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Night Wing Dual-Edge Assisted Opening Knife - Blue Titanium

Price:

12.99


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Night Flight Twin-Blade Assisted Opening Knife - Blue Titanium

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1922/image_1920?unique=18cabad

3 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening knife brings a dual-blade, bat-inspired profile to Texas pockets. Spring-assisted deployment snaps each spear point out fast and clean, while the aluminum handle and liner lock keep it under control. It’s not an automatic knife or OTF knife—it’s a true assisted opener with manual start and mechanical finish. For Texas collectors who like their night-themed hardware bold, this switchblade-adjacent design delivers display presence with real cutting ability.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

934BL

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
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 11
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 5.81
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Titanium
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Bat Theme
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Night Flight in Your Pocket: What This Assisted Opening Knife Really Is

The Night Flight Twin-Blade Assisted Opening Knife - Blue Titanium is a true assisted opening knife designed for Texas buyers who know the difference between a spring assist, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife. This is a manual-start, spring-finished folder with two opposing spear point blades. You start the motion with a thumb, the spring takes over, and both blades lock up with a liner lock—no button-fired switchblade mechanism, and no out-the-front track.

For a Texas collector who’s tired of every folding knife being called a switchblade online, this piece lands squarely where it belongs: an assisted opening knife with a fantasy bat-wing profile, built for night-themed display and light duty cutting.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics: How the Dual Blades Really Work

This assisted opening knife runs on a spring-assisted mechanism. Each 3-inch spear point blade folds into the black aluminum handle and rides on its own pivot. You apply pressure to the flipper or tang; once you pass the detent, the internal spring snaps the blade into the open position. The liner lock then engages, securing the blade until you manually close it.

Assisted vs Automatic Knife vs OTF Knife

Mechanically, that makes it different from an automatic knife. An automatic or switchblade uses a button or hidden release to fire the blade from a fully closed, static state. This Night Flight assisted opener still needs your hand to start the move. It’s also not an OTF knife: both blades swing out from the side like a traditional folder, instead of driving straight out the front on a track. For Texas buyers comparing automatic knife and OTF knife options, this one sits firmly in the assisted opening lane—visually wild, mechanically honest.

Dual-Edge, Blue Titanium Spear Points

Each blade is steel with a blue titanium finish, spear point profile, and plain edge. The dual-edge look is more about symmetry and presence than pure utility, but the geometry still handles everyday cutting, box opening, and light chores. At 11 inches overall and 5.75 inches closed, you’re getting full-size visual impact in a pocketable assisted opening knife.

Texas Carry Reality: An Assisted Opening Knife That Knows Its Place

In Texas, modern knife law is far friendlier than it used to be, but knowing what you’re carrying still matters. This is an assisted opening knife, not a fully automatic knife or traditional switchblade. It opens with manual pressure plus a spring assist rather than a release button. For most Texas buyers, that means it fits more comfortably into everyday carry habits and social expectations than a full-on automatic knife or OTF knife, even though the silhouette leans aggressive.

The aluminum handle keeps weight reasonable at just over five ounces, while the pocket clip lets the knife ride low and discreet. The bat-wing profile and blue titanium blades give it a big personality when it’s out, but in-pocket it behaves like any other side-opening assisted folding knife.

Collector Appeal: Why This Bat-Themed Assisted Opening Knife Belongs in a Texas Drawer

Most Texas collectors already own a workhorse blade or two: a simple lockback, maybe a side-opening automatic knife, sometimes an OTF knife for the mechanical satisfaction. The Night Flight assisted opening knife fills a different role. It’s a bat-inspired, night-flight fantasy piece that still operates with practical mechanics and a known deployment style.

The central white bat emblem, the symmetrical blue titanium blades, and the winged handle profile give this assisted opening knife a superhero lean without crossing into toy territory. It still cuts like a real knife, locks up with a real liner lock, and rides in a real pocket with a real clip. That combination—fantasy silhouette, honest assisted mechanism—is what sets it apart from generic switchblade-lookalikes and cheap movie props.

Display Presence with Everyday Capability

On the shelf, the knife reads as a centerpiece: twin blue blades framing the bat motif, almost architectural in symmetry. In the hand, it’s an easy-learning assisted opening knife with familiar side-opening behavior. If you already own an automatic knife and maybe one OTF knife for the collection, this becomes the night-themed bridge between display and function.

Texas Law and Culture: Where This Knife Fits

Texas law has loosened significantly on blade types, but collectors here still pay attention to distinctions. The Night Flight is a spring-assisted, side-opening knife—not a button-fired automatic knife or out-the-front switchblade. That mechanical reality matters more than marketing labels when you’re talking Texas carry, Texas shows, or explaining a pocket clip to a curious deputy at a country gas station.

Because it is an assisted opening knife, it tends to draw less legal confusion and social heat than an OTF knife or classic switchblade, even though the styling is bold. Texas buyers who want something that nods toward automatic knife and switchblade culture without actually living in those categories will appreciate the clarity here. It’s an assisted opener, plain and simple, dressed up like a night-flying predator.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Assisted Opening Knife

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

This is an assisted opening knife. You start the blade by pushing a flipper or tang; a spring finishes the opening and a liner lock holds it open. A true automatic knife or switchblade uses a button or release to fire the blade from rest, and an OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a track. The Night Flight is side-opening and manual-start, so it’s not legally or mechanically an automatic knife or OTF knife.

Is this assisted opening knife legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is generally favorable to modern folders, including assisted opening knives, and is far less focused on the old switchblade bans than it used to be. That said, local rules and specific locations can vary. Because this is an assisted opening knife and not a button-fired automatic knife or OTF knife, it typically faces fewer restrictions, but every Texas buyer is responsible for checking current state law and any local or posted rules where they live and carry.

Is this more a working knife or a collectible?

Functionally, it will handle light everyday tasks: opening packages, cutting cord, basic utility chores a Texas buyer expects from a pocket knife. But the real value is collector-focused. The twin blue titanium spear point blades, bat-themed handle, and symmetrical profile give it strong display value. Most serious collectors in Texas will treat this assisted opening knife as a themed piece that rounds out a group of automatic knives, OTF knives, and traditional folders rather than as their primary ranch or jobsite tool.

For a Texas knife collector who already understands the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife, the Night Flight Twin-Blade Assisted Opening Knife - Blue Titanium feels honest. It looks like it flew straight out of a comic panel, but it opens like a proper assisted folder and carries like any other side-opener. If your collection runs from slipjoints to switchblades and you want a night-side piece that plays well with the rest, this one earns its space in the drawer.