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Marble Luxe Executive EDC Spring-Assisted Knife - Black Marble

Price:

5.39


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Boardroom Edge Executive Assisted EDC Knife - Black Marble

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For the buyer who knows the difference between a gimmick and a real tool, this spring-assisted EDC keeps it clean and functional. The Boardroom Edge snaps open with a positive assisted action via thumb stud or flipper, locking solid on a liner lock. A polished stainless drop point and black marble inlays turn this into a true dress carry – compact at 4.05" closed, but with a 2.75" blade that actually works. It’s the knife you can clip to slacks without apologizing for it.

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Executive-Level Assisted EDC for Buyers Who Care About the Mechanism

If you're looking for an automatic knife for sale and you actually care how the action feels in the hand, you already know most “tactical” folders aren’t built for a boardroom. The Boardroom Edge Executive Assisted EDC Knife - Black Marble is unapologetically a dress carry piece: a compact, spring-assisted knife with a clean, positive deployment and a look that matches a steel watch and a pressed shirt.

Mechanically, this is a spring-assisted folder, not a fully automatic knife or OTF. That matters. The assist gives you fast, one-handed deployment on demand, but you still have deliberate control over when the blade starts moving. For many buyers, that’s the sweet spot between speed, safety, and legality.

Why This Assisted EDC Belongs Next to Serious Automatic Knives for Sale

Collectors and EDC obsessives tend to chase the wildest automatic knives for sale – double-action OTFs, hard-firing side-openers, big-name switchblades. This piece plays a different game: it’s about refined action and carry, not shock value.

The pivot is tuned for a clean, predictable assisted snap. The blade rides on a conventional pivot with factory-set tension that doesn’t fight you on the opening stroke. Start it with the thumb stud or flipper tab and the assist takes over with a decisive, no-stutter deployment. There’s no gritty start, no mid-stroke hesitation – just a smooth ramp into lockup.

Flipper + Thumb Stud: Two Paths to the Same Clean Action

Most budget assisted knives pick one deployment method and do it badly. Here you get both:

  • Flipper tab: Ideal when you want a low-profile opening with your index finger. The tab gives you leverage, and the spring does the rest.
  • Thumb stud: Classic side-open feel for those used to traditional folders and autos. A short, positive push and the assist takes over.

For a collector, that duality is interesting. It lets you feel how the same assist spring behaves under two different initiation methods – and it makes this knife a surprisingly good benchmark piece for comparing assisted mechanisms in your collection.

Steel, Geometry, and Real EDC Use – Not Shelf Queen Territory

The polished stainless drop point is honest about what it is: a practical EDC blade, not a boutique steel science project. Stainless in this class gives you what a daily user actually needs – corrosion resistance, easy touch-ups, and enough edge holding to get through boxes, mail, packaging, and light food prep without drama.

The 2.75-inch blade length hits a sweet spot: long enough to be genuinely useful, short enough to stay discreet in an office or urban setting. The plain edge and drop point geometry give you a controllable tip and a gentle belly – think precise point work on packaging, straight cuts on paper or tape, and clean slicing through plastic without binding.

Stainless Construction with Marble Inlays: Why It Feels Better in Hand

The handle is full stainless steel with black marble-look inlays. That combination isn’t about posing – it affects how the knife sits and behaves:

  • Weight and balance: Stainless gives it a reassuring in-hand weight, so the assist doesn’t feel toy-like the way ultralight folders can.
  • Marble inlays: The glossy black scales break up the steel, giving you a smoother, warmer contact patch and visual depth that doesn’t scream “tactical.”
  • Finger grooves: Subtle sculpting on the handle locks in your grip for controlled cuts, something dress knives often ignore.

Carry Reality: An Assisted Knife Built for Slacks, Not Cargo Shorts

A lot of buyers hunting for an automatic knife for sale end up carrying something huge and aggressive, then discover it doesn’t play well with office chairs and dress pants. This knife was clearly designed by someone who has lived with a pocket clip day in, day out.

