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Carbon Gauntlet Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Carbon Fiber

Price:

6.80


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Vector Pivot Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Gray Aluminum
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Carbon Gauntlet Rapid-Control Assisted Opening Knife - Carbon Fiber

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/704/image_1920?unique=fc09262

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This is not an automatic knife—it’s a purpose-built, spring-assisted folder for buyers who care about control. The Carbon Gauntlet uses a knuckle-style, four-finger handle and carbon fiber texture to lock your grip, while the flipper drives the matte black clip point out with clean, repeatable force. A liner lock anchors it open, the pocket clip keeps it ready, and the geometry makes everyday cuts feel planted instead of tentative. This is the assisted opening knife you choose because the action and ergonomics actually matter.

6.80 6.8 USD 6.80

A511CF

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

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Carbon Gauntlet Assisted Opening Knife for Sale – Built Around Grip and Leverage

The Carbon Gauntlet isn’t an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade. It’s a spring-assisted folding knife engineered for people who care more about control and deployment geometry than marketing buzzwords. You get a four-finger knuckle-style handle, carbon fiber texture that actually bites into the hand, and a flipper that brings a matte black clip point into play with zero drama and plenty of authority.

If you’re the buyer who asks how a knife feels in a hard twist cut or with wet hands instead of just asking the price, this assisted opening knife was built for you.

Why This Assisted Opening Knife Converts Buyers Who Know Their Gear

On paper, the numbers are straightforward: 8 inches overall, 4.75 inches closed, 3.25-inch clip point blade, 6.21 ounces. In hand, the story changes. The four-hole knuckle-style frame forces proper finger alignment. Each arc indexes a fingertip, locking your hand into the handle instead of just perching on it. That translates into real leverage—especially in pull cuts, box work, and any task where you’re driving the edge through stubborn material.

The spring-assisted flipper does what assisted opening is supposed to do: shorten the distance between intent and locked blade without pretending to be a full automatic knife. A controlled press on the flipper loads the torsion spring, the blade clears the detent, and the assist takes over in a single, predictable snap. No wrist flick theatrics, no half-hearted opens.

Clip Point Geometry That Earns Its Keep

The blade is a classic clip point in matte black—a shape that’s survived this long because it works. The clipped spine and subtle swedge give you a finer tip for scoring, piercing packing straps, or detail cutting, while maintaining enough belly for everyday slicing. Paired with a plain edge, it sharpens cleanly on basic stones and strops without fighting serrations or odd grind transitions.

Liner Lock and Flipper – The Practical Action Pairing

The liner lock on the Carbon Gauntlet engages fully onto the tang with a familiar, audible click. For anyone who’s carried modern folders, that lockup feedback is the sanity check: no flex, no uncertainty. The flipper tab is tuned to be glove-friendly—enough purchase to catch with a gloved index finger, but not a snag hazard coming out of the pocket.

Mechanics First: How This Action Differs from an Automatic Knife

Automatic knives and OTFs are about powered deployment from a locked closed position with a button or slide doing the work. This assisted opening knife sits one step back on that scale—it still needs deliberate manual initiation, then the spring finishes the job. From a mechanical and legal perspective, that matters.

With the Carbon Gauntlet, you have:

  • Spring-assisted flipper: Manual start, spring finish—fast, but still under your control.
  • Liner lock: Simple, proven lockup that’s easy to inspect and maintain.
  • Single-direction deployment: This is a folding knife, not a double-action OTF; it opens once and closes manually.

The result is an action that’s quick enough for real work but mechanically simpler than most automatic knife mechanisms. That simplicity is what keeps assisted EDC knives like this in rotation long after flashier pieces end up in display cases.

EDC Reality: How the Carbon Gauntlet Carries and Works

An 8-inch overall length and 4.75-inch closed size puts this squarely in the full-size EDC category. It’s not a tiny gentleman’s folder—it’s the knife you grab when you expect to actually use it.

At 6.21 ounces, it lands in that deliberate middle ground: substantial enough that the knuckle-style handle can soak up force without feeling hollow, but not so heavy that it becomes a brick in the pocket. The pocket clip carries it low and controlled, with just enough tension to keep it anchored through a day’s worth of bending, driving, or climbing.

The carbon fiber pattern scales are more than a cosmetic choice. The texture gives micro-bite to your grip, especially when your hands are cold, wet, or gloved. Combined with the four-finger guard, this knife feels planted in a way a flat, two-finger slab-sided folder simply doesn’t.

Control Under Stress and in Bad Conditions

The knuckle-style handle isn’t about theatrics; it’s about indexing. With four dedicated holes, your hand finds the same position every time, even without looking. That consistency is what lets users work confidently in the dark, in the rain, or with attention focused on the task—not on babysitting their grip.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Even though the Carbon Gauntlet is a spring-assisted folder, a lot of the same questions that come up when people look for an automatic knife for sale show up here too: legality, mechanism, and whether it’s actually worth carrying.

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) primarily restricts interstate commerce and shipment of automatic knives and switchblades, especially via mail, with exceptions for military, law enforcement, and some work-related uses. It does not outright ban simple ownership nationwide. The real deciding factor is state and local law. Some states allow automatic knives and OTFs with few restrictions; others limit blade length, carry method, or reserve them for certain professions; a few prohibit them almost entirely. Assisted opening knives like the Carbon Gauntlet are treated differently in many jurisdictions, but you cannot assume anything. Always check your specific state and municipal regulations before carrying. This is general information, not legal advice.

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

Mechanically, the distinctions are straightforward:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: A button, slide, or similar device releases the blade from a closed, locked position and the internal spring drives it fully open. "Switchblade" is the older legal and cultural term; "automatic knife" is the enthusiast’s term for the same basic mechanism.
  • OTF (out-the-front): A subtype of automatic knife where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Many are double-action, meaning the same control deploys and retracts the blade.
  • Assisted opening knife (like the Carbon Gauntlet): The user starts the blade manually with a flipper or thumb stud; once the blade passes a certain point, a spring assists the rest of the opening. It will not open on its own from a fully closed position.

Collectors and serious users care about these distinctions because they affect maintenance, reliability, legality, and how the knife behaves under real use.

What makes this assisted opening knife worth buying?

Three things separate the Carbon Gauntlet from commodity spring-assisted folders:

  • Purpose-built grip: The knuckle-style guard isn’t just an edgy silhouette; it creates a repeatable, four-point finger lock for serious control.
  • Tuned assisted action: The flipper and spring balance is dialed so it opens decisively without feeling jumpy or over-sprung.
  • Work-first geometry: The clip point, plain edge, and matte black finish are all about everyday use—cutting, scoring, and slicing without glare or drama.

For a buyer who already knows how many knives ride in their drawer, this one earns pocket time by feeling secure in the hand and honest in its mechanics.

Collector and Enthusiast Takeaway – Choosing the Right Tool on Purpose

If you came here looking for an automatic knife for sale and stayed because the mechanics of this assisted opening knife make sense, that’s the point. The Carbon Gauntlet isn’t pretending to be an OTF or switchblade; it’s a tuned, spring-assisted EDC built around a locked-in four-finger grip and a blade that actually works for daily tasks.

For enthusiasts and collectors, this is the piece you add when you want to feel how a knuckle-style handle and assisted flipper change the way a folding knife behaves in real work. For first-time buyers who’ve done their homework, it’s a smart way to step into fast-deploying folders without jumping straight to full automatics.

Either way, you’re not just buying another knife—you’re choosing a specific mechanism, a specific grip philosophy, and a tool that backs up its silhouette every time the blade snaps into place.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 6.21
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock