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Aviator Skull Dual-Edge Assisted Opening Knife - Yellow/Red

Price:

12.99


Aviator Skull Wing-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Red/Black
Aviator Skull Wing-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Red/Black
12.99 12.99
Hook Control Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum
Hook Control Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum
11.99 11.99

Skull Aviator Twin-Wing Assisted Knife - Red/Yellow

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3700/image_1920?unique=f1ddf84

12 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening knife is pure Skull Aviator attitude with Texas-ready function. Twin spear point blades snap out with spring-assisted speed, turning the red and yellow handle into a winged silhouette that looks airborne even clipped in your pocket. It’s not an OTF or a switchblade — it’s a dual-blade assisted opener built for one-handed deployment and everyday cutting. For the Texas collector who likes their steel loud and their mechanisms honest, this is a fantasy piece that still earns its keep.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

SK6624YL

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 12
Closed Length (inches) 6
Blade Color Black
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Theme Skull
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted

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Skull Aviator Twin-Wing Assisted Knife – What It Really Is

This Skull Aviator Twin-Wing is an assisted opening knife first and a wild fantasy design second. That distinction matters. You’re not looking at an automatic switchblade or an OTF knife here. Both spear point blades are folding, spring-assisted, and ride inside a 6-inch metal handle until you start them with a thumb stud or flipper. Once you give it that nudge, the springs take over and bring the blades to lock-up with liner locks on each side.

Open, you’ve got about 12 inches of steel and artwork in your hand, twin 3-inch spear point blades forming a winged profile around a yellow skull aviator graphic. Closed, it’s a pocket-sized Texas conversation piece that still knows how to cut cord, open boxes, or ride backup to your primary EDC.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanics vs. OTF and Switchblade Action

If you’ve ever been burned by a site that calls every spring-powered knife a switchblade, this one will feel like a breath of fresh air. An assisted opening knife like this Skull Aviator requires you to start the motion. You push on the thumb stud or flipper, the blade passes a certain point, and the internal spring does the rest. It’s fast, but it’s not firing open at the push of a button like a true automatic knife or OTF knife.

A switchblade is a side-opening automatic knife that opens from a closed position with a button or lever and no help from your thumb. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track, using a sliding switch or trigger. This Skull Aviator isn’t doing either of those jobs. Both spear points fold into the sides of the handle like a standard folder. The automatic-style speed comes from the spring assist, not a full automatic mechanism.

Dual Blades, Dual Liner Locks

Each spear point blade has its own liner lock inside the metal frame. Once the assisted opening snaps the blade into position, the liner lock swings under the tang to keep it there. A quick push with your thumb clears the lock so the blade can fold back into the handle. It’s simple, familiar, and dependable — especially if you’ve been carrying assisted folders for years.

Fast Deployment Without Full Automatic Status

Because this is an assisted opening knife and not a true automatic switchblade or OTF, you get plenty of speed without drifting into that button-activated territory. For a lot of Texas buyers this hits the sweet spot: one-handed deployment when you need it, plus a little less drama if someone mistakes every fast knife for a prohibited automatic.

Texas Carry Reality for an Assisted Opening Knife

Texas law has eased up over the years, but it still pays to know what you’re carrying. This Skull Aviator lives firmly in assisted opening knife territory, which Texas buyers generally treat differently than a push-button switchblade or an OTF knife. You’re manually starting the open, just with a spring helping you finish the job.

That makes it a practical piece to drop in a pocket or clip to your jeans for weekend runs, range days, or just showing off at a Texas knife meet. The pocket clip keeps it riding ready, and the 3-inch blades stay in a comfortable range for everyday utility work. You’re not swinging a giant combat automatic or a double-action OTF here — you’re carrying a dual-blade assisted opener that happens to look like something out of a midnight flight over a West Texas airfield.

Where It Belongs in a Texas Kit

This isn’t the knife you press into hard ranch work all day long. This is the one you pull when you’re around other folks who know knives. It rides next to your reliable work blade, your favorite automatic knife, or that OTF knife you keep for pure mechanical satisfaction. When someone asks what you’ve picked up lately, this Skull Aviator is the one you lay on the table first.

Collector Appeal: Skull Art, Dual Blades, and Texas Fantasy Steel

From a collector’s standpoint, this assisted opening knife earns its keep through theme and mechanism. The skull aviator graphic, the red and yellow handle, and the neon green bats let it stand out in a drawer that’s already full of black-handled automatics and stonewashed EDC folders. The twin folding spear points give it a silhouette that reads like wings in flight when you snap them both open.

It’s an easy talking piece in any Texas collection because it slots cleanly into your assisted opening category: not a switchblade, not an OTF, just a flashy dual-blade folder that uses the same spring-assisted concept as your more serious EDC knives. That clarity matters when you’re organizing and documenting a growing lineup.

Steel, Build, and Display

The matte black steel blades carry fantasy graphics, but they’re still plain-edge spear points capable of real cutting. The glossy metal handle, decorated screws, and pocket clip make it just as comfortable riding on a pocket as standing up in a display case. For many Texas collectors, this kind of skull-themed assisted opening knife sits in the same lane as tattoo-art folders and horror motifs — meant to be handled, shown, and passed around at the table.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is an assisted opening knife the same as an automatic or OTF?

No. An assisted opening knife like this Skull Aviator needs you to start the opening motion. You push a thumb stud or flipper, and once the blade moves past a set point, the internal spring finishes the job. An automatic switchblade opens from a fully closed position with a button or lever and no help from you. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a track using a switch. All three feel fast, but for a Texas collector, the differences in mechanism and definition are important.

Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas has relaxed many restrictions, and assisted opening knives are widely carried across the state. Because they require manual initiation and don’t rely on a push-button automatic mechanism, most Texas buyers treat them differently than classic switchblades or certain OTF knives. That said, laws can change and some locations have their own rules, so a serious collector always checks current Texas statutes and any local restrictions before carrying, especially with a knife that draws as much attention as this one.

Where does this Skull Aviator fit in a serious collection?

This piece slots into your assisted opening and fantasy-art category. It won’t replace a hard-use work blade or a high-end automatic knife, but it will anchor the skull-and-horror corner of your drawer and sit neatly beside any aviation or bat-wing themed knives you own. Its dual spear point blades and loud Texas-friendly artwork make it a go-to show-and-tell knife when other collectors come by, and it clearly distinguishes itself from your OTF knives and classic switchblades by mechanism alone.

Texas Identity in a Skull-Wing Assisted Opener

Owning this Skull Aviator Twin-Wing Assisted Knife tells a quiet story: you know the difference between an assisted opening knife, an automatic, and an OTF, and you like your steel with a little theater. It’s the kind of piece a Texas collector clips on before a show or a meet, knowing it’ll get picked up, opened, and turned over more than once.

In a state where knives are part of the landscape, this one doesn’t pretend to be a tactical workhorse or a covert switchblade. It’s exactly what it claims to be — a bold, dual-blade assisted opening knife with skull-and-bat artwork — and that honesty, backed by a proper understanding of the mechanism, is what keeps it in a Texas collection long after the novelty wears off.