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Operator Reach Precision OTF Knife - Gray Carbon Fiber

Price:

24.49


Carbon Weave Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber
Carbon Weave Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber
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Skull Phantom Quick-Deploy OTF Dagger - Skull Camo
Skull Phantom Quick-Deploy OTF Dagger - Skull Camo
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Carbon Strike Long-Reach OTF Automatic - Gray Weave

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This automatic knife for sale is a long-reach, double-action OTF built for people who care how an action feels. The 4.35" two-tone dagger blade snaps out and retracts on a thumb-slide track that runs clean and positive—no mush, no mystery. Gray carbon fiber scales keep the frame light and controlled at full 10.5" extension. Deep-carry clip and glass breaker round it out as a serious modern OTF for collectors and hard-use EDC buyers who choose mechanism first.

24.49 24.49 USD 24.49

SB271GYCFDP

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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
  • Sheath/Holster

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Automatic Knife for Sale That Understands Reach, Action, and Control

If you're looking to buy an automatic knife that actually respects what a long OTF is supposed to be, this Carbon Strike Long-Reach OTF Automatic - Gray Weave earns a spot in the rotation. It's a double-action out-the-front with a 4.35" dagger blade, 10.5" overall, built around clean deployment and a surprisingly controlled feel for a knife this long.

This isn't a novelty "switchblade." It's a modern OTF automatic knife engineered so the action, grip, and carbon fiber frame all work together when it's at full extension.

Automatic Knives for Sale With Real Double-Action OTF Mechanics

Mechanically, this is a true double-action OTF: the same side-mounted thumb slide both fires and retracts the blade. No secondary charging, no manual reset. When you run the actuator, you feel a defined track, spring tension ramping, then a decisive lock-up—exactly what you want in a working OTF automatic.

The blade rides inside an internal channel, guided by rails and spring tension until it locks at full extension. That longer 4.35" dagger profile can punish a weak mechanism; here, the frame length and slide position are tuned so you get enough leverage to drive a full-size blade without feeling like you’re wrestling the spring.

Action Feel: Slide, Tension, and Lock-Up

Collectors notice the difference between an OTF that just "goes out" and one that feels sorted. On this piece, the thumb slide has a deliberate, almost gated feel: light take-up, then a defined push through the spring, followed by a crisp stop when the blade hits lock. No rattle, no wandering halfway points. The return stroke is just as positive, which matters more than people admit—if retracting the blade feels lazy, you stop trusting the knife.

Dagger Geometry and Two-Tone Finish

The dagger blade brings a symmetrical point and a long central fuller, with a two-tone finish that leaves the primary surfaces dark and the edges bright. It’s not just cosmetic: that contrast highlights the grind lines and lets you see the edge clearly when you're checking sharpness or alignment. For an OTF that will live in a collection and in a pocket, blade geometry plus visual read matters.

Buy Automatic Knife Confidence: Carbon Fiber, Length, and Everyday Carry

At 6.15" closed and 10.5" open, this is a long OTF automatic knife, but the carbon fiber inlay does the heavy lifting keeping it carryable. The gray carbon weave isn’t just there for looks—it lightens the handle and adds a subtly grippy texture so the knife stays anchored when the blade snaps forward.

The rectangular frame gives you a straight indexing surface—easy to orient in the pocket, easy to draw in the dark. The deep-carry pocket clip keeps most of that 6.15" handle buried and discreet, while the glass breaker at the pommel adds a functional strike point that doesn’t interfere with grip.

EDC Reality: Long Blade, Manageable Package

Long OTFs can be awkward if the balance is off. Here, the weight bias stays closer to the handle, so when the dagger blade launches, the knife doesn't try to roll forward out of your fingers. That’s the difference between a shelf piece and something you actually carry. The matte black frame hardware and screws keep glare down and blend into gear or jeans.

Steel, Edge Behavior, and What Matters to Enthusiasts

In this price and category, the question isn’t "Is it super steel?" It’s "Does the steel match the mechanism and intended use?" This OTF sits in that utility-tactical lane where a reliable, mid-grade stainless is the right call: tough enough to handle the shock of out-the-front deployment, stainless enough for pocket sweat and daily carry, and easy to bring back on a stone or rod without ceremony.

Pair that with a simple plain edge and dagger grind and you get a blade that sharpens predictably. No fancy recurve, no overcomplicated geometry—just an edge that takes a clean bite and stays honest about when it needs a touch-up.

Automatic Knife Legal Context: Where This OTF Fits

Any time you look at automatic knives for sale, especially OTF designs, you need to think about where and how you’re allowed to carry them. In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly governs interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives and traditional "switchblades." Retail buyers are mostly governed by state and sometimes local law.

Some states are now fully automatic-friendly, allowing OTF and other automatic knives for everyday carry. Others restrict blade length, limit carry to your own property, or block autos and switchblades outright. City ordinances can add another layer. This knife is an automatic OTF with a 4.35" blade and dagger profile—features that you must compare directly against your local regulations before you clip it into a pocket or glove box.

Bottom line: owning and collecting is generally easier than carrying. Always confirm your state and city rules for automatic knives, OTFs, and switchblades, and when in doubt, treat this as a collection piece until you’re absolutely clear.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., the legality of an automatic knife—whether an OTF or a side-opening switchblade—comes down primarily to state and local law. Federal law focuses on interstate shipping and import of automatic and switchblade knives, not on simple ownership by an individual.

Some states now allow automatic knives and OTFs with few restrictions. Others cap blade length, restrict carry to certain roles (like law enforcement or military), or ban automatic knives and traditional switchblades altogether. Dagger blades and long reaches, like the 4.35" on this OTF, may trigger additional rules in some jurisdictions.

This is not legal advice. Before you buy an automatic knife or carry an OTF like this one, check your current state statutes and local ordinances, and verify any length or blade-type limits.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad category: a knife whose blade deploys from the closed position by pressing a button, lever, or slide, using an internal spring. "Switchblade" is the traditional legal and cultural term, usually describing side-opening automatic knives with a pushbutton in the handle.

OTF—out-the-front—is a specific automatic design where the blade travels in line with the handle and exits the front instead of pivoting from the side. This Carbon Strike is a double-action OTF automatic: the same slide both extends and retracts the blade. All OTFs like this are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTFs, and many side-opening autos are what people casually call "switchblades."

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, the value is in the long-reach double-action OTF system that still feels controlled—no sloppy travel, no vague lock-up. The 10.5" overall length with a 4.35" dagger blade gives you serious presence without turning the handle into an unwieldy brick.

Collector-wise, the gray carbon fiber inlay, two-tone dagger, and clean hardware layout make this more than another generic black OTF. It looks like a modern tactical piece, but the way the slide runs and the blade tracks out and back is what earns its place in a collection or an EDC lineup.

For the Enthusiast Who Buys Automatic Knives With Intent

If you’re not just hunting for "automatic knives for sale" but actually care how an OTF feels in hand and in motion, this Carbon Strike Long-Reach OTF Automatic - Gray Weave is built for you. The double-action mechanism, long dagger reach, and carbon fiber handle treatment give you that satisfying, tuned deployment that serious collectors and daily carriers look for when they buy an automatic knife. It’s a modern, technical OTF that respects the mechanics as much as the aesthetics—and that’s exactly the kind of piece that stays in a collection long after the impulse buys are gone.

Blade Length (inches) 4.35
Overall Length (inches) 10.5
Closed Length (inches) 6.15
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Material Carbon fiber
Theme Carbon Fiber
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon pouch