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Edge Ranger Double-Edge OTF Knife - Stonewash Green

Price:

39.99


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Ranger Line Double-Edge OTF Dagger Knife - Stonewash Green

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This OTF knife is built for clean, controlled deployment, not show. The double-edge dagger blade rides on a true double-action mechanism: thumb the slide forward, it’s there; pull it back, it’s gone. Stonewashed steel shrugs off everyday wear, while the stonewash green aluminum handle rides light and flat in a Texas pocket. Deep-carry clip, glass-breaker pommel, and balanced weight give collectors and everyday carriers a solid, no-nonsense automatic that does exactly what you expect—no more, no less.

39.99 39.99 USD 39.99

SB194GNDP

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes

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Ranger Line Double-Edge OTF Dagger Knife - Stonewash Green

The Edge Ranger is a true out-the-front knife, not a side-opening automatic and not a marketing man’s catch-all “switchblade.” This is a double-action OTF knife with a double-edge dagger blade that shoots straight out of the front of the handle on command, then retracts just as cleanly when you run the slide back. For a Texas buyer who actually cares how their gear works, that mechanical honesty is where the trust starts.

What This Double-Action OTF Knife Really Is

Mechanically, this OTF knife runs on a top-mounted thumb slide that controls both deployment and retraction. Push the slide forward and the internal spring drives the dagger blade out the front until it locks. Pull the slide back and the same system pulls the blade home, safe and buried in the stonewash green aluminum handle.

That makes it different from a side-opening automatic knife, where the blade swings out from a pivot like a regular folder, and from many folks’ catch-all use of the word “switchblade.” Around Texas, collectors use the terms a little sharper: an OTF knife like this Edge Ranger sends the blade forward in-line with the handle, while a traditional switchblade pattern usually opens from the side. Both are automatic knives, but the mechanism and feel are not the same.

Double-Edge Dagger Purpose

The double-edge dagger profile gives you symmetrical penetration and clean in-line cuts whether you’re pushing or pulling. For a Texas user, that means slicing cord, breaking down a stubborn box, or punching through heavy plastic is the same motion no matter how the knife is oriented in your hand. No serrations, no gimmicks—just twin plain edges ready to work.

Stonewash Steel That Hides the Miles

The stonewash blade finish does two things well: it knocks down glare and it hides the small scuffs and scratches that come with honest use. A lot of collectors like seeing their knives age, but they don’t need every mark shouting from across the room. This OTF knife carries those miles quietly.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade: Why It Matters

On this site, we don’t call everything a switchblade and hope you don’t notice. An automatic knife is the big tent: any knife where the blade opens by stored energy—a spring—when you hit a button, slide, or lever. Under that tent, you’ve got two main flavors: side-opening automatics and out-the-front knives like this Edge Ranger.

An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. The Edge Ranger is a double-action OTF, meaning the same slide both deploys and retracts the blade. Some OTFs are single-action and need to be manually reset—this is not that. You run the slide both ways and you’re done.

“Switchblade” is the old, broad street name that gets thrown over everything, but serious Texas collectors usually reserve it for side-openers or use it as shorthand when the mechanism is already understood. If you’re searching for a true OTF knife, this Edge Ranger is exactly that—an automatic knife with a front-firing blade, not just another generic switchblade.

Why Collectors Prefer Clear Terms

When you’ve got a drawer full of steel, the details matter. A collector in Houston or Lubbock wants to know: is this an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic, or an assisted opener I still have to start by hand? With the Edge Ranger, the answer is plain: fully automatic, double-action, out-the-front, double-edge dagger. No confusion, no surprise when it shows up in the mail.

Texas Carry Reality for an OTF Knife

Texas law has come a long way. Today, automatic knives, OTF knives, and what folks call switchblades are generally legal to own and carry in most everyday situations, as long as you’re not in a restricted place and you respect local rules and posted signs. That means a knife like the Edge Ranger can ride in your pocket around most of Texas without you feeling like you’re sneaking contraband.

This OTF knife was built with that Texas carry reality in mind. It’s slim enough for front-pocket carry in a pair of jeans, light enough that you don’t notice it until you need it, and clean in the hand when you draw and fire it. The deep-carry pocket clip tucks it down low, but that stonewash green handle makes it easy to spot when you’re sorting through your gear.

Practical Texas Use Cases

Think of this more as a practical everyday automatic knife than a glass-case queen. Ranch gate wire, tie-down straps in the back of the truck, plastic banding on feed or freight, packaging in a warehouse, or just daily city carry—it’s all the same to this OTF knife. The glass-breaker pommel and lanyard hole add another layer of utility for Texans who keep a blade as part of a roadside kit or emergency setup.

Mechanics, Build, and Collector Value

The Edge Ranger’s frame is stonewash green aluminum—lightweight, rigid, and tough enough for serious use. The matte finish and grip grooves on the sides give you more purchase without chewing up your hands or pockets. Torx screws keep the handle tight and serviceable, which long-time collectors appreciate when it’s time for a cleaning.

The double-action mechanism is the heart of this automatic knife. When an OTF is tuned right, you feel a clean, decisive snap as the blade locks out and a confident pull as it returns. Sloppy action is where cheap switchblades show their price; the Edge Ranger aims for that tighter, more controlled ride that collectors notice the first time they thumb the slide.

Why This OTF Knife Earns a Slot in the Drawer

For a serious Texas knife collector, you’re rarely buying just another blade—you’re filling a specific gap. This piece checks several boxes at once: a true double-action OTF, double-edge dagger profile, stonewashed finish, and a subdued military-style green handle. It’s not a showpiece with engraving and polish; it’s a working automatic that still looks sharp laid out next to your higher-end switchblades and side-opening autos.

If you already own traditional Italian-style switchblades or modern side-opening automatics, the Edge Ranger brings that front-firing experience into your lineup without being fragile or fussy. It’s the one you hand to a friend when you want to explain what a real OTF knife feels like in actual use.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

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

All three terms touch it, but in different ways. Mechanically, it’s an out-the-front knife—blade fires straight out of the front. That also makes it an automatic knife, because a spring and thumb slide do the work for you. Some folks would casually call it a switchblade, but that word is looser and often used for side-openers. If you’re being precise, call it a double-action OTF automatic knife.

Is carrying this OTF knife legal in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF knives and what people call switchblades—are generally legal to own and carry for most adults, with restrictions in certain locations like schools and some government buildings. Blade length and location can still matter, and laws can change, so a wise Texas carrier double-checks the latest state law and any local rules before making this their everyday automatic knife.

How does this OTF knife compare to a side-opening automatic for everyday carry?

A side-opening automatic swings open like a regular folder; an OTF knife like this Edge Ranger drives the blade forward in-line. In the pocket, they ride about the same. In the hand, the OTF gives you a straight push and pull—very controlled, very predictable. If you like quick, one-direction deployment with minimal movement, this automatic OTF may feel more intuitive than a traditional switchblade-style side opener.

For Texas collectors who care about the fine print between an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic knife, and the old catch-all switchblade, the Edge Ranger Double-Edge OTF Dagger Knife feels right at home. It’s a clean, honest front-firing automatic built to ride in a real Texas pocket, see real Texas miles, and still earn its space in a serious collection when the day’s work is done.