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Flagline Rapid-Response Spring Assisted Rescue Knife - Black Blade

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6.99


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Rebel Rescue Spring-Assisted EDC Knife - Black Blade

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7042/image_1920?unique=ba84893

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This spring assisted rescue knife is built for the second you hope never comes. A Confederate flag handle wraps a black 3.5-inch partially serrated 440 stainless blade, ready to chew through rope and webbing. The flipper tab and liner lock give you fast, one-hand deployment without crossing into switchblade or OTF knife territory. A belt cutter, glass breaker, and pocket clip make it at home in a Texas truck door pocket or work pants, where utility matters more than talk.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

KN1956CF

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method

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Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material 440 Stainless Steel
Theme Confederate Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted

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What This Spring Assisted Rescue Knife Really Is

This Rebel Rescue spring assisted rescue knife is a side-opening folder with a little mechanical help, not a switchblade and not an OTF knife. You start the motion with the flipper or thumb stud, the internal spring takes it the rest of the way, and the liner lock holds the 3.5-inch black blade open. That distinction matters, especially to Texas buyers who know their mechanisms and their law.

The handle wears a full Confederate flag graphic in red, white, and blue, wrapped around a matte aluminum frame. The blade is 440 stainless steel in a black matte finish, with a drop point profile and partial serrations to bite into rope, webbing, and stubborn material when time is short.

Spring Assisted Rescue Knife Mechanics for Texas Collectors

A spring assisted knife sits right between a manual folder and a true automatic knife. With this Rebel Rescue, you nudge the flipper tab or thumb stud, then the internal torsion bar snaps the blade into lockup. That means you get fast, repeatable deployment without the button-triggered action that defines most switchblade-style automatics.

OTF knives push or fire the blade straight out the front of the handle. This knife doesn't do that; it's a classic side-opening folder where the blade pivots out from the spine on a hinge. For collectors who keep OTF knives, automatic knives, and assisted openers in different cases, this one belongs firmly in the assisted opener row.

Blade and Build Details

The 3.5-inch 440 stainless blade offers easy sharpening and solid corrosion resistance, which suits a glovebox, truck console, or ranch gate duty. The partial serrations near the handle end of the edge chew through straps and cord, while the plain edge toward the tip handles finer cuts. Overall length at 8 inches and closed length at 4.5 inches make it a pocketable rescue tool, not a giant camp chopper.

Rescue Hardware: Cutter and Glass Breaker

At the butt, you get an integrated belt/strap cutter and a hardened glass breaker. In a vehicle accident, that turns panic into a procedure: cut the belt, break the window, get out. It isn't a fantasy "tactical" feature – it's simple hardware that earns its keep in a Texas truck or work rig where road miles and long days are the norm.

How This Assisted Opening Rescue Knife Carries in Texas

Texas buyers care about how a knife rides day in and day out, not just how it looks on a screen. The pocket clip keeps this assisted opening knife sitting ready on a jeans pocket or inside a work vest. At 4.5 inches closed, it disappears until you need it, but that flipper tab and spring-assisted action mean one-hand access is there when things go sideways.

This isn't the kind of OTF knife you bring out to impress someone at the table. It's the spring assisted rescue knife you forget about until a rollover on a county road or a fence repair in August sun reminds you why you carry it. The glass breaker and belt cutter are built into the same flag-branded handle, so you don't have to dig around for a separate tool.

Spring Assisted Knife vs. Automatic Knife vs. OTF Knife

Collectors in Texas are tired of every folder being called a "switchblade." Mechanically, here's where this Rebel Rescue sits. A true automatic knife, often casually called a switchblade, opens when you hit a button or hidden actuator; the spring does all the work from closed to locked. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, then retracts the same way, usually via a sliding switch.

This knife is a spring assisted folder: it requires you to start the blade moving with a flipper or thumb stud, and then the spring takes over. It opens from the side on a pivot, not out the front. That assisted opening gives you plenty of speed without putting it in the same mechanical bucket as a switchblade or OTF knife. For the Texas buyer building out a well-rounded collection, it's a distinct category worth its own space in the drawer.

Texas Context: Carrying a Spring Assisted Rescue Knife

Texas law has opened up considerably for knife owners. In most everyday situations, an adult Texan can carry an assisted opening knife like this Rebel Rescue without worrying that it's being mistaken for a prohibited switchblade or exotic OTF knife. It's a side-opening folder with spring assist, not a button-fired automatic, and that distinction matters when you talk to someone who knows the code as well as the hardware.

That said, Texas still draws lines around certain locations and large blades. This rescue knife sits in a practical pocket size with an 8-inch overall length, right where most Texans like their EDC gear. It's the kind of piece that feels natural clipped in a ranch hand's pocket, a tow operator's vest, or a volunteer firefighter's bag. As always, if you're carrying near schools, government buildings, or sensitive locations, it's on you to check the most current law and any local rules before you rely on internet talk.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Rescue Knives

Is a spring assisted rescue knife the same as an automatic or OTF knife?

No, and this Rebel Rescue is a good example of why words matter. With a spring assisted knife, you start the blade yourself using a flipper or thumb stud, and then a spring helps it snap open the rest of the way. An automatic knife, often called a switchblade, opens from fully closed with a button – you don't have to start the motion. An OTF knife sends the blade out the front of the handle using a switch or slider. This is a side-opening, spring assisted rescue knife, not an OTF or button-triggered automatic.

Are spring assisted rescue knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

For most adult Texans, yes. Spring assisted opening knives are widely treated as standard folding knives, not as prohibited switchblades, and Texas law has moved away from the old blanket bans. This knife opens with a manual start via flipper or thumb stud and then spring assist, and it folds back into the handle when you're done. As with any knife, certain restricted places and age limits can still apply, so a serious collector or daily carrier will always double-check current Texas statutes rather than rely on rumor.

Why would a Texas collector add this piece if they already own automatics and OTFs?

Because mechanism and purpose both matter. This Rebel Rescue sits in the spring assisted category, giving you quick one-hand action without the full automatic or OTF mechanism. On top of that, it's purpose-built with a belt cutter and glass breaker, making it a true rescue knife rather than just another flashy folder. The Confederate flag handle adds a very specific Southern-heritage aesthetic some collectors seek out, but the hardware – serrated 440 stainless blade, assisted deployment, and rescue tools – is what earns it a working slot in a Texas collection.

Why This Assisted Opening Rescue Knife Earns a Spot in a Texas Collection

In a state where knives are tools first and conversation pieces second, this spring assisted rescue knife checks both boxes. The Confederate flag handle will draw the eye in any Southern-leaning display, no question. But the real value for a Texas collector is the mechanism and mission: a quick, assisted-opening folder with a partially serrated 440 stainless blade, liner lock, belt cutter, and glass breaker, built for bad days on hot pavement.

Someone who knows the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener will slot this right where it belongs – in the spring assisted rescue lane. It rides clipped and quiet until something happens on the road or at the lease. Then it does what it was built to do. That's the kind of plain, purpose-built piece that speaks to a Texas buyer who doesn't need a lecture, just the right knife for the job.