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Rebel Snap California Legal Automatic Knife - Confederate Flag

Price:

9.99


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Rebel Banner California-Legal Automatic Knife - Confederate Flag Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1087/image_1920?unique=d37a396

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This Rebel Banner California-legal automatic knife is a compact side-opening auto with a full-size spring hiding in a 3.25" frame. One press of the push button snaps the 1.75" clip point blade into action, backed up by a positive safety switch and pocket clip. It’s an automatic knife sized for low-profile everyday carry in Texas, with a bold Confederate flag handle for collectors who like their pocket pieces small, fast, and unapologetically themed.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

SB209DF

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
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 1.75
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.25
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Confederate Flag
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip Yes

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Rebel Banner California-Legal Automatic Knife for Texas Pockets

This is a true automatic knife in a compact frame – a side-opening folder that fires with a push button and locks up with authority. At 3.25 inches closed with a 1.75 inch clip point blade, it’s built in the California-legal size class but right at home in a Texas jeans pocket. The Confederate flag handle makes the visual statement; the mechanism makes it worth a collector’s time.

For Texas buyers sorting through automatic knives, OTF knives, and every so-called switchblade on the internet, this one is simple: it’s a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF, not an assisted opener. Push the button, the spring takes over, and the blade snaps out from the side like a traditional auto.

How This California-Legal Automatic Knife Actually Works

The mechanism on this knife is straightforward, which is exactly what serious buyers expect. The blade rides inside the handle like a standard folding knife. A coil spring is preloaded inside the frame. When you press the push button, you release that spring, and the blade swings out from the side and locks in place. That’s an automatic knife in plain terms – button release, spring-driven opening, full lockup.

Side-Opening Automatic vs. OTF Knife Behavior

With an OTF knife, the blade travels straight out the front of the handle on rails. This Rebel Banner piece is not an OTF knife; the blade pivots on a traditional side-mounted hinge. That makes it closer to the classic switchblade profile most people picture, even though the term "switchblade" gets thrown around casually. Here, you’ve got a compact button-activated automatic folder, not a dual-action OTF and not a manual knife pretending to be an auto.

Full-Size Spring in a Small Frame

Because this California-legal automatic knife uses a full-size spring inside a short 3.25 inch handle, the action has more snap than you’d expect from the dimensions. The 1.75 inch clip point blade jumps out with a crisp sound and settles into a solid open position. For a collector who’s handled a lot of automatic knives, that fast, confident deployment in a small format is what separates this piece from the pile of novelty autos.

OTF Knife, Automatic Knife, and Switchblade: Where This One Fits

Texas buyers care about terms being used correctly. This Rebel Banner is an automatic knife – a side-opening automatic with a push button and safety. It is not an OTF knife; the blade doesn’t ride out the front. It fits under what most people casually call a switchblade, but for clarity:

  • Automatic knife: Button or switch releases a spring-driven blade. That’s this knife.
  • OTF knife: Blade exits straight out the front of the handle. Not this design.
  • Switchblade: Often used as a catch-all term for automatic knives, but serious collectors use the more precise mechanism language.

This piece gives Texas collectors a compact automatic knife that behaves like a classic side-opener, while staying in that California-legal blade length zone for those who like smaller autos.

Texas Carry Reality for a California-Legal Automatic Knife

Texas law has opened up a lot in recent years, and automatic knives are no longer the underground topic they once were. For adults in Texas, carrying an automatic knife is legal in most day-to-day situations, with the main limits kicking in at certain "location-restricted" places. The shorter blade on this California-legal automatic knife makes it even easier to carry as a low-profile pocket piece.

The push button and separate safety switch matter here. In a Texas truck console, glove box, or jeans pocket, accidental deployment is the enemy. Slide the safety on, and this automatic knife stays closed even if the button catches on your belt or pocket seam. Slide the safety off, and it’s a single button press to open – no wrist flick, no two-step assisted mechanism. That immediate action is exactly what separates an automatic from an assisted opener or simple folder.

Pocket Clip and Everyday Texas Use

The tip-down pocket clip makes this knife ride low and out of the way. With a closed length of 3.25 inches, it doesn’t crowd your pocket like a full-size tactical auto or a big OTF knife. For Texans who already carry a larger work blade or hunting knife, this compact automatic can serve as a second, quick-access EDC piece – the kind of knife you use for light cutting jobs without pulling your main blade.

Confederate Flag Theme and Collector Appeal

The first thing anyone sees on this piece is the Confederate flag graphic stretched across the handle scales. That red, blue, and white cross-and-stars design makes this automatic knife a themed item as much as an EDC tool. For collectors who focus on Southern or Confederate flag motifs, this is a small but fully functional automatic knife, not just a printed novelty.

The matte silver clip point blade keeps the focus on the handle art while still offering a practical cutting profile. The clean edge, simple grind, and spine jimping show this wasn’t treated purely as a display piece. The combination of an unmistakable Confederate flag image with a real automatic mechanism gives it a niche place in a larger automatic knife or switchblade collection.

Why It Earns a Slot in a Serious Collection

Most Confederate flag knives in the bargain bins are manual folders with weak liners and busy graphics. This one stands out because it’s a true push-button automatic knife with a safety, a pocket clip, and a snappy spring. For a Texas collector who already owns premium OTF knives and high-end side-opening autos, this compact California-legal automatic can sit in the collection as a themed outlier – the small rebel auto you hand to a friend who appreciates the symbol and the mechanism equally.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

Is this a real automatic knife or just a fancy folder?

It’s a real automatic knife. The blade is spring-driven and released via a side-mounted push button. You’re not dealing with an assisted opener that needs a manual start, and you’re not looking at an OTF knife that fires out the front. This is a classic side-opening automatic, the same family most people mean when they casually say "switchblade," just in a compact, California-legal blade length.

Is a California-legal automatic knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives are broadly legal for adults to own and carry, including side-opening autos like this one. The short, California-legal 1.75 inch blade isn’t a requirement in Texas, but it does make this automatic knife even easier to carry discreetly. As always, location-restricted areas and specific local rules can apply, so Texas buyers should stay current on state statutes and any local regulations before carrying any automatic or switchblade-style knife.

How does this compare to an OTF or larger switchblade in a collection?

An OTF knife gives you that straight-out-the-front action and a very different internal track system. Larger switchblade-style autos provide more blade and often more robust lockwork. This Rebel Banner California-legal automatic knife earns its spot by doing something different: compact size, full-strength spring, bold Confederate flag theme, and true push-button automatic operation. It’s the knife you add when you want a small, fast auto with a very specific Southern aesthetic, not another generic black tactical design.

In the end, this Rebel Banner California-legal automatic knife is for the Texas buyer who knows exactly what they’re looking at: a compact side-opening automatic, honest about its mechanism, unapologetic about its Confederate flag handle, and sized to disappear in a pocket. It doesn’t pretend to be an OTF knife, and it doesn’t need a long explanation to prove it’s a real automatic. For collectors who care about both the story on the handle and the spring under the scales, this piece fits right into a Texas drawer full of well-chosen blades.