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Urban Specter Safety-Lock Automatic Knife - Jade G-10

Price:

16.99


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Urban Specter EDC Automatic Pocket Knife - Jade G-10

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1783/image_1920?unique=f402329

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This automatic knife is built for real Texas EDC, not desk-drawer daydreaming. The Urban Specter rides slim in the pocket, then snaps open with a clean push-button automatic action backed by a positive safety lock. The jade G‑10 handle keeps things light, secure, and easy to spot in a gear drawer. A matte clip point blade handles daily cutting with quiet authority—perfect for the Texan who wants a true automatic knife, not an OTF or assisted opener dressed up as one.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

SB262JDCP

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material G-10
Theme None
Safety Safety Lock
Pocket Clip Yes

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Urban Specter Automatic Knife for Real Texas EDC

The Urban Specter is a side-opening automatic knife built for everyday Texas carry. Push-button deployment, a real safety lock, and a slim jade G‑10 handle make it a practical pocket tool, not a gimmick. This isn’t an OTF knife and it isn’t an assisted opener. It’s a true automatic knife that fires from the side, the way serious Texas knife folks expect a classic automatic to run.

How This Automatic Knife Works (And What It Isn’t)

Mechanically, the Urban Specter is simple and honest. A coil spring inside the handle drives the blade open when you press the round push button. Until that button is pressed, the blade stays closed and secure. That spring-powered, one-touch deployment is what makes this an automatic knife in the proper sense of the word.

It’s not an OTF knife, because the blade does not travel straight out of the front of the handle. It swings out from the side on a pivot, like a traditional folding knife that just happens to be spring-driven. And it’s not a switchblade in the old movie-prop sense, though Texas law may group them together. Around serious collectors, “switchblade” is usually just the casual term. “Automatic knife” is the precise one, and that’s what you’re buying here.

Side-Opening Automatic Mechanism

The side-opening design keeps this piece slim at only about five inches closed. You get full automatic speed without the chunky feel common to many OTF knives. Press the button and the 3.75-inch clip point blade snaps into place with authority, ready for boxes, cord, or ranch chores.

Safety Lock You Can Trust

A sliding safety sits on the handle, giving you the option to lock out the button in pocket. That’s important for Texas carriers who want the speed of an automatic knife without worrying about accidental deployment in jeans, work pants, or a truck console.

Blade, Handle, and Build: Texas-Ready Details

The matte silver clip point blade gives you a familiar working profile—plenty of tip control for detail cuts and enough belly for general slicing. A plain edge keeps things straightforward: easier to sharpen on a stone in the garage or out at the deer lease.

The handle scales are jade G‑10—lightweight, tough, and grippy without chewing up your pockets. That pale jade color isn’t just for looks; it’s easy to spot in a dark bag or glovebox, which most working Texans appreciate more than flashy coatings.

Slim Urban EDC Form

At about 8.75 inches overall when open and five inches closed, this automatic knife hits that sweet spot: large enough to work, small enough to disappear along the seam of a pocket. The single-position pocket clip and lanyard hole give you carry options whether you’re in an office in Dallas or topping off a tank outside of Lubbock.

Jimping and Control

Jimping along the spine near the handle gives your thumb a proper landing pad. That extra traction matters when you’re bearing down on rope, plastic banding, or stubborn packaging. The whole package is built for control and repeatable cuts, not just a good Instagram photo.

Automatic Knife vs OTF vs Switchblade in Texas Context

Texas buyers are right to pay attention to knife type. An automatic knife like this one deploys from the side with a push button and a spring. An OTF knife pushes the blade straight out the front, usually via a thumb slider. Both get called switchblades in casual speech, and some Texas statutes use that term broadly. But for collectors and serious users, mechanism matters.

If you want that classic side-opening snap that feels like a traditional folding knife on fast-forward, you want an automatic knife like the Urban Specter. If you prefer a blade that rides inside the handle and exits the front, that’s an OTF knife—different tool, different feel. This clarity is what keeps a Texas collection organized and your expectations honest.

Texas Carry Reality and Legal Lens

Texas has taken a more permissive stance toward knives over the past several years, but that doesn’t mean details don’t matter. Adults can generally own and carry automatic knives and OTF knives across much of the state, but local rules, restricted locations, and age considerations still apply. A smart Texas carrier knows the difference between what’s mechanically possible and what’s legally advisable on any given day.

The Urban Specter’s side-opening automatic design, safety lock, and plain-edge blade make it a natural fit for everyday Texas carry where permitted—running ranch errands around Abilene, commuting in Houston, or working a job site near Austin. It slides into the role of practical cutting tool first, collectible automatic knife second.

Practical Texas Use Cases

Picture this knife breaking down feed sacks, trimming rope on a stock trailer, popping zip ties off new equipment, or just dealing with shipping tape after a porch delivery in San Antonio. The automatic mechanism saves time and effort when your second hand is busy, and the safety lock keeps it tamed until you call it up.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives

Is this closer to an OTF knife or a classic switchblade?

This is a side-opening automatic knife, the style most folks think of when they say switchblade. The blade pivots out from the side on a hinge when you press the button. An OTF knife, by contrast, drives the blade straight out of the front of the handle via a slider or switch. So if you’re picturing that sideways snap you’ve seen for decades, this automatic is exactly that—not an OTF, not an assisted opener.

Are automatic knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has relaxed significantly on automatic knives and what older statutes called switchblades. In many situations, adults can own and carry an automatic knife like this one, as well as OTF knives, within state law. That said, there are still restricted places—schools, certain government buildings, and other sensitive locations—where blade type and length can matter. The right move is to check the latest Texas statutes and any local rules before you treat an automatic knife as an everyday companion.

Why would a Texas collector add this automatic instead of another OTF?

Because it fills a different niche in the drawer. An OTF knife scratches that mechanical curiosity itch. A clean side-opening automatic like the Urban Specter covers the quiet, practical part of your carry. The jade G‑10, slim build, safety lock, and straightforward clip point all point toward real-world use. For a Texas collector, that balance of function, distinctive color, and correct automatic mechanism makes it a solid working piece that still stands out among louder switchblades and OTF knives.

Why This Automatic Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

The Urban Specter automatic knife doesn’t shout. It just does the job: quick side-opening action, dependable safety lock, and a slim jade G‑10 handle that sets it apart from the black-on-black crowd. It knows what it is—an automatic knife built for real Texas pockets—and doesn’t pretend to be an OTF or some vague “switchblade” for movie night.

If you’re a Texas buyer who can tell the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener, this piece fits right into your understanding. It’s the kind of knife a collector carries when they’re past trying to impress anyone and just want the right tool, tuned to the life they actually live.