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Spider Hero Snap-Action California Legal Automatic Knife - Red Aluminum

Price:

16.99


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Spider Street Snap California Automatic Knife - Red Aluminum

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This California legal automatic knife is built for Spider Street speed—compact, clipped, and ready. A 1.75-inch red steel blade jumps to attention with a clean push-button snap, while the Spider Hero artwork turns this into a pocket-sized comic panel. At just 5 inches overall, it disappears in a jeans pocket yet handles quick-cut chores with ease. For Texas collectors who know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF, and a switchblade, this is the fun, fast side-opener that earns its spot.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SBPF70B

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 1.75
Overall Length (inches) 5
Closed Length (inches) 3.25
Blade Color Red
Blade Finish Printed
Blade Style Normal Straight
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Printed
Button Type Push-button
Theme Spider Hero
Pocket Clip Yes

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Spider Street Snap California Automatic Knife - What It Really Is

The Spider Street Snap is a California legal automatic knife, not an OTF and not a novelty switchblade knockoff. It’s a compact side-opening automatic that uses a push-button to drive a 1.75-inch red steel blade out of the handle on a pivot, just like any honest folding knife—only faster. For a Texas buyer who knows their mechanisms, this is a true automatic knife built in a small, city-friendly package with bold Spider Hero art across the blade and handle.

The blade rides closed at 3.25 inches overall, waiting behind that black push-button. Press it, and the spring takes over, snapping the blade into a locked, ready position. No sliders, no double-action mystery, just a straightforward side-opening automatic. That mechanical honesty is exactly what separates an automatic knife like this from an OTF knife or an assisted opener, and it’s why collectors who care about the difference pay attention.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Side-Opening Speed, Comic-Book Style

This automatic knife runs a simple story: button, spring, pivot, lock. The push-button on the handle releases the internal spring, driving the red steel blade out and into a solid open position. Unlike an OTF knife where the blade rides inside the handle and jumps straight out the front, this Spider Street Snap swings out from the side on a hinge—classic automatic action, done small and done clean.

Side-Opening Automatic vs. OTF vs. Switchblade

Texas collectors know: an automatic knife like this uses a side-pivot and a button. An OTF knife shoots the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually by sliding or pushing a control on the spine. A switchblade is a legal term that often gets thrown around for both, but mechanically, this piece is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF. The Spider Street Snap doesn’t pretend to be anything else—it’s a one-thumb, pivoted blade with comic-book flair.

California Legal Size With Texas Attitude

The 1.75-inch blade length is designed to meet California legal automatic knife limits, which also makes it a natural fit for Texas buyers who want a low-profile, non-intimidating automatic for casual carry. In the hand it feels like a pocket tool, not a fighting knife, but the snap is still there and the action is still automatic.

Texas Carry Reality: A Legal Mindset for Automatic Knives

Texas law has grown friendlier to knives, including automatic knives and traditional switchblades, but serious collectors still pay attention to where and how they carry. This California legal automatic knife, with its short blade and light footprint, slides neatly into that space where a Texas buyer wants something automatic in the pocket without drawing the wrong kind of attention.

Clipped in a pair of jeans, the Spider Street Snap looks like any other compact pocket knife. It doesn’t have the long, aggressive silhouette of a large switchblade or the squared-off bulk of an OTF knife. For a Texan walking into a feed store, a game night, or a backyard cookout, that matters. The less drama in the clip profile, the better.

Texas Law and Small Automatic Blades

As of current Texas law, automatic knives and what many call switchblades are no longer singled out the way they used to be, but location restrictions and common sense still rule the day. A small automatic knife like this, with its sub-2-inch blade, is easier to treat as an everyday cutting tool than a weapon. That doesn’t replace knowing the law, but it does mean this piece fits naturally into a Texas EDC rotation where discretion and utility come first.

Design and Build: Spider Hero Graphics With Everyday Utility

The first thing that catches the eye is the bold red blade with a white spider graphic, matched by the Spider Hero artwork along the red aluminum handle. This automatic knife doesn’t try to hide—its job is to look like it stepped out of a comic panel and into your pocket. Underneath that artwork, the details still matter.

The steel blade is treated as a simple, straight-edged cutter—no serrations, no gimmicks. The spine has notches near the handle for thumb control, giving you a bit of honest grip when you’re opening boxes, trimming tape, or slicing cord. The aluminum handle keeps weight down while the printed finish does the talking. A black pocket clip on the reverse side carries tip-down, ready to deploy with a thumb on the button.

Mechanism Details Collectors Appreciate

The push-button is circular and raised enough to find without looking, yet tuned so you’re not popping the blade by accident. That’s a subtle line most cheap switchblade imitators miss. Here, the timing between button travel and spring engagement feels deliberate. Add in the small lanyard hole at the butt and you’ve got a compact automatic knife that can live on a key fob, a bag, or deep pocket carry without fuss.

Why This Automatic Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

Every Texas collector has a drawer full of serious blades—heavy OTF knives, classic side-opening switchblades, big fixed blades, and work-worn EDC folders. This California legal automatic knife earns its place for a different reason: it brings personality to a proven mechanism. It’s a clean, honest side-opening automatic in a compact size, wrapped in Spider Hero art that doesn’t take itself too seriously.

Where an OTF knife might be your choice for fast, straight-line deployment and a traditional switchblade might scratch the nostalgia itch, this automatic knife is the one you hand a friend at the tailgate and say, “Hit that button.” The red blade jumps, the spider pops, and they understand exactly why you kept it.

It also fills a practical gap. Sometimes you don’t want a long blade or a tactical look. You want a small, quick cutter that rides light and deploys faster than any assisted opener. This side-opening automatic gives you that in a California legal length, which makes it an easy travel companion when you’re bouncing between states or just moving from office to ranch and back again.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

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

Mechanically, this is a side-opening automatic knife. Press the push-button and the blade swings out from the side on a pivot. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle using a sliding or pushing control. “Switchblade” is a broad term people use for both, but if you’re talking mechanisms, this is a compact automatic knife, not an OTF. That clarity matters to Texas collectors who sort their drawers by how a knife actually works.

Is a California legal automatic knife like this okay to carry in Texas?

Current Texas law is generally favorable toward automatic knives and what older statutes called switchblades, but there are still restricted locations and situations where any blade can get you in trouble. The California legal blade length on this automatic knife doesn’t override Texas law, it just means you’re working with a short, utility-sized cutter. For most day-to-day Texas carry, a compact automatic like this is easier to justify and less likely to alarm than a large tactical or combat-style OTF knife. Always check up-to-date Texas statutes and local rules before you clip it on.

Why would a serious collector add such a small automatic to their lineup?

Because mechanism and story matter as much as size. This automatic knife shows how a tried-and-true side-opening design can be scaled down to California legal dimensions without losing the snap that defines the category. Add the Spider Hero theme and you’ve got a conversation piece that still counts as a real automatic, not a toy. It fills the niche between novelty and tool—a fun, visually loud pocket knife that still cuts, still locks, and still reminds you why automatic knives are a breed apart from both assisted openers and everyday folders.

In the end, the Spider Street Snap California Automatic Knife - Red Aluminum is for the Texas buyer who can explain the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade without breaking stride—and still appreciates a little comic-book color in the pocket. It’s compact, legal-minded, and mechanically honest, the kind of piece that rides along quietly until someone asks, “What’s that red knife?” Then you hit the button, let the blade snap, and let the story tell itself.