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Signal Trigger Front-Button OTF Automatic Knife - Anodized Green

Price:

15.99


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Signal Edge Dual-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Anodized Green

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5323/image_1920?unique=f14b591

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This out-the-front automatic knife is built for Texans who want fast, no-drama deployment in a compact package. A front-button, dual-action mechanism snaps the spear point blade in and out with a clean, mechanical certainty. The anodized green aluminum handle rides light in the pocket but is easy to spot in a truck console or range bag. For the collector, it’s a tight, modern OTF that understands its job: disappear until the moment you need it, then go to work without hesitation.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB7061GN

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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 1.875
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 Stainless
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Front
Theme None
Double/Single Action Dual
Pocket Clip Yes

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Signal Edge Dual-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Anodized Green

This is a true out-the-front automatic knife, built for Texans who know exactly what that means. The blade rides inside the handle, not folded to the side, and a front-mounted sliding button drives it straight out and back in with a firm, repeatable click. It’s compact, it’s honest about what it is, and it doesn’t pretend to be a side-opening switchblade or an assisted opener. It’s an OTF knife first, an automatic knife by mechanism, and a pocket tool that earns its keep.

What Makes This an OTF Automatic Knife, Not Just a "Switchblade"

In Texas, words matter—especially when you’re talking about an automatic knife. This piece is an out-the-front automatic knife in the cleanest sense: the spear point blade runs on an internal track and deploys straight out of the handle when you push the front button forward. Pull it back and the same mechanism retracts the blade. That’s dual-action OTF, not a spring-assisted flipper and not a side-opening switchblade.

Where a traditional switchblade swings the blade out from one side, this OTF knife sends the blade directly forward. Where an assisted knife needs you to start the motion, this automatic does the work once you commit with the button. That distinction is exactly what Texas collectors pay attention to—and what this design gets right.

Mechanism and Build: Dual-Action Precision in a Compact Frame

Front-Button Dual-Action OTF Mechanism

The front-mounted slider is the heart of this automatic knife. Thumb it forward, and the internal spring system drives the 440 stainless spear point blade out the front. Pull it back, and the same action pulls the blade home. There’s no half-measures here—just clean in-and-out dual-action with a clear, tactile stop at each end. It’s quick enough for one-handed work but controlled enough that it doesn’t feel jumpy or loose.

440 Stainless Spear Point for Everyday Texas Use

The blade is simple and sensible: 440 stainless steel with a dual-tone spear point profile. It’s short—under two inches—but balanced, with enough point for detail cuts and enough straight edge to handle tape, cord, or packaging without drama. The matte finish cuts glare, while the central black grind line gives it a modern tactical look that still reads like a working blade, not a showpiece.

Anodized Green Aluminum Handle That Won’t Disappear on You

The rectangular aluminum handle keeps this OTF knife light and strong, with chamfered edges that won’t bite your hand or your pocket seam. The bright anodized green finish is the point: it’s high-visibility without being loud, easy to pick out from the bottom of a range bag or truck console. Black hardware, a deep-carry clip, and spine jimping round it out into a real EDC package instead of a gimmick.

Carrying an OTF Knife in Texas: Practical Reality

Texas has opened the door for automatic knives and OTF knives in a way that used to be unthinkable. For most adults, carrying an automatic or OTF knife like this is legal, but you still need to respect location-based restrictions—schools, certain government buildings, and similar off-limits areas. This compact OTF format makes sense for Texas pocket carry: it drops into jeans, rides in gym shorts with the clip, or tucks into a work bag without taking over the space.

At just over five inches overall and under two inches of blade, this isn’t pretending to be a combat piece. It’s a small automatic OTF that handles day-to-day Texas chores—cutting straps in the feed store parking lot, opening packages on the porch, or trimming cord at the range. The blade length keeps it easy to live with, while the mechanism gives you that instant-on, instant-off control people look for in a true automatic knife.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade: Where This One Sits

How This Knife Fits the Three-Type Conversation

Think of it this way: all OTF knives in this style are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTF. And while most folks in Texas still say "switchblade" for any auto, this particular piece is better described as a dual-action OTF automatic knife. It doesn’t swing from the side, it doesn’t need a flipper tab, and it doesn’t wait on you to assist the blade the last inch.

So if you’re comparing automatic knife vs OTF knife vs switchblade, this green operator lives squarely in the OTF column. Mechanically it’s an automatic, culturally most people will call it a switchblade, but a serious Texas collector will appreciate that it’s an out-the-front dual-action automatic knife—with all the mechanical character that implies.

What Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Automatic Knives

Is an OTF knife just another name for a switchblade?

Not exactly. In Texas conversation, "switchblade" gets used for any automatic knife, whether it’s side-opening or out-the-front. Mechanically, this is a dual-action OTF automatic knife: the blade moves straight out and back into the handle along a track, driven by a spring system controlled by the front button. A classic switchblade usually opens from the side on a pivot. Both are automatic knives, but this green OTF is a different breed in the way it deploys and retracts.

Are OTF automatic knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

As of current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are broadly legal for adults to own and carry, including what most people call switchblades. The key limits now are locations—schools, secured government facilities, and other restricted areas still apply. This compact OTF automatic knife falls on the practical EDC side of the spectrum, but it’s still on you to stay current with Texas statutes and local rules before you clip it into your pocket.

Why would a Texas collector add a small OTF like this?

Because not every out-the-front automatic has to be a full-size bruiser. This piece gives you a clean example of a dual-action OTF mechanism in a very pocketable frame, with a high-visibility anodized green handle that stands out in a drawer full of black and gray. For a Texas collector, it’s a working demonstration of front-button OTF mechanics and a legitimate everyday carry option—something you’ll actually use, not just admire under case lights.

Collector Value: A Working OTF With Texas Sense

For a Texan who knows their automatic knives, this anodized green OTF hits a smart middle ground. It’s mechanically honest, clearly an out-the-front automatic knife with dual-action operation, not a confused assisted opener. It’s sized for real-world Texas carry, from ranch errands to city runs. And it wears a color that means you’ll find it when you need it, whether it’s in the truck door pocket or the bottom of a gear bag.

If your collection already covers side-opening switchblades and a few assisted knives, this is the kind of OTF that rounds out the story: compact, functional, and mechanically distinct. It doesn’t shout, it just works—and that’s exactly the kind of piece a serious Texas knife owner keeps reaching for.