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Stealth Command Large Strike Automatic Knife - Black Grivory

Price:

113.99


Dragon Arc Precision Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel
Dragon Arc Precision Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel
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Stealth Strike Side-Opening Automatic Knife - Black Grivory

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This Boker Plus Large Strike isn’t an OTF or an assisted opener – it’s a honest, side‑opening automatic knife built for hard Texas use. Hit the push button and the D2 drop‑point snaps out fast, locking on a stout button lock with sliding safety. The black Grivory handle rides light, carries deep, and gives you real traction when the work gets mean. For the Texan who knows their mechanisms and wants a reliable automatic in all‑black, this one earns pocket time.

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Understanding This Boker Plus Large Strike Automatic Knife

This Boker Plus Large Strike is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF and not an assisted opener. Hit the push button and the blade drives out from the side on a pivot, powered by an internal spring, then locks up on a button lock with a sliding safety. That’s the whole story, told straight. If you’re in Texas and you want a dependable automatic knife you can trust, this one fits the bill without trying to be something it isn’t.

The all-black finish, push-button deployment, and Grivory handle put it squarely in the modern tactical folding world. It carries like a regular folder, works like a serious tool, and gives you automatic speed when you actually need it.

Automatic Knife Mechanism: Side-Opening, Button-Lock, Texas-Ready

Mechanically, this is a classic side-opening automatic knife. The blade is a 3.62-inch D2 drop point riding on a pivot, stored in the handle like any other folding knife. The difference is the drive system: when you press the button, the internal spring takes over and the blade snaps open to full lockup. You’re not nudging it like a flipper or assisted knife – the automatic mechanism does the work.

How It Differs From OTF Knives

An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. This Boker Plus Strike sends the blade out the side, like a traditional folder, just under spring power. If you’re searching for a switchblade or OTF knife, this is still in the same broad family of automatic knives, but its side-opening format means you get familiar ergonomics and strong lock geometry with fewer moving parts than most OTF knives.

Button Lock, Safety, and Real-World Use

The button does double duty: it releases the blade to fire and also serves as the lock release when you close it. A sliding safety rides beside the button. Slide it on and the knife won’t deploy in your pocket; slide it off and a single press sends the blade into action. It’s a simple, proven automatic design that Texas collectors recognize immediately – nothing fancy, just solid mechanics.

Texas Carry Reality for This Automatic Knife

Texas has opened the door wide for automatic knife ownership and carry, but it still pays to know what you’re toting. This Boker automatic knife’s 3.62-inch blade keeps it under the 5.5-inch threshold Texas law flags as a switchblade-length concern for certain restricted places. You’re still responsible for knowing where blades are limited – schools, some government buildings, and other posted locations – but for day-to-day Texas life, this is a practical, lawful automatic for most adults.

Pocket carry is helped along by the convertible clip. You can run tip-up or tip-down, depending on how you like to draw an automatic knife from your jeans or duty pants. The all-black profile doesn’t shout for attention, which a lot of Texas carriers quietly prefer, especially around town.

Steel, Build, and Why Collectors Notice This Boker Automatic

The heart of any serious automatic knife is the blade steel and lockup. Here you’re looking at D2 tool steel, a favorite with collectors who actually cut things. D2 holds an edge, shrugs off hard use, and pairs well with the black powder coating to resist the elements. It’s not a dainty show steel; it’s a working choice for a working knife.

D2 Drop Point for Real Cutting

The drop-point profile, with a straightish spine and a modest belly, makes sense for a Texas everyday carry blade. It’ll cut cord, break down feed sacks, slice cardboard, and still pull defensive duty if life ever gets sideways. At 0.12 inches thick, the blade has enough backbone for pressure cuts without feeling like a pry bar.

Grivory Handle With Steel Liners

The handle is Grivory over solid steel plates. That combination keeps the weight reasonable at 4.62 ounces while keeping the chassis rigid enough for hard cuts. The diagonal ridges and extra texturing around the button give your fingers something to bite into, wet or dry. Deep thumb jimping up top locks in your grip when you bear down.

For a Texas collector, that steel-lined Grivory handle, paired with the automatic mechanism and sliding safety, marks this as a Boker Plus Strike – a recognizable line that’s earned a place in a lot of serious drawers already.

Automatic Knife vs OTF vs Switchblade – Where This One Fits

On the internet, you’ll see folks call everything a switchblade, OTF, or automatic knife like those words are interchangeable. They’re not. Here’s where this Boker Large Strike sits in that family.

  • Automatic knife: A broad term for any knife that opens by pressing a button, lever, or switch, with the blade driven by a spring. This Boker is an automatic knife.
  • Side-opening automatic: The blade folds into the handle on a pivot and swings out from the side when fired. That’s the exact mechanism on this Strike.
  • OTF knife: "Out-the-front" – the blade travels in line with the handle and exits the front when deployed. That is not what this is.
  • Switchblade: Everyday language in Texas often uses "switchblade" for most automatic knives, but collectors usually keep the term tied to side-openers like this one and some classic patterns.

So if you’re a Texas buyer searching OTF knife, switchblade, or automatic knife and you land here, understand: this is a side-opening automatic with a push button and safety – the pattern a lot of seasoned collectors still reach for first.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Automatic Knife

Is This an Automatic Knife, an OTF, or a Switchblade?

This Boker Plus Large Strike is a side-opening automatic knife. Press the button and the spring drives the blade out from the side on a pivot. It is not an OTF knife – the blade doesn’t travel straight out the front. Around Texas, plenty of folks will call it a switchblade in casual talk, but if you care about mechanisms, the accurate term is side-opening automatic knife with a button lock and safety.

Is This Automatic Knife Legal to Carry in Texas?

Texas law now allows adults to own and carry automatic knives, including what people call switchblades, with a few place-based restrictions. Blade length matters for certain locations; with a 3.62-inch blade, this Boker automatic knife sits under the 5.5-inch mark that often triggers "location-restricted" status. You still need to respect posted signs, schools, secured areas, and any local nuances, but for most everyday Texas carry situations, this side-opening automatic is a lawful, practical choice. When in doubt, check the current Texas statutes or talk to a local attorney.

Why Would a Texas Collector Choose This Over Another Automatic?

A Texas collector chooses this Boker Plus Large Strike because it hits a clean balance: proven D2 steel, a reliable automatic mechanism, a positive safety, steel-lined Grivory for real grip, and a blade length that works across ranch, shop, and city carry. It’s not chasing fads or gimmicks – it’s a modern tactical automatic knife that knows its job. In a drawer full of flashy OTF knives and thumb-stud folders, this one earns space by being the straight-talking side-opener you’ll actually clip on and use.

End of the day, this Boker automatic knife fits the kind of Texan who can tell an OTF from a side-opener just by the silhouette. You want a switchblade-style automatic that carries light, fires hard, and stays honest about what it is. This Large Strike delivers exactly that – a blacked-out, Texas-ready automatic knife for folks who’d rather spend time using their knives than arguing over what to call them.