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Sprinkle Surge Fast-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Pink Cupcake

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Sweet Strike Double-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Pink Cupcake

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/4921/image_1920?unique=fe97543

15 sold in last 24 hours

This out-the-front automatic knife brings a little Texas fun to serious everyday carry. A candy-blue spear point blade snaps out with true double-action OTF authority, then locks back with the same thumb slider. The pink cupcake handle with sprinkle graphics looks playful, but the stainless steel blade, pocket clip, and glass-breaker pommel keep it working-class ready. It’s compact, easy to carry, and built for the Texan who knows their mechanism and doesn’t mind a little color with their capability.

32.99 32.99 USD 32.99

SB112SSPD

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip
  • Sheath/Holster

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Blade Length (inches) 2.625
Overall Length (inches) 6.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.125
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Titanium-coated
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Zinc Alloy
Button Type Slider
Theme Cupcake
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath

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Sweet Strike Double-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Pink Cupcake

The Sweet Strike is an honest out-the-front automatic knife with a playful Texas accent. Mechanically, it’s a true double-action OTF knife: the same thumb slider on the handle drives the blade out and draws it back in. That puts it in a different class from a side-opening automatic knife or your typical switchblade, and collectors who care about mechanisms will spot that in a heartbeat.

Under the cupcake paint job, this is a compact everyday carry built for anyone in Texas who wants real OTF performance in a pocketable size and doesn’t mind standing out a little when the blade clicks into place.

What Makes This OTF Automatic Knife Different

Let’s start with what this knife actually is. This is a double-action out-the-front automatic knife, not a side-folder and not a spring-assisted flipper. When you run that side-mounted slider forward, the stainless steel spear point rides a track and drives straight out the front of the handle. Pull the slider back, and the blade retracts the same way—no wrist flick, no separate release button.

That’s the key distinction between this OTF knife and a classic switchblade. Most people use “switchblade” as a catch-all, but in collector terms a switchblade usually means a side-opening automatic knife where the blade swings out on a pivot. Here, the blade moves in line with the handle, guided by internal rails and springs. It’s a more specialized mechanism, and that’s exactly why Texas collectors seek out true OTF automatics like this one.

Double-Action OTF Mechanism, Plain and Simple

The Sweet Strike runs a double-action system: one control, two jobs. Press the slider forward and the internal spring drives the blade out with a decisive snap. Pull it back and the same system pulls the blade home. There’s no separate manual reset or cocking step like you’ll find on some single-action OTF knives. That makes it quicker to run in real-world use and more satisfying for the collector who likes to cycle a piece in hand.

Because this is a compact OTF automatic knife, the 2.625-inch blue titanium-coated blade keeps the stroke short and snappy. Less travel means less drag on the mechanism, which you’ll feel every time you deploy it. It’s built to be flicked, admired, and carried, not just parked in a display case.

Steel, Build, and Everyday Reality

The blade is stainless steel with a titanium-coated finish, finished in a candy blue that plays nicely off the pink cupcake handle. That coating doesn’t just look good—it helps with corrosion resistance in a Texas glovebox, truck console, or humid pocket. The spear point profile gives you a centered tip, a clean plain edge, and enough belly for everyday utility cutting.

The handle is zinc alloy with a matte finish and raised texturing for grip. It feels like a real tool in hand, not a toy, even with the sprinkle graphics. Torx screws hold the chassis together for any future maintenance, and the exposed pommel doubles as a glass-breaker to earn its spot in a truck or ranch rig. A tip-down pocket clip keeps the OTF riding low and ready.

OTF Automatic Knife vs Switchblade vs Assisted Opener

Texas collectors care about calling things by their right name, especially when it comes to automatic knives. This Sweet Strike is an OTF automatic knife, which means the blade travels out the front of the handle when actuated. A traditional switchblade, in collector language, is usually a side-opening automatic: press a button and the blade swings out on a hinge like a regular folder, just powered by a spring.

