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Cobalt Airframe Featherweight Automatic Knife - Blue Aluminum

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Skyline Airframe EDC Automatic Knife - Blue Aluminum

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1966/image_1920?unique=2df8ef1

15 sold in last 24 hours

This Skyline Airframe EDC Automatic Knife is a true side-opening automatic knife built for Texas pockets. Hit the button and the drop point blade snaps out clean, fast, and controlled—no OTF rattle, no assisted half-measures. The blue aluminum handle keeps weight down without feeling cheap, riding deep and light all day. It’s the kind of automatic Texans carry when they know their laws, know their tools, and want a knife that looks custom but works like an honest everyday cutter.

20.99 20.99 USD 20.99

SB10983BL

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 7.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.688
Weight (oz.) 3.2
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Anodized
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Titanium
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Button
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes

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Skyline Airframe EDC Automatic Knife - What This Texas Auto Really Is

The Skyline Airframe EDC Automatic Knife is a true side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF knife and not an assisted opener dressed up like one. Press the button, the internal spring drives the blade out from the side on a pivot, and you’re open and working in one clean motion. That’s the heart of this automatic knife: straightforward Texas-ready deployment in a slim, featherweight frame.

Collectors and everyday carriers in Texas know the difference. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on a track. A switchblade, in the way most folks use the word, is any automatic knife that opens with a button or switch. This piece lives squarely in that side-opening automatic switchblade family, with a modern EDC profile and a blue aluminum handle that feels custom without shouting about it.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Side-Opening, Button-Driven, No Guesswork

This Skyline Airframe is a button-activated automatic knife with a traditional pivot, built for people who want the speed of an auto without the bulk of a full tactical switchblade. The black button rides high enough to find under your thumb, but low enough not to trip in your pocket. Inside, a coil spring provides the power—press, release, and the drop point blade snaps into lockup with authority.

How It Differs from an OTF Knife

An OTF knife sends the blade straight out through the front of the handle, riding in a channel. This automatic doesn’t do that. It folds out from the side like a regular folder, just powered by a spring instead of your thumb. You still get instant action, but with the familiar pivot feel many Texas collectors prefer for EDC cutting chores.

Not Assisted, Not Manual—Fully Automatic

Assisted openers need you to start the blade moving before the spring helps. With this automatic knife, the spring does all the work from a dead stop. That’s the clean dividing line: if a button alone fires the blade, you’re in automatic switchblade territory. This one passes that test every time.

EDC Reality: Lightweight Automatic Knife Built for Texas Pockets

At just 3.2 ounces with a 3.25-inch drop point blade, this automatic knife hits that sweet spot where an everyday-carry switchblade stops being a toy and starts being a tool. The blue anodized aluminum handle gives you the strength-to-weight ratio of an airframe: rigid enough for real cutting, light enough to disappear in your jeans or work pants.

The tip-up pocket clip keeps the automatic riding high enough to grab, low enough to keep the profile clean. With jimping on the spine and subtle handle geometry, you get secure traction without hot spots. This isn’t an OTF showpiece you flick at the desk; it’s the automatic you reach for when there’s a package to cut, a strap to slice, or a chore that doesn’t care what the catalog calls your knife.

Texas Automatic Knife Law and Real-World Carry

Texas has come a long way on automatic knife and switchblade law. For adult Texans, state law no longer treats an automatic knife or switchblade as contraband just because it’s spring-powered. The key issues now are blade length in certain restricted places and local rules you still need to respect. This Skyline Airframe keeps the blade in that practical mid-length range many Texas carriers favor for all-around utility without drawing the wrong kind of attention.

Because it’s a side-opening automatic, not an OTF knife, it carries more like a traditional folder. In a Texas truck console, clipped to your pocket at a Friday night high school game, or riding backup in ranch country, it looks like a clean EDC first and a switchblade second. That matters if you want capability without theatrics.

Collector Details: Clean Lines, Honest Build, Everyday Switchblade Appeal

Collectors who already own a dozen automatics tend to look for three things: mechanism feel, visual restraint, and how often they actually carry the piece. This automatic knife checks all three. The action is crisp and confident, with a satisfying snap instead of a clack. The blade runs a plain-edge drop point, unbranded, with a long fuller-style groove that keeps the look modern and tidy.

Why This Automatic Belongs Next to Your OTF Knives

If your roll already holds a couple of OTF knives, this side-opening automatic gives you the other half of the automatic story. The pivoted blade has more traditional cutting geometry, tends to be easier to maintain, and usually shrugs off grime better than many OTF switchblade tracks. It’s the practical counterweight to the mechanical drama of an OTF.

Blue Aluminum as a Collector Signal

The blue aluminum handle with a titanium-style finish reads as intentional, not gimmicky. It’s color, not camouflage; style, not flash. For Texas collectors, that means it looks as at home in an office as it does in a glove box. Clean lines and black hardware let the blue carry the visual weight, giving the automatic knife a quiet, custom-shop feel at a working man’s level.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

Is this an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or just a switchblade?

This is a true side-opening automatic knife—what most folks would honestly call a switchblade. It’s not an OTF knife; the blade doesn’t come straight out the front. Instead, a button fires the blade out from the side on a pivot. That separates it from both manual folders and assisted openers, which still need you to move the blade partway before they help.

Is carrying this automatic knife legal in Texas?

Under current Texas state law, adults can generally own and carry an automatic knife or switchblade, including side-openers like this one. OTF knives and other autos share the same broad treatment now. The usual cautions still apply: certain locations and age-related restrictions can bring separate rules, and some situations care more about your behavior than your blade. When in doubt, Texans do their homework and carry accordingly.

Why choose this automatic over another EDC or OTF?

For a Texas buyer, this Skyline Airframe automatic hits a rare balance: light in the pocket, sharp in the hand, and honest about what it is. You get instant button deployment without the bulk or attention of a big tactical switchblade, and without the mechanical complexity of an OTF knife. The blue aluminum handle sets it apart visually in a drawer full of black, while the straightforward mechanism means you’ll actually carry it instead of just showing it off.

Closing: A Texas Automatic for People Who Know the Difference

Owning this Skyline Airframe EDC Automatic Knife marks you as the kind of Texan who knows the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener—and cares enough to pick the right tool. It’s a side-opening switchblade built light, trimmed clean, and tuned for daily use from Amarillo to Brownsville. No drama, no confusion, just a reliable automatic that earns its place in your pocket and in your collection, one button-press at a time.