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Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Blue ABS

Price:

6.99


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Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife - Blue ABS

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This automatic knife is for Texans who like their EDC quick, clean, and to the point. The Skyline Sprint pairs a push-button automatic mechanism with a 2.5-inch drop point blade and a grippy blue ABS handle that disappears in the pocket until it’s needed. It’s not an OTF and it’s not an assisted opener—just a straightforward side-opening automatic that fits Texas carry life, from glove box to ranch gate, for buyers who know exactly what they’re carrying.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

SB980BL

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 2.5
Overall Length (inches) 5.75
Closed Length (inches) 3.35
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Push button
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes

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Skyline Sprint Automatic Knife for Texas Everyday Carry

The Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife is a compact side-opening automatic knife built for real Texas carry, not catalog fantasy. Push-button fire, 2.5-inch drop point blade, blue ABS handle, and a pocket clip that makes it vanish until you need it. It’s an automatic knife in the classic sense: folding, side-opening, and driven open by a spring once you hit that button.

This is not an OTF knife and it’s not an assisted opener. The blade swings out from the side on a pivot like a traditional folder, but under spring tension. You’re not nudging it open—you’re triggering it. That clean mechanical truth is what makes this a proper automatic knife, and what Texas buyers who care about the distinction are looking for.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Push-Button, Side-Opening, No Confusion

Mechanically, the Skyline Sprint automatic knife keeps things simple and honest. A push button on the blue ABS handle releases the blade and kicks the spring into gear. The blade rotates out from the side and locks into place, giving you one-handed deployment without the drama of an OTF or the half-measure feel of an assisted opener.

How This Automatic Differs from OTF Knives

OTF knives send the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails, usually with a sliding switch. The Skyline Sprint is a side-opening automatic knife. It folds into the handle and pivots out from the side like a standard pocket knife. That means simpler internals, fewer moving parts, and a slimmer profile for pocket carry. If you want the clean utility of an automatic knife without the bulk of a front-firing OTF knife, this is your lane.

Automatic vs. Assisted: Where the Skyline Sprint Sits

An assisted opener needs you to start the blade manually before a spring takes over. An automatic knife like the Skyline Sprint does all the work once you hit the button. No thumb studs, no flipper tab—just a direct push and full-speed deployment. For Texas buyers who want a true automatic, not a halfway assisted solution, this side-opening switchblade-style action is the point.

Texas Carry Reality: Automatic Knife Built for Real Pockets

Texas law has come a long way on blades, and automatic knives now have room to breathe. The Skyline Sprint’s 2.5-inch drop point blade puts it solidly in everyday carry territory—small enough to ride comfortably in jeans, scrubs, or slacks, but big enough to handle the everyday work a Texan actually sees: boxes, cord, feed sacks, zip ties, and the odd roadside fix.

The blue ABS handle keeps the weight down and the grip sure, even in the heat. Texturing on the handle gives your fingers a home, and the integrated pocket clip lets this automatic knife ride low and quiet. It’s the kind of switchblade-style side-opener that feels natural in a truck console, a backpack, or clipped inside the pocket of your Sunday shirt.

Texas Use Cases: From City Blocks to Back Roads

In Houston or Dallas, this automatic knife is the quick-deploy EDC that opens packages, plastic clamshells, and warehouse tape without looking out of place. Out in West Texas or the Hill Country, it’s a glove box backup that cuts baling twine, trims hose, or slices open feed without hogging space. The small footprint and fast action make it a practical switchblade-style automatic for Texans who actually use their blades.

Blade, Handle, and Hardware: Built for Everyday, Not the Safe

The Skyline Sprint automatic knife runs a plain-edge, matte-finished drop point blade—no serrations to snag, no coatings to baby. It’s made to be sharpened easily and put back to work. The 2.5-inch length hits that sweet spot where control matters more than reach, especially for an EDC automatic.

The blue ABS handle keeps things light, tough, and affordable. ABS doesn’t mind being tossed into a bag, clipped onto gym shorts, or riding in the door pocket day after day. The push button and hardware are kept simple and dark, so visually the knife reads as a straightforward tool, not a showpiece.

Why Collectors Still Care About a Simple Automatic

Not every automatic knife in a Texas collection has to be exotic steel or custom handles. Sometimes a collector wants a clean example of a mechanism and form factor: a compact, side-opening automatic knife with a push-button switchblade-style deployment. The Skyline Sprint fills that role—an everyday automatic that shows how this class of knife actually lives in pockets, not just in display cases. It’s the kind of piece you hand to a friend when they ask, “So what’s a regular automatic knife versus an OTF?”

What Texas Buyers Ask About the Skyline Sprint Automatic Knife

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

This is a side-opening automatic knife with a push button—what many folks casually call a switchblade. It is not an OTF knife; the blade does not shoot straight out the front, it pivots from the side like a normal folder. That side-opening, spring-driven action is what makes it a true automatic, distinct from both OTF knives and assisted openers that need a manual start.

Is carrying this automatic knife legal in Texas?

Texas has largely removed restrictions on automatic knives, including traditional switchblade-style side-openers and OTF knives, for adults who can legally possess a blade. The Skyline Sprint’s blade is 2.5 inches, well within common Texas everyday-carry comfort zones. As always, Texas buyers should stay mindful of local rules for specific venues like schools, courthouses, and certain posted properties, but for most day-to-day Texas carry, a compact automatic knife like this is on solid ground.

Who is this automatic knife really for—collector or everyday carrier?

The Skyline Sprint automatic knife earns its place with both. For the collector, it’s a clean, modern example of a compact side-opening automatic—simple mechanism, clear identity, easy to explain next to OTF knives and assisted folders. For the everyday Texan, it’s a small, quick-deploy automatic that actually gets used: easy to carry, easy to control, and no confusion about what it is or how it works.

Why This Automatic Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

The Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife is for Texans who know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener—and want a straightforward side-opening automatic to match that knowledge. It doesn’t pretend to be tactical, and it doesn’t chase flash. It gives you a clean push-button mechanism, a modest drop point blade, and a bright blue ABS handle that’s easy to spot in a drawer or bag.

In a serious Texas collection, this knife sits in the everyday lane: the automatic you’re not afraid to beat up, lend, or keep as the glove box standby. In a single piece, it shows how an honest, compact automatic knife lives in the real world—carried, used, and understood by someone who knows their blades and doesn’t need to be impressed, just respected.