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Sprinkle Rush Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Powder Blue

Price:

14.99


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Sugar Cone Snap Assisted Opening Knife - Powder Blue

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/6482/image_1920?unique=d9aa1f8

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This assisted opening knife turns everyday carry into a candy-shop ritual. The powder blue drop point and stainless handle dressed in waffle cone, icing drips, and sprinkles ride light in your pocket, but the spring-assist deployment and liner lock are all business. At 7.5" overall with a 3.25" 3Cr13 blade, it’s a quick, one-handed cutter that fits Texas glovebox, ranch bag, or purse duty—sweet on the outside, practical where it counts for buyers who know their assisted from their automatic.

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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
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.25
Blade Color Powder Blue
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3cr13 Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme Sweet Treats
Safety Liner lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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What This Assisted Opening Knife Really Is

The Sugar Cone Snap Assisted Opening Knife - Powder Blue is a spring-assisted opening knife first and a candy-shop conversation piece second. Mechanically, it’s a side-opening assisted knife: you start the blade with the flipper tab or thumb stud, and a spring takes it the rest of the way. That makes it different from a true automatic knife or switchblade, where a button or switch fires the blade from a closed position without you ever nudging it open. It’s also a long way from an OTF knife, where the blade shoots straight out the front of the handle.

So in Texas terms, this is an easy-riding assisted opening pocket knife with a sweet-themed handle, not an OTF knife and not a classic switchblade automatic. It’s built for everyday cutting jobs with a bit of personality, not for confusing mechanism categories.

Assisted Opening Knife Mechanism, Plain and Simple

This assisted opening knife runs a spring-assist system paired with a liner lock. You nudge the blade with the flipper tab or thumb stud; once you’re past a certain point, the internal spring snaps the powder blue drop point into lockup. That fast, one-handed action is why folks sometimes lump assisted knives in with automatic knives, but mechanically they’re not the same thing.

How It Differs from Automatic and OTF Knives

On a true automatic knife or switchblade, a button or slide releases a preloaded spring and the blade jumps from fully closed to fully open. You don’t start the blade, you just trigger it. An OTF knife, on the other hand, drives the blade straight out the front of the handle in a track. Here, the Sugar Cone Snap opens from the side on a pivot like a standard folding knife; the spring just helps you finish the motion. That detail matters to Texas collectors and to anyone thinking about Texas knife laws.

Liner Lock Confidence and Everyday Steel

A stainless steel handle and liner lock give this assisted opening knife straightforward reliability. The 3Cr13 steel blade isn’t exotic, but it sharpens quickly and shrugs off light everyday chores—opening boxes, trimming cord, cutting tape. The satin drop point with a slight belly offers a generous working edge, so it feels like a real tool, not just a novelty dessert piece.

Candy-Shop Design Meets Texas EDC Reality

Visually, this spring-assisted opening knife leans hard into an ice-cream parlor theme. The handle wears a pink waffle cone pattern under dripping powder blue icing, scattered with multicolor sprinkles. Gold-tone pivot hardware ties it together, and the ergonomic curve with a finger groove keeps it anchored when you put it to work. It’s whimsical, but it still sits in the same drawer as your tactical automatics and the OTF knife you save for ranch chores.

Closed, this assisted opening knife sits at about 4.25 inches—compact enough for Texas pocket carry, purse carry, or a place in the truck console. The pocket clip lets it ride secure without tumbling to the bottom of your jeans, and the lanyard hole gives you options if you like a bead or fob for quick access.

Texas Carry and How This Knife Fits

Texas knife culture has room for everything from big fixed blades to discreet EDC folders. This assisted opening knife sits in the more relaxed end of that spectrum. It opens fast, but you still initiate the blade manually, and that difference from a push-button automatic knife or traditional switchblade can matter when you’re thinking about how and where you carry.

Many Texas buyers keep a knife like this as a light-duty everyday cutter—something you can loan a friend without scaring them off, something that looks more like dessert art than a combat OTF knife. It slips into a pocket at a barbecue, a day in town, or a shift at the shop. It’s the opposite look of blacked-out tactical, but in the same mechanical family as other assisted opening knives you already know.

Collector Value for Texas Knife Folks

For a Texas collector who already owns a few automatic knives, maybe an OTF knife or two, and at least one classic switchblade, this candy-themed assisted opening knife fills a different niche. It’s a novelty piece with a real mechanism behind it. The spring-assist action, liner lock, and drop point blade are honest working features; the cone-and-icing handle just makes it memorable.

A Themed Assisted Knife That Still Works

Plenty of dessert or cartoon-themed knives cut corners on function. This one keeps the essentials: one-handed assisted opening, usable 3.25-inch blade, reliable lock, and a clip that lets it live in a real pocket, not just a display case. For a Texas buyer building out a diverse collection of assisted opening, OTF, and automatic knives, it’s the light-hearted counterpoint to all that black G10 and stonewash.

Where It Sits Among OTF and Automatic Pieces

In a serious Texas collection, this assisted opening knife doesn’t try to compete with high-end OTF knives or heirloom switchblades. Instead, it rounds out the story. You might have one row of side-opening automatic knives, another for OTF knives, and a section for assisted opening EDCs. This one belongs in that assisted row—the fun, color-forward piece you hand someone when they ask about the difference between assisted and automatic. One flip, one snap, and you’ve explained it without saying a word.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this assisted opening knife the same as an automatic or switchblade?

No. This is a spring-assisted opening knife, not a true automatic knife or traditional switchblade. With an assisted opener like this, you start the blade with the flipper tab or thumb stud, and then the spring finishes the opening. On a classic automatic or switchblade, a button or switch launches the blade from fully closed with no initial push from you. It’s also not an OTF knife; the blade on this model pivots out from the side instead of traveling straight out the front of the handle.

How does an assisted opening knife like this fit Texas law?

Texas law has become far more permissive about knives in recent years, including many types that used to cause concern, like larger blades and automatic knives. That said, an assisted opening knife generally isn’t treated the same way as a push-button automatic or a front-firing OTF knife. Because you must begin the opening manually, many Texas buyers consider assisted opening knives a straightforward everyday carry choice. Still, anyone in Texas who carries regularly should review current state law and any local restrictions, and make their own informed decision.

Why would a collector choose this over a more tactical assisted knife?

A Texas collector might pick this assisted opening knife because it fills a gap no matte-black tactical piece can. The ice-cream cone theme, pastel powder blue, and sprinkle graphics make it a standout talking piece that still has a legitimate assisted mechanism. It’s the knife you carry when you don’t want to look like you just walked off a range, but you still want one-handed deployment, a liner lock, and a real edge. In a drawer full of automatics, OTF knives, and switchblades, this one is the grin you reach for.

In the end, the Sugar Cone Snap Assisted Opening Knife - Powder Blue is for the Texas buyer who knows exactly what an assisted opening knife is, knows it isn’t an OTF or a switchblade, and still appreciates a little humor in the handle art. It rides easy, opens fast, and tells anyone paying attention that its owner understands both the mechanics and the culture of Texas knife carry—sweet on the surface, serious enough underneath.