  • Closed length 4.05 inches: Disappears in-pocket, even in slimmer trousers.
  • Tip-down pocket clip: Steel clip keeps it anchored without chewing up fabric.
  • Slim profile: No oversized scales or protruding hardware to print badly against a pocket.

Clip this to your waistband or pocket and it wears like a pen, not a pry bar. When you need it, the assisted action makes one-handed draw-and-open moves feel natural and efficient.

Liner Lock: The Quiet Workhorse of This Design

The lock is a straightforward liner lock – and that’s a good thing. No gimmicks, no complex safeties to fight with. Once deployed, the liner snaps into place behind the tang with a positive, audible engagement. That geometry is familiar to anyone who’s carried modern folders, and it keeps the whole mechanism honest and serviceable.

Legal Context: Assisted Opening vs. Automatic Knife, Switchblade, and OTF

One reason many buyers look for an assisted EDC instead of a full-auto or OTF is legal peace of mind. Under U.S. federal law, a true switchblade (what the statute calls an automatic knife) is a knife that opens automatically by a button, pressure on the handle, or gravity/inertia alone. Most spring-assisted knives, including this one, require the user to start opening the blade manually before the spring engages, so they are generally not classified as switchblades at the federal level.

However, state and local laws vary widely. Some states group assisted openers with automatic knives or have broad "gravity knife" or "spring knife" language. Others explicitly allow assisted mechanisms while restricting full automatics and OTF knives. Before you carry this (or any knife) daily, you should:

  • Check your specific state and local knife laws for assisted, automatic, OTF, and switchblade definitions.
  • Note any blade-length limits for EDC or concealed carry.
  • Understand restrictions on carry in schools, government buildings, and certain workplaces.

This knife is engineered as an assisted-opening folder, not an OTF or button-activated automatic. That design choice alone makes it a more realistic everyday carry in jurisdictions that are strict about true automatics.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act) restricts interstate commerce of automatic knives and switchblades but does not ban simple possession nationwide. The big variables are state and local laws. Some states allow automatic knives and OTFs with few restrictions, others allow only assisted openers and manual folders, and a few have outright bans or narrow exceptions (like law enforcement or active-duty military).

This particular knife is spring-assisted, not a true automatic or OTF. Even so, you must check current laws where you live and where you carry – including blade-length rules and prohibited locations. Knife laws change, and nothing here is legal advice.

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

Enthusiasts use these terms precisely:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Side-opening blade that deploys automatically when you press a button or actuator. "Switchblade" is the legal term in U.S. federal law; "automatic knife" is the enthusiast and industry term.
  • OTF (out-the-front): A subtype of automatic where the blade travels straight out the front of the handle, single-action (deploy only) or double-action (deploy and retract with the mechanism).
  • Assisted-opening knife: Like this one – the user starts opening the blade manually (via thumb stud or flipper). Once past a certain point, a spring assists the rest of the deployment. Fast, but not a button-activated automatic.

Mechanically and legally, assisted openers and full automatics are different animals, even if both feel quick in the hand.

What makes this automatic-style assisted knife worth buying?

For the price and category, this knife hits several points that matter to a serious buyer:

  • A dialed-in assisted action with both flipper and thumb stud initiation.
  • A polished stainless drop point that actually cuts, not just looks good.
  • Stainless frame with black marble inlays that read as executive, not cosplay tactical.
  • A compact, pocketable footprint that works with office wear.
  • A straightforward liner lock and clip design that won’t fight you during real use.

If you’re building out an automatic and assisted collection, this isn’t the loudest piece you’ll own – but it will probably be one of the few you can clip to your pocket five days a week without catching HR’s attention.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their EDC with Intent

If your search for an automatic knife for sale is really about finding a fast, one-handed EDC that respects both mechanics and context, this executive-assisted folder earns its place. It’s not pretending to be a combat OTF or a vintage switchblade. It’s a compact, well-balanced, spring-assisted knife with a confident action and a black marble dress profile that suits buyers who know their gear and choose it deliberately.

This is the piece you carry when you care how your knife feels, looks, and deploys – and when you want that decision to say you’re an enthusiast, not a show-off.

Blade Length (inches) 2.75
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.05
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme Marble
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock