This comb knife is a small, manually accessed blade in a disguised form. Disguise alone doesn’t automatically make it illegal, but it can change how law enforcement or security view it if there’s an incident. The smart Texas move is to check current state law, mind the usual restricted places, and remember that even when a knife is legal, context and behavior still matter.

Where does a comb knife fit in a serious Texas collection?

Right alongside your oddities and conversation pieces. Your main lineup might be premium steel automatics, hard-use OTF knives, classic Texas lockbacks, and traditional switchblade patterns. This Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife earns its slot for a different reason—it shows how far makers will go to hide a blade in plain sight. It’s inexpensive, visually loud but functionally subtle, and it tells a story about concealment that your standard automatic or OTF can’t match.

Why a Texas Collector Keeps One Around

In a drawer full of sharp, honest steel, the Neon Mirage Covert Comb Knife stands out precisely because it doesn’t look like it belongs there. It’s bright purple, made from ABS, and shaped like a simple comb until you split it apart. For a Texas buyer who already understands automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades, this isn’t a replacement—it’s a side note that rounds out the story.

If you know your mechanisms and you appreciate the difference between deployment speed and quiet disguise, this little comb knife earns its keep. It’s the piece you carry when you want options without announcements—and the one your fellow Texans will ask about when they spot it in your kit and realize that not every blade in the state has to look like one.