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Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade

Price:

11.99


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Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1047/image_1920?unique=eabe7b0

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This automatic knife is a side-opening, push-button folder with quick, confident deployment and a safety you can trust. The matte black clip point blade with partial serration handles everyday Texas chores, while the Dixie banner aluminum handle makes its statement in the pocket or the display case. At 3.25 inches of steel and 8 inches overall, it rides well, works hard, and tells anyone who sees it that you know the difference between a real automatic, an OTF knife, and a switchblade.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

SB162DFC

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 4.28
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Push Button
Theme Confederate Flag
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This Automatic Knife Really Is

The Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF knife and not a gimmicked-up assisted opener. You hit the push button, the internal spring takes over, and the blade swings out from the side and locks. That makes it a true automatic knife in collector terms, and in Texas terms, a serious everyday carry piece with a very specific style.

Here, the story starts with three things working together: a matte black clip point blade with partial serration, a bright Dixie banner handle, and a straightforward push-button mechanism with a safety switch. No mystery, no marketing fog — just a clean automatic action built into a folding knife that rides in your pocket the way a proper side-opener should.

Automatic Knife Mechanism vs OTF and Switchblade

This knife is a textbook side-opening automatic knife. Press the button on the handle, the internal spring drives the blade out from the side, and it locks in place. To close it, you release the lock and fold it back into the handle like any other folding knife. That’s the core difference between this piece and an OTF knife, where the blade travels straight out the front of the handle.

Collectors sometimes use "switchblade" as the broad umbrella term, but around serious Texas buyers, language matters. A switchblade in conversation usually means a side-opening automatic knife like this one, while an OTF knife is its own animal with a completely different track and internal hardware. This Rebel Banner rides firmly in the automatic knife camp: side-opening, push-button, spring-driven, and built for fast deployment from a folded position.

Push-Button and Safety Layout

The push button sits where your thumb naturally lands, making deployment quick without contortions. Just above it, the sliding safety switch lets you lock out the automatic action when you’re pocketing it, tossing it in a truck console, or handling it around folks who don’t share your comfort level with fast-opening blades. That combination — button plus safety — is exactly what Texas collectors expect from a work-ready automatic knife.

Blade Shape and Edge for Real Use

The clip point profile gives you a fine, controllable tip for detail work, while the partial serration near the handle is there for rope, straps, and stubborn packaging. You get the practical side of a tactical-style automatic knife without giving up everyday utility. And the matte black finish keeps reflections down, pairing cleanly with the darker, more aggressive visual character of the knife.

Texas Use: Carrying This Automatic Knife Day to Day

In Texas, an automatic knife like this is no longer something you have to hide or dance around. State law changes over the last decade opened the door for Texans to carry automatic knives, OTF knives, and what many still call switchblades without the old blanket bans. That doesn’t mean you can ignore local rules entirely, but it does mean a side-opening automatic like this Rebel Banner can realistically be an everyday partner.

With a 3.25-inch blade and an 8-inch overall length, the size lives in that sweet spot for Texas pocket carry — big enough to feel substantial in work jeans, small enough to disappear under a shirt hem when clipped inside the pocket. The pocket clip keeps it riding where you can reach it quickly, whether you’re opening feed sacks, cutting paracord at the lease, or just dealing with blister packs in an office that still thinks a box cutter is high tech.

Automatic Knife vs Assisted Opener in Daily Carry

For Texas buyers who already own assisted openers, this automatic knife fills a different slot. An assisted knife needs you to start the blade moving before the spring kicks in. This Rebel Banner, as a true automatic knife, does the whole job from the button press. That matters if you’re wearing gloves, working in tight quarters, or just prefer the clean snap of full automatic deployment. It also adds a certain mechanical satisfaction that assisted openers rarely match.

Design Story: Dixie Banner and Black Blade

The visual center of this knife is the Dixie banner handle — bold red and blue fields crossed by white bars and stars — laid over sculpted aluminum. It’s a Confederate battle flag theme presented in modern tactical form. Collectors know that imagery is loaded, and they buy it or pass on it with both eyes open. For those who do buy it, the appeal is that straight-line, no-apology Southern rebel aesthetic paired with a practical automatic mechanism.

The black blade doesn’t compete with the handle; it frames it. The matte finish keeps the focus on the battle flag graphic while still reading as a tactical-style automatic knife. The angular grip lines cut through the artwork just enough to keep the handle functional in hand, giving you traction and indexing without burying the design. Hardware and pocket clip keep a low profile, letting the blade and the banner do the talking.

Collector Position: Theme Piece with Working Guts

In a Texas automatic knife collection, this one doesn’t pretend to be a gentleman’s folder or a dressy piece. It’s a theme knife with working guts: push-button automatic action, safety, partial serration, and a solid 4.5-inch closed length. It earns its spot as the rebel-flag automatic, the one you pull out when someone asks about Southern-themed blades or wants to see how a side-opening automatic compares to your OTF knives.

Texas Law, OTF Knives, and Switchblade Confusion

Texas law now treats automatic knives, OTF knives, and what older statutes used to label switchblades far more leniently than in years past. Adults can generally carry an automatic knife like this Rebel Banner openly or concealed in most everyday settings. The main limits today focus on blade length in sensitive places and on prohibited locations such as schools, secure government facilities, and some events.

That’s why mechanism clarity matters. When a Texas buyer looks at this knife and calls it an automatic knife, they’re functionally right in both common language and legal context. When they call it an OTF knife, they’re wrong mechanically — this blade swings from the side, it does not shoot out the front. A serious collector keeps that distinction straight, especially when discussing what they carry and where.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

This is a side-opening automatic knife: push-button, spring-driven, folding design. It is not an OTF knife — nothing comes out the front of the handle. In casual conversation, some folks would still call it a switchblade, but in collector and technical terms it’s best described as a side-opening automatic knife. If you already own an OTF knife, this will feel familiar in speed, but different in how it carries and how the blade travels.

Is it legal to carry this automatic knife in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can generally own and carry automatic knives, including side-opening automatics and OTF knives, with far fewer restrictions than in the past. The big things to watch are locations and, in a few cases, blade length categories. This automatic knife’s 3.25-inch blade keeps it comfortably within everyday carry territory for most Texas situations. As always, know your local ordinances and any specific place-based rules — courthouses, schools, and secure facilities still have their own standards.

Where does this fit in a serious Texas collection?

This piece sits squarely in the themed automatic knife lane. You’re not buying it as a high-end steel experiment or a minimalist gentleman’s knife. You’re adding a Dixie banner automatic to round out the Southern, rebel, or historical side of your drawer. Mechanically, it fills the role of a work-ready side-opening automatic with a partial serration and safety — useful enough to carry, distinctive enough to keep for the graphic alone.

Why This Automatic Knife Belongs in a Texas Drawer

Owning the Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade says two things: you care about the mechanism, and you care about the story on the handle. You know what separates an automatic knife from an OTF knife, and you’re comfortable choosing a side-opening push-button over flippers and assisted openers. You understand that in Texas, the law has finally caught up to what knife folks have known for years — that these mechanisms are tools as much as statements.

If your collection already has a few OTF knives, a couple of classic switchblade-style side-openers, and a row of assisted EDCs, this one slides in as the Dixie banner automatic: a bold, black-bladed piece that looks like a display knife but works like a daily cutter. It’s for the Texas buyer who knows their knives, knows their history, and prefers their explanations as clean as their edges.