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Skeleton Glide Precision Butterfly Knife - Silver

Price:

8.99


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Skeleton Glide Balanced Butterfly Knife - Polished Silver

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3524/image_1920?unique=ed7d7cf

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This butterfly knife was built to glide. The Skeleton Glide’s stainless steel spear point blade and drilled handles pull weight out of the frame, giving flips a smooth, predictable rhythm. All-metal, all-silver construction keeps it durable, easy to clean, and handsome on the shelf. At 8.875" open and 5" closed, it lands right in the sweet spot for Texas balisong fans who want a true butterfly knife, not an automatic or OTF, that feels balanced the second it hits your hand.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

BF277SLD

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
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.875
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Latch Type T-latch
Is Trainer No

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Skeleton Glide Balanced Butterfly Knife - Polished Silver

The Skeleton Glide is a true butterfly knife, the kind of balisong a Texas collector picks up and understands immediately. Two steel handles, a pivoted blade, and a simple T-latch closer. No springs, no buttons, no sliding track like an OTF knife. Just clean stainless steel and a smooth flipping rhythm that rewards good hands.

What Makes This Butterfly Knife Different

Start with the balance. This butterfly knife runs a 3.75" stainless steel spear point blade inside polished stainless handles, coming in at 8.875" open and 5" closed. The blade is skeletonized with long oval cutouts, and the handles are drilled with circular holes. That weight reduction isn’t for show; it lightens the swing and gives the knife a quick, controllable arc as you cycle through openings, rolls, and transfers.

Because it’s a butterfly knife and not an automatic knife or switchblade, you provide the power. There’s no button to press, no coil spring to kick the blade out, and no out-the-front track to manage. The blade pivots cleanly on its tang, with a tang pin and T-latch keeping things honest when it’s open or closed. That mechanical simplicity is exactly why balisong collectors trust this style: fewer moving parts, more control in the hand.

All-Metal Construction for Real Use

The polished stainless steel blade and handles give this butterfly knife a modern, minimalist look with practical upside. Steel shrugs off pocket wear, wipes clean after use, and doesn’t care if it rides in a truck console, range bag, or tackle box. The plain-edge spear point slices clean and is easy to sharpen, which matters more than any trick deployment when you actually put it to work.

Skeletonized for Glide and Feedback

The cutouts in the blade and the drilled handles change how this balisong feels. Instead of a nose-heavy swing, the weight is pulled back toward the pivots, which gives you better feedback on where the blade is at every moment. For Texas buyers who already own an automatic knife or maybe a compact switchblade, this butterfly knife offers a very different kind of satisfaction: not just fast deployment, but the feel of a tuned tool moving exactly how you expect.

Butterfly Knife vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

A lot of sites call anything that “opens fast” a switchblade. That’s how collectors get burned. This Skeleton Glide is a butterfly knife, also called a balisong. The blade sits between two handles that rotate around it. You flip it open; it doesn’t fire open. That puts it in a different class than an automatic knife, where a spring does the work after you hit a button or switch.

It’s also not an OTF knife. An OTF (out-the-front) knife sends the blade straight out of the handle through a channel, usually by pushing a thumb slider. This balisong has no internal track and no linear deployment. Likewise, the word switchblade is usually used to describe side-opening automatic knives with push-button or lever-actuated springs. This Skeleton Glide doesn’t fit that picture either. It’s a manually flipped butterfly knife, through and through, and that distinction matters to Texas buyers who want to stay within the lines and know exactly what they’re carrying.

Texas Context: Carrying a Butterfly Knife in the Lone Star State

Texas is friendlier to knives than most states, but serious collectors still care about the details. This is a butterfly knife, not an OTF knife, not an automatic knife, and not a traditional push-button switchblade. It opens by manual flipping only. That manual mechanism is one reason many Texas owners feel comfortable using a balisong as a truck knife, ranch companion, or range-bag piece, right alongside their other folders.

Blade length on the Skeleton Glide comes in at about 3.75", which keeps it reasonable for everyday tasks around the shop, on the road, or at the lease. As with any knife type—automatic, butterfly, OTF, or switchblade—Texas buyers should always check the most current state and local rules for where they live and where they plan to carry. But if you’re looking for a manual balisong that doesn’t rely on hidden springs or push-button tricks, this piece fits that bill cleanly.

Texas Use Cases: From Desk Drawer to Tailgate

This butterfly knife fits the real Texas rhythm. It’s slick enough to flip at the desk or show off on the tailgate, but practical enough to cut cord, tape, or light packaging without fuss. The polished silver finish gives it a showpiece shine, while the steel and simple mechanics make it a tool you won’t baby. For the collector who already owns an automatic knife for quick side-opening work and maybe an OTF knife for sheer novelty, this Skeleton Glide fills the “hands-on skill” slot in the lineup.

Mechanism Details for Texas Collectors

Collectors in Texas tend to ask the right questions: How does it lock? Where are the weak points? What makes this balisong worth another slot in the case when I already own a switchblade or two? Here, the answers are straightforward.

The knife uses a T-latch at the base of one handle to secure the handles together in the closed position and to keep them locked up in the open position. A tang pin at the base of the blade meets the handles and sets the stop points, which is the classic butterfly knife setup. There are no coil springs, leaf springs, or internal sliders that define an automatic knife or OTF knife. That means less to fail and more that can be tuned if you like to dial in your pivots and handle play.

Display, Training, and Everyday Readiness

This is a live-blade butterfly knife, not a dull trainer. The plain-edge spear point is meant to cut. The skeletonization and polished finish make it a strong display piece, but it’s also a practical everyday cutter. Many Texas collectors pair a balisong like this with a more traditional EDC folder or automatic knife—the folder handles the quick, quiet pocket jobs, while the butterfly knife comes out when there’s room to flip or when they want something with more personality.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Is a butterfly knife the same as an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. A butterfly knife (balisong) like the Skeleton Glide is a manual knife. You flip two handles around the blade to open and close it. An automatic knife uses a spring and a button or switch to fire the blade out from the side. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front using a slider. Switchblade is usually used to describe side-opening automatics with push-button deployment. This Skeleton Glide is none of those; it’s a manual butterfly knife that relies on your technique, not internal springs.

Are butterfly knives legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas law has become more knife-friendly over the years, and butterfly knives are widely owned here by collectors and enthusiasts. That said, rules can change, and some cities or specific locations may have their own restrictions on blade types or lengths, whether you’re talking about a butterfly knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. Texas buyers should always confirm the current state and local regulations before deciding how and where to carry any knife.

Why would I add this butterfly knife if I already own automatics and OTFs?

Because it does something those knives don’t. An automatic knife or switchblade gives you instant, push-button deployment. An OTF knife offers that straight-line, mechanical novelty. A butterfly knife like the Skeleton Glide is about control and rhythm. The skeletonized blade and drilled handles change the balance, giving you a smooth, responsive flip that feels more like a tuned tool than a simple opener. For a Texas collector who wants a hands-on, skill-based knife alongside their automatics, this piece earns its place.

In the end, the Skeleton Glide Balanced Butterfly Knife - Polished Silver is for the Texan who knows what they’re holding. You understand the difference between a balisong, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, and you buy accordingly. This is a clean, all-steel butterfly knife with honest mechanics and a balanced feel, ready to flip at the house, ride in the truck, or sit in the case next to the rest of your collection. No confusion, no gimmicks—just a proper butterfly knife with Texas-ready attitude.