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Shadowline Dual-Action Dagger OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

Price:

36.99


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Stonewash Strike Dual-Action OTF Knife - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5130/image_1920?unique=30d2fcd

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This OTF knife runs true Texas straight: dual-action, slide-fired, and ready when you are. A stonewashed dagger blade with partial serrations punches through stubborn rope and webbing, while the matte black aluminum handle keeps things slim and pocketable. The glass-breaker pommel, deep-carry clip, and positive track give you confident control in or out of the truck. For the buyer who knows the difference between an automatic knife, a switchblade, and a true OTF, this one earns its spot in the rotation.

36.99 36.99 USD 36.99

SB194BBDS

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This Dual-Action OTF Knife Really Is

The Stonewash Strike Dual-Action OTF Knife - Black Aluminum is a true out-the-front knife, not a side-opening automatic and not a loose "switchblade" catch-all. Thumb the side-mounted slide and the dagger blade drives straight out of the handle on rails; pull the slide back and it retracts the same way. That dual-action OTF mechanism is the whole story here: clean, fast, and controlled, with no wrist tricks and no guesswork.

For Texas buyers who actually care how a knife works, this is a purpose-built OTF knife with a stonewashed, partially serrated dagger blade and a matte black aluminum handle. It’s slim enough to ride in a jeans pocket, tough enough to live in a truck console, and honest enough about what it is—a working automatic OTF, not a marketing term.

Dual-Action OTF Knife Mechanism, Explained Texas Plain

Automatic knives come in a few flavors. This one is a dual-action OTF knife: the same slide deploys and retracts the blade. No flipper tab, no liner lock, no wrist snap. The internal spring and track system do the work as you guide it with your thumb. That’s different from a side-opening automatic knife, where the blade swings out from a pivot and locks like a folder. It’s also a more specific term than "switchblade," which folks use loosely for just about any automatic.

Here, the blade rides straight out the front of the handle, dead in line with your grip. That makes this style prized by many Texas collectors for its direct point control and compact footprint. The slide action is deliberate—enough tension to avoid pocket mishaps, but smooth enough to run confidently with one hand. You feel the mechanism lock home both ways, which matters when you’re using it for real work instead of just desk-flicks.

Stonewashed Dagger Blade with Working Serrations

The blade is a double-edged dagger profile with a stonewash finish. That stonewash does two jobs: it softens wear marks from use, and it knocks down glare so you’re not flashing sunlight every time you cut something outside. Partial serrations near the handle give you a dedicated bite zone for rope, webbing, and strapping—exactly the kind of stubborn materials that show up in the back of a ranch truck, on a job site, or at a roadside tangle.

Because this is a dagger OTF knife, blade orientation doesn’t matter. Point is point, edge is edge, and it comes out in line with your wrist. For collectors who run multiple automatic knives, that in-line presentation is the reason to own an OTF alongside side-opening autos.

Matte Black Aluminum Handle Built for Real Carry

The handle is matte black aluminum, squared off but chamfered where it counts. That gives you a low-profile footprint in the pocket and a solid, non-flexing frame for the internal OTF mechanism. Grip grooves along the body and spine keep it from twisting under pressure, even when your hands are sweaty, dusty, or gloved.

On the spine you get a deep-carry pocket clip so it rides low and quiet. At the tail sits a pointed glass-breaker pommel with a lanyard hole—a feature that appeals to Texas first responders, ranch hands, and anyone who keeps a knife as part of a truck or range kit. This isn’t a fantasy handle; it’s a working shape with working hardware.

OTF Knife vs Automatic Knife vs Switchblade in One Texas Breath

Texas collectors care about the language, because the language points to the mechanism. This piece is:

  • A true OTF knife: blade goes straight out and straight back into the handle.
  • An automatic knife: spring-driven, fired and retracted by the slide.
  • Often called a switchblade in casual speech, but that term doesn’t tell you if it’s out-the-front or side-opening.

So in plain terms: all OTF knives like this are automatic knives, and many folks will call them switchblades. But not all automatic knives are OTF. Side-opening automatics kick out from a hinge like a regular folder. This one is for the buyer who wants the specific feel and silhouette of a dual-action OTF alongside any side-openers already in the drawer.

Texas Carry and Real-World Use for an OTF Knife

Texas has some of the most knife-friendly laws in the country. Automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives like this are legal to own and carry for most adults, subject to location-based restrictions like schools, certain government buildings, and other sensitive spots. That means a dual-action OTF dagger can live in your pocket, truck, or ranch bag without you having to play word games about what kind of automatic knife it is.

In the real world, this piece makes sense for Texans who want one-handed, no-drama deployment with a straight-line profile. Sliding it out for a task feels more like drawing a tool than flipping a toy. Working serrations let you handle feed bags, tie-down straps, hose, or paracord without babying the edge. The stonewash finish shrugs off dust, sweat, and glove scuffs that would make a polished blade look tired fast.

Why a Dual-Action OTF Belongs Beside Your Other Knives

If you already own a few side-opening automatics or classic switchblades, an OTF like this fills a different role. It’s flatter in the pocket, straighter in the hand, and quicker to re-stow—just pull the slide back and the blade disappears. No closing against a spring, no lining up a lock bar. That makes it well suited for quick cut-and-done tasks where you want the blade gone as soon as you’re finished.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Knife

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

Mechanically, it’s all three. It is first and foremost a dual-action OTF knife: the blade slides straight out and straight back in via the side-mounted slide. That makes it an automatic knife because spring tension does the work once you start the motion. Many people will casually call it a switchblade, but collectors in Texas know that "switchblade" is a broad term, while "OTF knife" tells you exactly how it behaves in the hand.

Is an OTF knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Yes, for most adult Texans, owning and carrying an automatic OTF knife is legal, including blades that many would call switchblades. Texas law no longer bans automatic knives outright, but you still need to respect restricted locations—schools, certain government facilities, and any place posting proper signage. Laws can change, so a serious collector or everyday carrier should always confirm current Texas statutes locally, but as of today an OTF knife like this is a lawful part of a Texan’s kit in most everyday settings.

Why would a collector choose this OTF over another automatic?

Collectors pick this one for the combination of dual-action OTF mechanism, dagger geometry, and honest stonewash finish. It’s not trying to be flashy; it’s built to be used. If you already own polished leaf blades and ornate bolsters, this gives you the opposite: a straight-line tactical profile that looks better the more it works. For a Texas buyer who wants a hard-use automatic knife that also happens to be a true OTF, this piece checks both boxes without shouting about it.

Collector Identity, Texas Straight

Owning the Stonewash Strike Dual-Action OTF Knife - Black Aluminum marks you as the kind of Texan who doesn’t confuse categories. You know that an OTF knife is its own creature inside the automatic and switchblade family, and you like it that way. This one rides light, works hard, and keeps its profile clean—more truck knife than trophy, but still worth a place in a serious collection. If you want an automatic that earns its keep in Texas heat, dust, and daylight, this OTF dagger is the straightforward answer.