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Backstage Rhythm Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Pink Guitar

Price:

5.93


Rock Star Tribute Quick-Assist Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black
Rock Star Tribute Quick-Assist Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black
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Chaos Evolution Assisted Opening Knife - Red
Chaos Evolution Assisted Opening Knife - Red
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Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star Assisted Opening Knife - Pink Guitar

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/2418/image_1920?unique=4340cc6

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This isn’t a toy, it’s a rock-themed assisted opening knife built to work. The Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star rides in pocket like a favorite riff, with a spring-assisted flipper that snaps the black drop-point blade into play fast and clean. The liner lock bites solid, the pocket clip keeps it ready on your belt or jeans, and the pink guitar handle makes it obvious who it belongs to: the one in the room who actually plays.

5.93 5.93 USD 5.93

GT6421F

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

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Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star Assisted Opening Knife - Pink Guitar

Some knives are just tools. This one walks onstage with you. The Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star Assisted Opening Knife takes a fully functional spring-assisted EDC platform and wraps it in a pink guitar theme that actually earns pocket space instead of just fishing for compliments. It’s a music lover’s working blade, not a plastic souvenir.

Assisted Opening Knife for Sale with Rock-Star Attitude

Under the graphic, this is a real assisted opening knife for sale built on a proven formula: flipper tab, spring assist, liner lock, and a pocket clip. The handle is shaped like a guitar body, but the mechanics are what matter. One deliberate press on the flipper and the internal spring takes over, driving the 3.25-inch drop-point blade to full lock with a clean, confident snap. No wrist gymnastics, no half-hearted deployment – just a proper assisted action that does what it’s supposed to do.

For buyers who normally scroll straight past novelty gear, here’s the distinction: this is a spring-assisted folding knife, not an automatic knife or OTF switchblade. You initiate the action manually with the flipper; the spring completes it. That means a familiar mechanism, easy one-handed use, and a legal profile that’s friendlier in many jurisdictions than a true automatic knife.

Mechanics First: Action, Lockup, and Real EDC Use

If you’ve handled enough assisted openers, you know the spectrum: from gritty, hesitant deployment to tuned, repeatable snap. The Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star falls comfortably on the right side of that line. The flipper tab is sized correctly relative to the blade length, giving enough leverage to overcome the detent without feeling like a thumb workout. Once you break that detent, the spring takes over smoothly and drives the blade home.

Spring-Assisted Deployment That Actually Works

This is a side-opening spring-assisted knife, not an OTF. The blade pivots from the handle like a standard folder, with the assist coil adding speed and consistency. That gives you:

  • Positive deployment without needing wrist flicks
  • Manageable closing force so you’re not fighting the spring
  • An action that stays usable even when your hands are cold or sweaty after a set

The liner lock engages the blade tang with a visible bite, and the lock bar is easy to access along the handle spine. You release, fold, and you’re back in your pocket in one controlled motion.

Blade Profile Built for Backstage Chores

The black-finished drop-point blade with a plain edge is tuned for the real backstage grind: boxes, tape, cable ties, packaging, and the inevitable gear fixes. The belly of the drop point gives you a predictable slicing arc, while the tip geometry stays stout enough for light prying or detail work without feeling fragile.

At 3.25 inches of blade and 8.25 inches overall, it hits that sweet spot where it still feels like a full-size pocket knife but doesn’t turn into a burden clipped on your pocket all night.

Collector Appeal: Novelty Theme, Functional Platform

Serious knife people usually ignore theme knives for one reason: they’re often junk under the paint. The difference here is that the guitar body handle and Rock Star blade text sit on top of a conventional, proven assisted-opening folder format. That gives this piece an oddball niche value for both knife collectors and music gear junkies.

  • Guitar-shaped metal handle with pink acoustic graphic
  • Rock Star marking on the blade as a clear thematic anchor
  • Practical pocket clip, not a keychain gimmick

As a collector piece, it fills a very specific slot: the knife you show the guitar player who usually couldn’t care less about your titanium framelocks. It’s a bridge blade, something that crosses between EDC collection and music memorabilia without sacrificing basic function.

Carry Reality: Pocket Clip, Size, and Balance

Specs on paper don’t lie here: 4.75 inches closed, 8.25 inches overall, pocket clip on the handle spine. It rides like a conventional assisted opening pocket knife, despite the guitar body profile. The metal handle gives it enough weight to feel substantial in hand without turning it into an anchor in your jeans.

The clip positions the knife where you can get a full purchase, roll onto the flipper, and deploy in one motion. Whether you’re cutting gaff tape in a dark venue or just murdering shipping boxes in your living room, the knife behaves like a standard EDC folder – which is exactly what you want from something that also happens to look like stage gear.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knife legality is a two-layer issue: federal and state. Federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly regulates interstate commerce and shipping of true automatic knives and switchblades, particularly across state lines and into federal territories. It does not, by itself, ban ownership for most individuals.

State and local laws are where things get serious. Many states now allow automatic knives with few restrictions; others limit blade length, carry style, or who can possess them; a few still restrict or ban autos and classic switchblades outright. You must check your specific state and local laws before you buy or carry any automatic knife.

This Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic knife or OTF switchblade. With an assisted opener, you start the blade manually using the flipper, and the spring completes deployment. In many jurisdictions, that’s treated differently—and often more leniently—than a push-button automatic, but you are still responsible for knowing and following your local regulations.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Enthusiasts separate these terms for a reason:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): A folding knife where a button or release activates a spring that drives the blade out from the side. You don’t move the blade yourself.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: The blade travels linearly out the front of the handle, usually via a thumb slider. Many are double-action, meaning the same control both extends and retracts the blade.
  • Switchblade: In U.S. law and common speech, this usually refers to any automatic knife activated by a button, switch, or similar device—side-opening or OTF.

The Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star is not an automatic knife or switchblade. It’s a spring-assisted folder: you manually move the blade with the flipper, and a spring assists the rest of the opening. That’s a different mechanism and, in many places, a different legal category.

What makes this assisted opening knife worth buying?

This knife earns its pocket space three ways. Mechanically, it’s a straightforward, reliable spring-assisted flipper with a solid liner lock and a useful drop-point blade – in other words, a real working folder. Thematically, the pink guitar handle and Rock Star blade text give it a distinct identity that resonates with musicians and collectors of music gear, not just knife people. Practically, the pocket clip, manageable size, and one-handed deployment make it a legitimate EDC candidate, not a drawer toy.

If you’re the type who chooses gear with personality but refuse to carry anything that can’t actually cut, this checks both boxes.

For the Enthusiast Who Refuses to Carry Boring Gear

Owning the Backstage Rhythm Rock-Star Assisted Opening Knife isn’t about pretending you’re on tour; it’s about admitting your tools can have a little stage presence without sacrificing function. You get a dependable assisted action, a lockup you can trust for everyday cutting, and a design that broadcasts your music obsession every time you pull it from your pocket.

For the collector who’s already got the serious blades covered, this is the fun outlier that still respects the fundamentals. For the guitarist who’s finally buying a real knife instead of another cheap novelty, it’s the upgrade that proves you can have theme and capability in the same package.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Material Metal
Theme Guitar
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock