Skip to Content
Tribal Flux Assisted Opening Dagger Knife - Silver White Acrylic

Price:

13.99


Iridescent Dazzler Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Blue Acrylic
Iridescent Dazzler Assisted Opening Knife - Rainbow Blue Acrylic
13.99 13.99
Marble Executive Gentleman EDC Spring-Assisted Knife - White
Marble Executive Gentleman EDC Spring-Assisted Knife - White
8.99 8.99

Tribal Glint Fast-Action Assisted Opening Knife - Silver White Acrylic

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8764/image_1920?unique=6f3be46

15 sold in last 24 hours

This assisted opening knife delivers fast deployment and standout style in one clean Texas-ready package. The 4" dagger-style blade rides on a spring-assisted mechanism, so a light touch on the flipper gets it working without crossing into automatic or switchblade territory. White acrylic inlay panels set off the silver frame and tribal graphics, giving it the look of a modern tattooed showpiece. At 9.5" overall with a pocket clip, it carries like a real EDC, not just a drawer queen.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

SP537SL

Not Available For Sale

5 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9.5
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 7.27
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Acrylic
Theme Tribal
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Tribal Glint Assisted Opening Knife for Texas Collectors

The Tribal Glint Fast-Action Assisted Opening Knife is for the Texan who knows what they’re buying: a spring-assisted folding knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a classic switchblade. You get quick one-hand deployment with a flipper and spring assist, carried in your pocket like any modern liner-lock, wrapped in a clean silver-and-white tribal design that looks as sharp as it cuts.

What an Assisted Opening Knife Really Is

Mechanically, this knife starts as a simple folding knife with a liner lock. The difference is the spring-assisted mechanism waiting just past half-open. You apply pressure to the flipper tab with your finger, the blade moves under your control, and once it crosses that engagement point, the internal spring takes over and snaps it the rest of the way open. That’s an assisted opening knife: you start the motion, the mechanism finishes it.

That’s not the same thing as an automatic knife or switchblade, where a release button or hidden actuator fires the blade from a fully closed position. It’s also not an OTF knife, where the blade slides straight out the front of the handle. This assisted opener stays in the side-folding family — fast, but still very much a manual start.

Mechanism Details Texas Buyers Care About

The 4-inch dagger-style spear blade rides on a spring-assisted pivot tuned for a confident snap, not a gimmicky slam. The flipper tab gives you a positive index point, even if your hands are wet or gloved. A liner lock inside the frame captures the blade when open, keeping things simple, familiar, and easy to maintain for anyone already used to modern folders.

Because this isn’t a true automatic knife or any form of OTF knife, you avoid the complexity of button mechanisms, internal tracks, or twin springs. For a Texas buyer who wants speed without extra moving parts, assisted opening hits a sweet spot between a pure manual folder and a switchblade-style automatic.

Design: Dagger Profile, Tribal Lines, and Acrylic Inlay

The blade is a symmetrical dagger-style spear point with a central ridge that gives it a classic, balanced silhouette. A printed tribal pattern runs along the flat of the blade, echoed by matching graphics on the handle, tying steel and frame together visually. The silver finish keeps it bright and modern, while the black graphics bring in that tattoo-style attitude.

White acrylic inlay panels sit in the handle like scales, giving a smooth, glossy contrast to the silver metal. It’s decorative, no doubt about it, but the contour of the handle is shaped for a real grip, not just for display. At 9.5 inches overall and 5.375 inches closed, you get a full, confident handful instead of a cramped three-finger hold.

Carry-Friendly Build and Pocket Clip

Weighing 7.27 ounces, this assisted opening knife has a reassuring heft. It’s not trying to win any ultralight awards; it’s meant to feel like something solid in your pocket. The pocket clip keeps it riding where you can reach it instead of rattling around in the bottom of a truck console or backpack. A lanyard hole at the butt offers another option for retention or personalization, which many Texas knife collectors appreciate on a daily carry piece.

