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Prism Flare Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Gloss

Price:

6.99


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Prism Flare Street-Ready Assisted EDC Knife - Rainbow Gloss

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2088/image_1920?unique=978ad81

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This assisted opening knife is built for Texans who like their EDC with a little fireworks. The Prism Flare Street-Ready Assisted EDC Knife pairs a matte black clip-point blade with a rainbow-gloss handle and a fast flipper tab for one-handed deployment. A liner lock keeps the action honest, while the pocket clip rides low and ready. It’s not an automatic knife or an OTF knife—just a quick, reliable assisted opener that stands out in any Texas collection.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

A41FTD

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  • 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 Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Theme Rainbow
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock

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Prism Flare Assisted Opening Knife for Texas EDC

The Prism Flare Street-Ready Assisted EDC Knife is a true assisted opening knife: a folding blade that needs a deliberate nudge on the flipper tab before the spring takes over and drives it open. It is not an automatic knife that fires from a button, and it is not an OTF knife that slides straight out the front. This is a side-opening assisted opener built for everyday carry, with Texas riders, workers, and collectors squarely in mind.

How This Assisted Opening Knife Actually Works

Mechanically, this knife keeps it simple and honest. You’ve got a matte black clip-point blade riding on a pivot, with an assisted mechanism that helps once you’ve started the motion. Press the flipper tab with your index finger, the spring engages, and the blade snaps into lockup. That extra step is what separates an assisted opening knife from a true automatic knife or switchblade under most definitions.

The liner lock anchors that action. Once the blade is open, a steel liner moves into place behind the tang and keeps it there until you deliberately move it aside. The pocket clip and compact profile make it a straightforward Texas pocket companion—no gimmicks, no mystery about how it works.

Flipper Tab and One-Handed Control

The flipper tab gives you one-handed deployment without the drama of a button-fired switchblade. It’s fast, repeatable, and easy to control even in work gloves. For Texans who use a knife dozens of times a day—from cutting zip ties on the job to slicing open feed sacks—this assisted opening setup is about efficiency, not flash.

Liner Lock Reliability for Real Carry

The liner lock system is a staple in serious folding knives because it’s simple to inspect and easy to trust. Look down into the frame and you can see how solidly the liner engages. For a collector, that visible lockup matters just as much as the rainbow handle pattern—mechanism first, decoration second.

Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, or Just Assisted? The Real Difference

A lot of sites will call anything that opens quickly a switchblade. That’s how you lose Texas collectors. This Prism Flare is not a switchblade and not an OTF knife. It’s a side-opening assisted opening knife that requires manual pressure on the flipper before the spring helps finish the job.

An automatic knife or traditional switchblade uses a button or switch to launch the blade from a closed position with no blade contact. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out of the handle, in and out along a track. The Prism Flare opens from the side like a classic folder; the assist just makes that final snap faster and smoother. If you know the difference, you can buy—and carry—with confidence in Texas.

Why This Distinction Matters to Texas Buyers

Texas collectors care about how a knife works because Texas law cares how a knife works. When you can accurately explain the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife, you know exactly what you’re putting in your pocket—and how it fits your understanding of Texas carry rules and your own comfort level.

Texas Carry, Culture, and the Prism Flare

Texas has opened up knife carry in recent years, and that’s changed what people are comfortable to clip on a pocket. Even so, a lot of Texans still like a low-profile assisted opening knife for day-to-day use instead of jumping straight to a switchblade or OTF knife. The Prism Flare fits that lane nicely.

The pocket clip keeps it easy to grab whether you’re sliding into a truck seat, walking a college campus in Austin, or working a late-night shift in Houston. It looks bold, but it rides like any straightforward EDC folder. The rainbow-gloss handle might turn heads at the counter, but in pocket it’s just another compact assisted opener doing quiet work.

Workday EDC in Texas Conditions

The matte black clip-point blade and steel construction give you a practical cutting tool for box duty, cord, packaging, and general ranch or shop tasks. The assist mechanism means you can get it open quickly even when your off-hand is holding gear, a gate, or a phone. This is where a well-tuned assisted opening knife earns its keep against both plain manual folders and flashier automatic knives.

EDC Personality in a Texas Knife Collection

Collectors in Texas usually own their share of blacked-out tactical pieces and classic bone-handled folders. A rainbow-gloss assisted opening knife like this adds color to the mix without stepping outside serious EDC territory. It’s a piece you hand across the table with a simple explanation: “Assisted opener, not an automatic. Flipper tab, liner lock, clip-point blade—feel how it snaps.”

Collector Appeal: Beyond the Rainbow Handle

The first thing people see is the rainbow-gloss handle, but a collector sticks around for the way the mechanism feels. The Prism Flare’s assisted opening gives a decisive snap, the liner lock seats with confidence, and the blade geometry balances pierce and slice with that curved clip-point profile. It may be priced like an entry-level EDC, but for a Texas buyer who owns OTF knives and true switchblades already, this fills a different slot in the drawer.

It’s the expressive assisted opener you hand to someone who’s never tried a flipper before. It’s also the knife you can carry into places where you’d rather not flash a push-button automatic knife. That kind of versatility gives it more staying power than a pure novelty rainbow piece.

How It Stands Apart from Other Assisted Openers

Most assisted opening knives in this bracket lean tactical black or plain utility. This one doesn’t apologize for its color. The rainbow theme, two-tone blade, and long cutout fuller give it a custom look at a price you don’t have to baby. For Texas retailers, it’s the knife that stops customers mid-aisle and opens the door to a talk about mechanism differences—assisted versus automatic, side-opening versus OTF. For Texas collectors, it’s an easy add when you want another assisted opening knife but don’t need another black-on-black clone.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this closer to an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a regular folder?

The Prism Flare is an assisted opening knife, which puts it closer to a regular folding knife than to a push-button automatic knife or OTF knife. You start the opening yourself using the flipper tab; once the blade moves a short distance, the spring assist takes over and snaps it open. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a button to fire the blade from fully closed, and an OTF knife sends the blade straight out of the handle along a track. This is a side-opening assisted opener—fast, but still dependent on your initial push.

Are assisted opening knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has become far more knife-friendly, and assisted opening knives are generally treated as folding knives rather than prohibited switchblades. That said, it’s on every buyer to stay current on Texas statutes and any local regulations, especially about blade length and specific locations like schools, courthouses, and certain events. From a mechanism standpoint, this Prism Flare assisted opening knife is not an OTF knife and not a push-button switchblade, which gives most Texas carriers extra peace of mind. When in doubt, check the latest Texas law—or talk to a lawyer, not a salesman.

Why would a collector add this assisted opener if they already own switchblades?

A Texas collector who owns automatic knives and OTF knives still benefits from a solid assisted opening knife in the rotation. This piece covers the everyday slot where you want speed and one-handed use without the full commitment of a push-button automatic. The rainbow-gloss handle adds visual variety, the assisted mechanism offers a distinct feel compared to both manuals and switchblades, and the price point makes it a low-risk, high-character addition. It’s the knife you loan, test, and carry hard while the high-end OTF stays in the safe.

Built for Texans Who Know Their Knives

The Prism Flare Street-Ready Assisted EDC Knife doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It’s not marketed as a switchblade, not dressed up as an OTF knife, and not confused about its job. It’s a side-opening assisted opening knife with a fast flipper, matte black clip-point blade, rainbow-gloss handle, and a pocket clip ready for Texas miles. If you’re the kind of buyer who can explain the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener without reaching for a search bar, this knife will feel right at home in your pocket—and in your collection.