An assisted opener is something else altogether. With an assisted knife, you start the blade manually—usually with a flipper tab or thumb stud—and a spring helps finish the move once you’ve begun. It’s not fully automatic, because it won’t open on its own from rest. This Sweet Strike doesn’t need that first nudge. The double-action automatic system handles both the launch and the return, which is why it sits firmly in the OTF automatic category.

Why the Distinction Matters for Collectors

If you’ve got a drawer full of blades, you already know: a collection built on mechanism variety is more satisfying than one packed with look-alikes. Owning an OTF automatic knife like this Pink Cupcake sits right alongside your classic Italian-style switchblades and your modern assisted flippers, giving you three different mechanical stories in one lineup.

The Sweet Strike earns its place not just because of the dessert styling, but because it’s a true double-action OTF. When a fellow Texan collector snaps it open and watches that blade ride out the front, they’ll know immediately they’re not handling just another side opener with a loud name.

Texas Carry, Culture, and This OTF Knife

Texas has loosened up on knives over the years, and that’s opened the door for more open talk about automatic knives, OTF knives, and even old-school switchblades. You still need to stay current on state law and any local rules, but as of recent years Texas has been one of the more permissive states for knife enthusiasts.

Within that landscape, a compact OTF automatic like this one makes sense for everyday Texas carry. With a blade under three inches and an overall length under seven, the Sweet Strike rides easily in jeans or shorts, or clipped inside a purse or backpack. The nylon sheath gives you another option if you’d rather keep it on a belt when you’re running fence lines or headed to the lake.

Culturally, this isn’t a "mall ninja" piece; it’s a conversation starter for someone who knows the difference between an automatic knife and an assisted opener and doesn’t mind a little color in their kit. The cupcake graphics are going to draw comments. The clean, crisp OTF deployment is what will keep the respect of anyone in Texas who actually knows knives.

How It Fits in a Texas EDC Rotation

Think of the Sweet Strike as your light-duty, high-personality OTF automatic. It’s the knife you clip on when you’re heading to a cookout, a game, or a casual night out in Dallas or Austin and want something more interesting than another black-handled tactical folder.

It opens packages, trims cord, and handles day-to-day utility with the same competence as a more subdued automatic knife, but it also tells people you didn’t just grab the first thing at the gas station counter. For a lot of Texas buyers, that matters as much as the blade steel.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This OTF Automatic Knife

Is this really an OTF automatic, or just a fancy switchblade?

This is a true out-the-front automatic knife with a double-action mechanism. The blade travels straight out the front of the handle and retracts the same way, all controlled by the side slider. A classic switchblade opens from the side on a pivot, and an assisted opener needs your hand to start the motion. Here, the mechanism does the work once you move the control—no wrist flick, no side swing.

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

Texas law has become much more friendly to automatic knives, OTF knives, and even traditional switchblades than it used to be. Many restrictions on automatic knife ownership and carry have been removed at the state level. That said, laws can change and certain locations can have their own rules. Before you carry this OTF automatic knife in Texas, especially into schools, government buildings, or other restricted places, check the most current state statutes and any local ordinances to stay on the right side of the law.

Why would a serious Texas collector want a dessert-themed OTF?

Because mechanism and execution come first. A serious Texas collector isn’t thrown by color; they’re looking for honest build quality, a true double-action OTF system, and a piece that tells a different story than the rest of the drawer. The Sweet Strike delivers reliable OTF action, a titanium-coated stainless blade, a functional pocket clip and glass-breaker, and a visual theme nobody forgets. It’s the kind of knife that makes people ask, “What else is in your collection?”

In the end, this Sweet Strike Double-Action OTF Automatic Knife - Pink Cupcake is for the Texan who knows exactly what an OTF is, understands how it differs from a side-opening automatic switchblade or an assisted opener, and appreciates a little humor wrapped around a real mechanism. It’s compact, it’s capable, and it proves you don’t have to paint everything black to take your knives seriously. That’s the kind of quiet confidence Texas collectors recognize right away.