Texas Carry Reality: Assisted Opening vs. Automatic and OTF

Texas has come a long way on knife laws, and collectors here know the difference between what they can carry and what they probably shouldn’t flash at the wrong time. An assisted opening knife like this Tribal Glint is still a side-folding folder you open with your hand. That keeps it in a friendlier category than some automatic knives, OTF knives, or old-school switchblades in the eyes of a lot of folks, even though Texas law has relaxed on many of those, too.

Because you have to start the blade moving manually, this assisted opener sits comfortably between a plain folding knife and a true automatic knife. There’s no button to press, no blade jumping straight out the front like an OTF knife. For everyday Texas carry — at the ranch, in the shop, or in town where you still want to look like you know what you’re doing — that distinction matters.

As always, Texas buyers should double-check current state and local restrictions, especially around location-based rules, but in broad strokes, an assisted opening folding knife remains one of the simpler, cleaner options to carry here.

EDC Use in Real Texas Life

This knife is more than a display piece. The plain edge on that dagger-style blade gives you a long, usable cutting surface for opening feed bags, slicing cord, or tearing into packaging in the warehouse. The spring-assisted action means you can get it into play quickly with one hand when the other is busy. For a Texas buyer who already owns a few automatic knives or even an OTF knife, this assisted opener fills the role of a showy but practical daily pocket ride.

Collector Value: Why This Piece Earns a Slot in the Roll

Texas collectors don’t need every knife to be tactical. Sometimes the right automatic knife or OTF knife is already covered in your lineup, and what you’re missing is a statement-piece assisted opener with real presence. That’s where the Tribal Glint comes in.

The symmetrical dagger profile, printed graphics, and white acrylic inlay give it a custom-inspired look at a price point where you’re not afraid to actually carry it. It’s the kind of knife that sits nicely between your serious-duty automatic and your vintage-style switchblade, reminding you that not every blade has to be mission-ready to deserve respect.

For display, the mirrored tribal motif from blade to handle makes it stand out in a row of plain black folders. For rotation, the assisted opening mechanism gives you that satisfying snap without the maintenance demands of more complex OTF knives. It’s a bridge piece: decorative enough to show off, dependable enough to use.

Mechanism Niche in a Serious Collection

A good Texas collection usually touches all three families: at least one honest automatic knife or switchblade, one or two OTF knives, and a bench of assisted opening knives and manuals that actually see pocket time. This Tribal Glint fills the “flashy assisted opener” slot — something you can hand to a friend, flip open smoothly, and talk about the mechanism without needing a tool kit or a legal disclaimer.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives

Is this closer to an OTF knife, a switchblade, or a regular folder?

This is a spring-assisted folding knife first and last. You start it with the flipper; the spring finishes the job. A true automatic knife or switchblade opens from a button or release with no manual blade movement to begin with. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on rails, usually with a slider or switch. The Tribal Glint stays in the side-folding lane — fast like an automatic, but operated like a regular folder with a little mechanical help.

Are assisted opening knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has eased up considerably on knife types, including many that used to be classified as prohibited, like some automatic knives and traditional switchblades. An assisted opening knife such as this, which you open by hand using a flipper before the spring engages, generally fits comfortably within typical Texas carry rules. That said, location-based restrictions and local nuances still exist, so a smart Texas buyer double-checks current statutes and any city-specific rules before assuming any knife — assisted, automatic, or OTF — is welcome everywhere.

Is this a user knife or just a flashy display piece?

It’ll do both. The plain-edge spear blade and liner lock make it perfectly usable as an everyday cutting tool, and the assisted opening mechanism is built for repeat use, not just for looks. At the same time, the printed tribal graphics and white acrylic inlay push it into display territory compared to a plain black work folder. For a Texas collector, that balance is the draw: a flashy assisted opening knife you won’t feel guilty actually carrying.

For the Texan Who Knows Their Mechanisms

The Tribal Glint Fast-Action Assisted Opening Knife belongs with buyers who can tell you, without blinking, why an assisted opener isn’t an automatic knife, why an OTF knife needs different care, and why a switchblade brings a different kind of history to the table. It’s a Texas-ready, spring-assisted folder with a dagger profile and tribal attitude, meant for the person who enjoys explaining the difference once, clearly, then sliding it back into their pocket and getting on with the day.