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Night Claw Quick-Assist Karambit Knife - Blue/Black

Price:

7.99


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Midnight Talon Quick-Assist Karambit Knife - Blue/Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2396/image_1920?unique=b1a7cda

15 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening karambit knife is built for Texans who like their edges fast and their grip locked in. The Night Claw–style talon blade snaps out with a quick spring assist, giving you one-handed control without drifting into automatic or OTF territory. A glossy blue 1065 German surgical steel blade, matte black handle, and solid finger grooves make it a confident everyday companion from Houston parking lots to West Texas backroads for folks who know their knives.

7.99 7.99 USD 7.99

DT1BKBL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 10
Weight (oz.) 10
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 1065 German surgical steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Unknown
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted

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Night Claw Quick-Assist Karambit Knife for Texas Buyers Who Know Their Steel

The Night Claw Quick-Assist Karambit Knife is a spring-assisted folding karambit, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. That distinction matters. This is a side-opening assisted karambit that uses a spring to finish what your thumb starts, giving you fast one-handed deployment without crossing into full switchblade territory. For Texas buyers who care about the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a true switchblade, this piece sits firmly in the assisted opening camp.

What Makes This Assisted Opening Karambit Knife Different

The heart of this knife is its mechanism. An assisted opening knife relies on you to start the motion; the internal spring simply helps the blade glide the rest of the way. That’s a different story than a traditional automatic knife or switchblade, where a button or switch launches the blade from the handle. It’s also worlds apart from an OTF knife, where the blade slides straight out the front instead of pivoting from the side.

On the Night Claw, you start the opening with the stud or tab, the spring takes over, and the curved talon blade snaps into place. Once it’s locked, you’ve got a full 4 inches of glossy blue 1065 German surgical steel in a tight, control-heavy karambit profile, with a 10-inch overall length that fills the hand like a dedicated tactical tool.

Mechanism: Assisted, Not Automatic

Collectors in Texas who run both automatic knives and assisted folders will feel the difference immediately. There’s no button, no OTF-style thumb slider, and no true switchblade auto-action. Instead, this assisted opening knife has that clean, mechanical follow-through—less drama, more control. You’re engaging a spring assist, not firing an automatic. For many Texas carriers, that’s the sweet spot: fast enough to matter, simple enough to trust.

Karambit Geometry with Real Retention

The blade takes its cues from classic karambit design: a hooked talon profile that wants to bite and pull, paired with a handle that locks into your palm. Deep finger grooves, spine jimping, and a flared pommel work together so the knife stays put under pressure. Where a straight-blade automatic knife or a slender OTF knife trades some retention for compactness, this assisted karambit leans into grip and control.

Texas Carry Reality: Assisted Opening Karambit vs Automatic Knife vs OTF

Texas has opened up its knife laws over the years, but serious collectors still care about how a piece is classified. This Night Claw is, first and last, an assisted opening knife. That means it’s not an OTF knife and it’s not a classic push-button switchblade. You’re physically starting the blade, which keeps it in a different mechanical category than a true automatic knife.

For a Texas carrier, that can matter in a few real-world ways. Some workplaces, private venues, or property owners draw their own lines between assisted knives, automatic knives, and OTF knives. When you can accurately say, “This is an assisted opening karambit, not a switchblade and not an OTF,” you’re speaking their language and protecting your own interests.

Day to day, the pocket clip keeps it riding where you need it—inside a work shirt in Houston, on a belt in the Hill Country, or clipped to your jeans while you’re running late-night errands in Dallas. It’s big enough to feel like a purpose-built tactical karambit, but still folds down to a 6-inch closed length that carries like a serious EDC.

Blue/Black Finish with Texas Character

The blue and black color scheme isn’t just for show, but it does catch the eye. The iridescent glossy blue blade has a modern, almost futuristic edge to it, while the matte black handle keeps things grounded in the tactical world. It’s the kind of combination a Texas knife collector will recognize across the room—loud where it should be, quiet where it counts.

Collector Value: Why This Assisted Karambit Earns Its Slot

Most Texas collections already hold a mix of auto knives, a couple of OTF knives, and at least one old-school switchblade. What’s usually missing is a spring-assisted karambit that brings that curved, talon-style blade into the same drawer as your side-opening autos and your front-deploy OTFs.

The 1065 German surgical steel blade gives you respectable edge performance with easy sharpening, which matters when a karambit geometry sees real use. At 10 inches overall and 10 ounces, it feels like a working tactical tool, not a dainty showpiece. For a collector, this becomes the bridge piece—the knife you pull out when you’re explaining how an assisted opening knife differs from a true automatic knife while still delivering that fast, almost instinctive deployment.

Assisted Opening Karambit in a Mixed Mechanism Collection

Laid out on a Texas workbench next to an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic, and a classic switchblade, the Night Claw stands on its own. The curved blade separates it visually, and the mechanism separates it mechanically. You still get speed, you still get one-handed use, but you stay in that assisted opening lane that many Texas owners prefer for day-in, day-out carry.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Assisted Opening Karambit Knife

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

This is an assisted opening knife, not a switchblade and not an OTF knife. A true automatic knife or switchblade opens from a button or switch with full spring power. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a track. The Night Claw is a side-opening folding karambit that uses a spring assist only after you manually start the blade. That keeps it firmly in the assisted opening category.

Is a knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has shifted in favor of knife owners, and assisted opening knives like this karambit are generally treated as standard folding knives, not as switchblades or prohibited automatic knives. That said, Texas does have location restrictions and blade-length considerations that can come into play, and private property rules can be stricter than state law. Serious Texas collectors check the current statutes and any local or venue rules before carrying any assisted knife, automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade.

Why pick this assisted karambit over a compact automatic or OTF?

You choose this knife for three reasons: the karambit control, the assisted opening mechanism, and the blue/black presence. A compact automatic knife or slim OTF knife often wins in pure pocket efficiency, but they can’t match the retention of a hooked talon blade and deep finger grooves. This piece gives you rapid assisted opening, a full-fist grip, and a visual profile that stands out inside a Texas collection that already has its share of autos and OTFs.

Texas Collector Identity in a Blue/Black Talon

Owning the Night Claw Quick-Assist Karambit Knife says you’re not confused about what you carry. You know the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade—and you chose this one on purpose. It lives well in a Texas rotation alongside your autos and front-deploy OTFs, but it doesn’t pretend to be anything it isn’t. For a Texas buyer who values clean mechanical truth, a hooked talon profile, and a bold blue blade, this assisted karambit earns its place without needing to say it twice.