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Carbon Weave Guardian Dual-Edge OTF Knife - Gray Carbon Fiber

Price:

39.99


Stealth Guardian Double-Action OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black
Stealth Guardian Double-Action OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black
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Stealth Guardian Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Silver
Stealth Guardian Rapid-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Silver
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Quiet Strike Dual-Edge OTF Knife - Carbon Weave Gray

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5359/image_1920?unique=04f5c56

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This dual-edge OTF knife is built for Texans who like their gear fast, slim, and honest about what it is. A double-action thumb slide fires and retracts the dagger blade straight out the front, giving you automatic speed without the bulk of a side-opening switchblade. The gray handle with carbon fiber weave inlays rides light in the pocket, ready for ranch chores, urban carry, or range days. It’s the kind of piece that tells other collectors you know your mechanisms.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB288GYDP

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.375
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.125
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes

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Quiet Strike Dual-Edge OTF Knife – What It Really Is

This is a true out-the-front automatic knife, built for Texans who know the difference between an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic knife, and a generic “switchblade.” When you run your thumb up the slide, the dual-edge dagger blade drives straight out the front of the handle. Pull the slide back and it retracts the same way. No flipper tab, no assisted spring folder, no mystery about the mechanism.

At 3.375 inches of steel and about 8.5 inches overall, this OTF knife rides in that sweet spot between pocketable everyday carry and serious field tool. The gray handle, carbon fiber weave inlays, and slim profile keep it discreet, while the double-edge dagger geometry makes clear this is built for controlled piercing, clean cuts, and confident deployment when time actually matters.

How This OTF Knife Works – Double-Action Done Right

Mechanically, this is a double-action OTF knife. That means the same thumb slide both fires and retracts the blade. You’re not yanking on a charging handle or manually pulling the blade back into the frame. Slide forward: it snaps open. Slide back: it returns home. Fast, repeatable, and predictable.

OTF vs. Automatic vs. Switchblade – Plain Texas English

An automatic knife usually opens from the side like a regular folding knife, just powered by a button and spring. Most folks call that a switchblade. An OTF knife, like this one, sends the blade straight out of the front of the handle instead of swinging out from a pivot. Every switchblade is an automatic knife, but not every automatic is an OTF. This piece sits right in that OTF lane, with a clear, honest double-action mechanism collectors can spot in a second.

The thumb slide sits along the spine of the handle where your thumb naturally lands. The action is tuned to be positive without being twitchy. That’s what you want in an OTF knife you actually carry—snappy enough to trust, controlled enough that it doesn’t surprise you in your pocket or your truck console.

Blade and Build: Dual-Edge Dagger with Texas Purpose

The blade is a dual-edge dagger with a central fuller and window cutouts, done in a two-tone black and silver finish. Both edges are plain sharpened, optimized for piercing and clean, straight cuts. This isn’t a broad hunting skinner and it’s not pretending to be. It’s for the Texan who wants a sleek, modern automatic knife that can handle cord, straps, light utility, and defensive carry if life ever goes sideways.

Steel and Geometry That Earn a Place in the Drawer

Steel on this automatic OTF is straightforward working steel, not some vanity alloy chosen just for spec-sheet bragging rights. The geometry is what really shines: a centered point, balanced grind, and a profile that lets the blade vanish back into the handle without wasting internal space. It feels more precise than its price suggests, which is exactly why serious collectors like to keep a few honest-working OTF knives around alongside their high-end switchblades and customs.

The handle carries that same practical mindset. Matte gray, chamfered edges, carbon fiber weave inlays on both sides, and diagonal milling near the butt for extra traction. It doesn’t scream for attention, but anyone who knows modern OTF knives will notice the details.

Texas Carry Reality for an OTF Knife

Texas law has opened up in recent years for automatic knives and switchblades, including OTF knives like this one. For most adults in Texas, carrying an automatic OTF knife is legal, with the main concern being blade length and location-specific restrictions. This blade sits at 3.375 inches, which keeps it under the old 5.5-inch mental benchmark a lot of Texans still default to when they think about knife length.

Where this OTF knife shines in Texas carry is how it disappears until you need it. The slim handle and blue pocket clip let it ride low and steady in jeans, work pants, or slacks. It doesn’t fight for pocket space with your keys or phone, and it doesn’t print like a big fixed blade on your belt. For ranch checks, gas station runs after dark, or walking from the truck to the lease cabin, it’s the kind of automatic knife that’s actually with you, not left in the glove box.

OTF Knife vs. Traditional Texas Pocketknife

A lot of Texans grew up on slipjoints and lockbacks. Those still have their place around the ranch and the campfire. This OTF knife doesn’t replace a good traditional folder; it fills a different role. When you want one-handed, no-question deployment in tight spaces—truck cab, tight hallway, tangled strap—you’ll appreciate that straight-out-the-front action. That’s why more Texas collectors are adding at least one OTF to sit alongside their side-opening automatic knives and classic switchblades.

Collector Value: Why This Specific OTF Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Collectors look for three things in an OTF knife: a clean, reliable mechanism, distinctive but honest styling, and a clear role in the lineup. This piece checks all three.

Mechanism-wise, the double-action system is straightforward and repeatable, the thumb slide is well-placed, and the blade track is stable. Stylistically, the carbon fiber weave inlays, gray matte handle, and dual-tone dagger blade give it a modern tactical look without tipping into novelty. That makes it a solid representative of the contemporary OTF knife trend—exactly the sort of thing you want in a collection that aims to show the evolution from traditional switchblades to modern automatics and OTFs.

Role-wise, it’s the “quiet professional” of the drawer: a dual-edge OTF knife you can actually carry in Texas, not just show and tell. It complements high-dollar customs and name-brand switchblades by being the one you don’t baby, but still respect.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

Is an OTF knife like this the same as a switchblade or other automatic knives?

They’re related, but not the same. All three—OTF knives, side-opening automatic knives, and what most people casually call switchblades—are automatic in the sense that a spring drives the blade open. The difference is direction. A switchblade or side-opening automatic swings open from a pivot on the side. An OTF knife like this one sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. So this is an automatic knife and often gets lumped in with switchblades, but mechanically it’s its own category: double-action OTF.

Is carrying this OTF knife legal in Texas?

Under current Texas law, most adults can legally own and carry automatic knives, including OTF knives and traditional switchblades, with some restrictions based on blade length and specific locations like schools or certain government buildings. This blade is just over three inches, which keeps it comfortably under older length limits many Texans still remember. Always check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules where you live or work, but for most Texas knife buyers, this OTF knife is a lawful everyday carry option.

Why would a Texas collector choose this OTF over another automatic knife?

Because it fills a specific slot: slim, dual-edge OTF with carbon fiber styling that actually carries well. If you already own a few side-opening automatic knives or classic Italian-style switchblades, this gives you a modern out-the-front example with real pocket manners. The double-action mechanism, dagger blade, and subdued gray-and-carbon look make it a balanced piece—aggressive enough for tactical tastes, refined enough for a serious Texas collection, and honest enough to be used, not just displayed.

For the Texas buyer who can tell an OTF knife from a side-opening automatic at a glance, the Quiet Strike Dual-Edge OTF Knife – Carbon Weave Gray feels right at home. It’s a modern automatic that respects the tradition of Texas knife carry while embracing the speed and precision of contemporary OTF design. Add it to your rotation, drop it in your pocket, and it quietly marks you as someone who doesn’t just buy knives—you understand them.