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Nightwing Twin-Edge Spring-Assisted Knife - Gold Blades

Price:

12.99


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Nightwing Vigilante Twin-Edge Assisted Knife - Gold Blades

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/6447/image_1920?unique=67e018c

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This spring-assisted knife brings twin spear-point blades and a bold bat motif into one striking Texas-ready folder. Each gold blade snaps out with a clean assist and locks up solid with liner locks at both ends. The matte black aluminum handle carries like a pocket knife, but displays like a vigilante collectible. It’s the piece you clip on when you want an assisted opening knife that works, but still earns double-take attention from Texas knife collectors.

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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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 11
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 5.81
Blade Color Gold
Blade Finish Metallic
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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Nightwing Vigilante Twin-Edge Assisted Knife - Gold Blades

The Nightwing Vigilante is a spring-assisted knife built for Texans who know the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and a switchblade. This one is a folding, side-opening assisted knife with twin blades, not an OTF knife and not a push-button automatic. You thumb the studs, the internal spring takes over, and both gold spear-point blades lock up on liner locks. Simple, mechanical, and exactly what it looks like.

What This Spring-Assisted Knife Actually Is

Mechanically, this is a dual-ended, spring-assisted folding knife. Each 3-inch spear-point blade rides in its own channel inside the bat-wing handle. You start the opening with a thumb, and the assist spring finishes the stroke. That puts it firmly in the assisted opening knife category, not in the true automatic knife or switchblade camp, and definitely not in the OTF knife family.

For a Texas buyer, that distinction matters. An automatic knife or classic switchblade usually opens via a button or lever that fires the blade from a closed position with one control. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front of the handle. This Nightwing runs on side-opening, spring-assisted blades that pivot like a regular folder — just faster and with more drama.

Dual-Blade, Dual-Liner-Lock Design

Each blade has its own liner lock inside the aluminum handle. Once open, you’ve got solid lockup on both ends, and you close them the same way you would any liner-lock folding knife: press the liner aside, rotate the blade home. The design keeps the assisted knife reliable and predictable even with the fantasy-forward bat theme.

Bat-Themed Form, Working Knife Function

The handle silhouette echoes bat wings, with a silver bat emblem in the center and black matte aluminum scales along the spine. It looks like it walked off a comic book page, but the lines are still contoured enough to get a real hold when you choke up on either side. The gold metallic blades aren’t just costume — they’re plain-edged steel, sharpenable and ready for light cutting work when you want this piece to earn its keep.

How This Assisted Opening Knife Compares to Automatics and OTF Knives

If you collect in Texas, you probably own at least one automatic knife and maybe an OTF knife or two. This Nightwing fills a different niche. Where a switchblade or other automatic opens from a button, this assisted opener still asks you to start the motion. It’s mechanically simpler, a bit more forgiving in pockets and bags, and less finicky to maintain than many OTF knives with complex internals.

You still get the snap and speed that automatic knife fans enjoy, just without the firing mechanism. For folks who like the look of a switchblade or the presence of an OTF knife, this twin-edge assisted folder gives you that same showpiece feel with more straightforward mechanics. In a collector drawer full of push-buttons and sliders, the dual-blade assist action stands out.

Why Collectors Like Twin-Edge Designs

A double-ended assisted knife isn’t about doubling your cutting power so much as doubling your options and your presence. One blade can stay cleaner, the other can take the rougher work. Or you can treat both as matched spears and keep this as a display-ready conversation piece. Either way, it’s the kind of knife Texas collectors pull out when friends come over and ask, “What else you got?”

Texas Carry Reality for a Spring-Assisted Knife

Texas has opened up the law on blades in a big way, and that’s been good news for automatic knife and switchblade buyers across the state. Assisted openers like this one have ridden along with that wave. While you should always check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules where you live, a spring-assisted knife is generally treated like a standard folding knife, not a prohibited switchblade.

That means this twin-edge assisted knife fits neatly into a Texas carry rotation where you might also own a side-opening automatic or a compact OTF knife. The pocket clip keeps it riding like a regular folder, and the closed length around 5.75 inches makes it viable for jeans, range bags, and glove boxes from El Paso to Beaumont. It’s not the quietest profile, but if you’re the kind of Texan who buys a bat-themed gold-blade knife, you’re probably not hiding it.

EDC in Texas: Practical or Pure Display?

Is this your primary EDC automatic-style knife? Probably not. This is the knife you clip on when you want character. It can open boxes, cut zip ties, and handle basic utility, but its real job is to ride backup to your more traditional everyday knife — a solid assisted or compact automatic that you don’t mind scratching up. When someone asks about your collection, this is the one you hand them first.

Collector Value for Texas Knife Buyers

For serious Texas knife collectors, the Nightwing Vigilante sits at the intersection of fantasy design and real assisted opening function. It’s not just a wall-hanger; the blades are steel, the liner locks are legit, and the spring-assisted mechanism is the same principle you’ll find in more understated assisted opening knives.

What makes it worth a slot in a Texas collection isn’t rarity or exotic steel; it’s theme plus mechanism. Bat-inspired knives tend to be either clunky props or purely decorative pieces. This one threads the needle: assisted deployment, pocket clip, functional twin blades, and a handle that clearly nods to vigilante lore without pretending to be something it isn’t. In a case that already includes an OTF knife, a couple of modern automatics, and an old-school switchblade, this piece tells a different story.

Display Presence in a Mixed-Type Collection

Set this knife between a skeletonized OTF and a traditional Italian-style switchblade, and it still holds its own visually. The gold blades catch the light, the black aluminum keeps it grounded, and the bat emblem pulls eyes right to the center of your display. It’s the kind of assisted knife that starts conversations about how far knife design can stretch while still being a true, working folder.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Knives

Is a spring-assisted knife like this the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. A spring-assisted knife like the Nightwing Vigilante is its own category. You begin opening the blade with a thumb stud or flipper, and a spring helps it finish. An automatic knife or classic switchblade uses a button or lever to fire the blade without that initial manual start. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a slider or button, instead of pivoting from the side. This Nightwing is a side-opening assisted folder with twin blades — it lives in the assisted opening world, even if it shares some of the same fast, one-hand feel as an automatic.

Are spring-assisted knives legal to carry in Texas?

As of current Texas law, assisted opening knives are generally treated like other folding knives and are legal for most adults to own and carry, alongside automatic knives and OTF knives. Texas removed the old “switchblade” prohibitions, which opened the door for a wide range of automatic knife and switchblade-style designs. That said, you still need to pay attention to overall blade length and any location-based restrictions, especially around schools or certain public buildings. Laws can change, so a quick check of the latest Texas statutes is always a smart move if you’re planning to carry daily.

Where does a knife like this fit in a serious Texas collection?

This knife doesn’t replace your best automatic or your favorite OTF knife; it complements them. You’ll keep your hard-use pieces for ranch work, hunting, and real field time. The Nightwing Vigilante earns its spot as a themed assisted opener with working parts and a strong visual identity. It’s for the shelf where you keep your more expressive knives — the ones you show when someone asks why you collect. If you’ve already got the mechanics covered with side-open automatics, double-action OTFs, and a traditional switchblade or two, this is the bat-winged, gold-blade wildcard that rounds out the story.

In the end, this spring-assisted knife is built for Texans who enjoy the mechanics as much as the mythology. You know what an automatic knife is, you can spot an OTF knife across the room, and you understand exactly why this double-ended assisted opener is neither — and that’s the point. It’s a pocket-ready nod to vigilante lore with real liners, real steel, and enough presence to hold its own in any Texas collection that takes knife mechanisms seriously.