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Prism Surge Double-Action OTF Knife - Rainbow Damascus

Price:

36.99


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Prism Surge Double-Action OTF Blade - Rainbow Damascus

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5466/image_1920?unique=3245c5b

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This double-action OTF knife is built for Texans who like their hardware loud and their mechanisms dialed in. A side-mounted switch drives the rainbow Damascus-etched dagger blade straight out the front, then hauls it back in with the same smooth motion. The matte metal handle, non-slip inlays, pocket clip, and glass breaker keep it working-man honest, even with all that color. It’s the kind of OTF you carry when you know the difference and want folks to see it.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB956RBDP

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Weight (oz.) 5.89
Blade Color Rainbow
Blade Finish Etch
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Switch
Theme Rainbow Damascus
Double/Single Action Double
Pocket Clip Yes

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Prism Surge Double-Action OTF Knife for Texas Collectors

The Prism Surge is a true double-action OTF knife: press the side switch and the blade rides straight out the front; pull it back and the same switch hauls it home. No flipper tab, no side-folding liner lock, no assisted spring hiding under a thumb stud. This is an out-the-front automatic built for Texans who know exactly what they’re buying and want that mechanism front and center.

On this one, the hardware is all business while the rainbow Damascus theme does the talking. The 3.25-inch dagger blade carries a rainbow-etched pattern that catches light from every angle, matched by an iridescent handle frame with dark inlays to keep your grip honest. It’s an automatic OTF knife that walks the line between showpiece and working tool, and it knows which side of the line it’s on when it’s time to cut.

What Makes This an OTF Knife, Not Just a Switchblade

A lot of folks call anything that opens itself a switchblade. In Texas, and in a collector’s drawer, that’s not nearly precise enough. This Prism Surge is an OTF knife, which means the blade travels in a straight track out the front of the handle, driven by an internal spring and a sliding switch. That double-action switch both deploys and retracts the blade—no manual closing, no flipping, no wrist tricks.

Most traditional switchblades are side-opening automatics: the blade swings out of the handle like a standard folding knife, just powered by a button and spring. An OTF automatic like this feels different in hand and works different in the pocket. The handle stays centered around the blade channel, giving you a straight-line thrust and a compact footprint, with the glass breaker and pocket clip lined up along that same spine.

Compared to an assisted opener, where you start the blade and a spring finishes the job, this double-action OTF is fully automatic both ways. No thumb stud, no flipper tab—just that one switch doing the work, clean and mechanical. That’s the distinction serious Texas knife buyers are paying for.

Mechanism Details for the Texas Automatic Knife Crowd

Double-Action OTF Operation

The Prism Surge runs a classic double-action OTF system. The side-mounted switch rides in a machined track, cocking an internal spring as you push. Once tension peaks, the spring snaps the rainbow Damascus-etched dagger blade out the front into lockup. Pull the switch back and the mechanism re-engages, drawing the blade back into the handle under control.

This gives you fast deployment and controlled retraction without having to guide the blade closed with your fingers. For Texas buyers already comfortable with automatic knives and switchblades, this feels familiar in intent but distinct in execution: the movement is linear, the lockup is central, and the whole thing has that signature OTF sound and feel.

Handle, Grip, and Real-World Control

The handle runs about 5.25 inches closed, finished in an iridescent rainbow frame with matte metal inlays. Those black grip panels aren’t just decoration—they break up the slick surface and give you bite when your hands are wet, sweaty, or gloved. At roughly 5.89 ounces, this OTF knife has enough weight to feel planted without turning your pocket into an anchor.

A glass breaker pins the butt of the handle, giving Texas drivers a genuine emergency tool that doesn’t need an excuse to ride in the console or on the pocket. The clip carries it ready, and the straight-sided frame makes indexing the switch second nature, even without looking.

Texas Context: Carrying an OTF Knife Under Texas Law

Texas loosened up on automatic knife and switchblade restrictions years back, and that opened the door for serious OTF knives like this Prism Surge to move from glass cases to real pockets. The key thing for Texans now isn’t whether it’s a switchblade, an automatic knife, or an OTF knife—the bigger issue is blade length and where you’re carrying it.

With a 3.25-inch blade, this out-the-front automatic sits comfortably under the common 5.5-inch threshold that applies in most everyday Texas settings. That keeps it in bounds for typical adult carry, whether you’re dropping it in your jeans in Houston, tossing it in the truck in Lubbock, or clipping it to your belt on the way to a lease outside San Antonio. Local rules, special locations, and age limits can still matter, so a smart owner will double-check the current Texas statutes and any local quirks before making it their daily companion.

But from a design standpoint, this knife was clearly built with legal-minded Texas collectors in mind: an automatic OTF knife with a sub-5.5-inch blade, glass breaker, and pocket clip, meant to be carried and used—not just looked at.

Rainbow Damascus Aesthetic with Collector Intent

What pulls this piece out of the ordinary OTF crowd is that rainbow Damascus-etched blade paired with a matching iridescent frame. It’s not shy. In a drawer full of black and stonewash, this one gets picked up first. The dagger profile, dual plain edges, and etched patterning give it a modern-tactical spine dressed up in full-color Sunday clothes.

Collectors who already own a half-dozen blacked-out OTF knives will see the value here: it’s mechanically familiar, but visually loud. The fasteners along the handle, the clean switch track, and the glass breaker all point to a tactical pedigree, while the rainbow theme adds the kind of personality that sells quick off a Texas display wall and earns a place up front in a personal collection.

It’s the knife you hand a friend when they ask what the fuss is about OTF automatics. One sweep of the switch, one flash of that rainbow Damascus, and the explanation takes care of itself.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Double-Action OTF Knives

Is an OTF knife like this the same thing as a switchblade?

They’re cousins, not twins. A switchblade is any automatic knife that opens with a button or switch—most of them are side-opening, swinging the blade out like a regular folder with a spring assist. This Prism Surge is an OTF automatic, where the blade shoots straight out the front of the handle along a track. It’s still an automatic knife in function, just built on a different architecture, and serious Texas collectors use those terms—switchblade, OTF knife, automatic knife—deliberately to describe the mechanism, not loosely as if they’re all the same.

Can I legally carry this OTF automatic knife in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades are broadly legal for adults, and the big line most everyday carriers care about is blade length, especially around 5.5 inches. This OTF knife sits at about 3.25 inches, so it fits comfortably inside that common limit for typical public carry. Certain places and situations still have their own restrictions, and laws can change, so a responsible owner will check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules. But from a design standpoint, this one was built with Texas-style everyday legality and practicality in mind.

Is this more of a showpiece, or can it handle real use?

The rainbow Damascus etch gives it showpiece flair, but the mechanics are straight-up working OTF. Steel blade, double-action automatic mechanism, non-slip grip panels, pocket clip, and a glass breaker all point toward real-world service. For many Texas buyers, it lands in that sweet spot: strong enough for light to medium everyday cutting, handsome enough to anchor an OTF section in a collection, and distinctive enough that you won’t confuse it with the dozen other black tactical autos already in your rotation.

For a Texas knife collector who knows the difference between a side-opening switchblade, a basic automatic knife, and a true double-action OTF knife, the Prism Surge Rainbow Damascus isn’t background noise. It’s the colorful accent that still plays in tune with the rest of the drawer. It carries light, hits hard, and makes its point without needing a long introduction—just a thumb on the switch and that rainbow blade sliding into place. That’s the kind of piece a Texas buyer doesn’t just own; they reach for it when they want to show they actually understand what’s riding in their pocket.