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Carbon Weave Lightning-Deploy OTF Knife - Blue Damascus

Price:

23.58


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Carbon Weave Lightning-Deploy OTF Knife - Blue Damascus

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This automatic knife for sale is a single-action OTF built for people who care about deployment as much as design. One deliberate push on the side-mounted slide sends the blue Damascus clip point out the front with a clean, confident snap. Carbon fiber weave inlays lock into the hand, while the rectangular frame, pocket clip, and lanyard hole make it a realistic EDC. This is the OTF you buy when you want modern materials, honest action, and a blade that actually turns heads.

23.58 23.58 USD 23.58

SB115CBLDM

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic Knives for Sale That Earn Their Pocket Space

When you buy an automatic knife, you’re not just buying a blade—you’re buying a mechanism. This Carbon Weave Lightning-Deploy OTF Knife - Blue Damascus exists for the buyer who cares as much about the slide and track as they do about steel and finish. It’s a single-action out-the-front automatic, not a generic “switchblade,” and that distinction matters the moment your thumb hits the actuator.

Automatic Knife for Sale: Single-Action OTF Done Right

This is a true OTF automatic knife for sale: the blade deploys straight out the front of the handle via a side-mounted slide. No flipper, no wrist flick, no assist spring pretending to be automatic. A contained internal drive spring takes the blade from fully closed to fully locked with one decisive motion.

The single-action design means deployment is powered; retraction is manual. You ride the slide forward, feel the spring load, and then the blade snaps into lockup with a clear, positive click. To reset, you manually pull the blade back and re-engage the track. It’s honest, mechanical, and direct—more tool-room than toy.

Why the Slide Actuator Matters

Side-mounted slides on an automatic OTF are about control. Positioned where your thumb naturally rests along the handle, this actuator gives you a straight-line push, not an awkward upward shove. Less torque on the frame means cleaner action, less wandering in the hand, and fewer accidental half-deployments. That’s the difference between something you flip a few times and something you trust to work when you actually need it.

Track, Spring, and Lockup

Inside, the blade rides in a guided track with a dedicated drive spring. The spring’s job is singular: get the blade out fast and seat it into lock. Once that lock engages, the blade feels like a conventional folder in hand—no rattle, no vague “is it really open?” moment. For an OTF automatic at this size, that confidence in lockup is what separates a display piece from a daily rider.

Blue Damascus and Carbon Fiber: More Than Just Flash

The first thing you see is the blue Damascus blade. The patterning is not there to hide flaws; it’s there to showcase them if they exist. The clip point profile gives you a fine, controllable tip with enough belly for real cutting, not just envelope-slitting. At about 3.5 inches of blade and 9 inches overall, this sits squarely in the full-size EDC automatic category.

Edge-wise, you’re working with a plain edge that can actually be sharpened by someone who knows their stones. No serrations to snag, no gimmicks. Steel choice here is about practical hardness and toughness—something that will hold a working edge respectably and still take a field touch-up without a diamond lab in your backpack.

Carbon Fiber Weave Inlays That Actually Do Their Job

The handle is a rectangular OTF frame with beveled corners, framed in black with carbon fiber weave inlays on both sides. These aren’t cosmetic stickers; carbon fiber is light, stiff, and transmits feedback well. Glossy, yes—but under pressure, that weave and the handle geometry give you a definite indexing point. You know blade orientation without looking, which matters if this is more than just a desk toy.

Blue hardware ties the look together: screws, accents, and the lanyard ring echo the blade’s tone, making this automatic knife look like a cohesive design, not a parts-bin special.

Buying an Automatic Knife for EDC: How This One Carries

As an everyday carry automatic knife, this OTF finds a solid middle ground. At 5.5 inches closed and around 6.7 ounces, it’s not a featherweight, but it earns the pocket space by being immediately accessible. The rectangular profile sits flat against the pocket seam, helped by a practical pocket clip that’s positioned for consistent draw.

The clip is tuned for real fabric, not just photo shoots—it bites enough to stay put on denim or work pants without shredding lighter materials. The lanyard hole at the butt with a blue accent gives you another retention option if you run a fob or want faster indexing from a bag.

Action Under Real Use

Single-action OTFs like this are built for intentional deployment. There’s resistance on the slide by design: it prevents accidental firing in the pocket but still lets you get the blade out with one controlled push. That tuned resistance is where serious buyers separate good automatics from sloppy ones. Too light, and it’s unsafe. Too heavy, and you fight the knife instead of using it. This piece hits that functional middle ground.

Legal Context: When Is an Automatic Knife Legal to Carry?

Any time you buy an automatic knife—or an OTF, or what some people loosely call a switchblade—you have to think about law, not just action. In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mostly restricts interstate commerce and shipment of automatic knives, especially through the mail, with certain exceptions for military, law enforcement, and one-armed users. It doesn’t, by itself, tell you whether you can carry this in your pocket on a Tuesday.

Carry and ownership are determined state by state, and often city by city. Some states allow automatic knives and OTFs with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, ban certain mechanisms like double-action switchblades, or restrict carry to your own property or hunting and fishing use. A few jurisdictions still prohibit possession outright.

So where does that leave you with an automatic knife for sale like this one? Here’s the practical framework:

  • Check state law first: Search your state’s statutes for “automatic knife,” “switchblade,” and “gravity knife.”
  • Check local ordinances: Some cities and counties are stricter than their states.
  • Consider blade length limits: Even in legal states, a 3.5-inch automatic blade may be treated differently than a sub-3-inch one.
  • Know the difference between ownership and carry: Some places allow you to own an automatic but not carry it concealed.

This isn’t legal advice—laws change, and responsibility sits with the buyer. But if you treat an automatic knife like this with the same seriousness you treat a firearm or other restricted tool, you’ll be on the right path: know the rules before you clip it in.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives exist in a patchwork of laws. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act regulates manufacture, import, and interstate shipment, especially through the mail, but it doesn’t outright ban personal ownership for most civilians. The real rules come from your state and local governments. Some states fully legalize automatic knives and OTFs for adults; others restrict blade length, limit carry to one-hand-disabled users, hunting use, or private property; a few ban them outright.

Before you buy an automatic knife, you should:

  • Confirm current state law from an official source.
  • Check city and county ordinances where you live and work.
  • Understand the difference between owning an automatic and carrying it concealed or in public.

Always verify the latest laws yourself; treating an automatic like a serious tool includes understanding the legal side.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where a spring deploys the blade by pushing a button, slide, or similar control—no wrist flick needed once you overcome the safety resistance. A switchblade is essentially the same thing; it’s the older, legal term that ended up in the statutes, and it usually covers button- or slide-actuated automatics.

An OTF (out-the-front) is a specific kind of automatic where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting out from the side. This Carbon Weave Lightning-Deploy is a single-action OTF automatic: the spring drives the blade out, and you manually reset it. A double-action OTF uses the same control to both deploy and retract the blade with spring assistance.

So all OTFs like this are automatic knives, and most laws treat them as switchblades—but not all automatic knives are OTF. Many are side-opening autos that look like conventional folders.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

For an enthusiast, a knife like this earns its spot in the collection for several reasons. Mechanically, it’s a dedicated single-action OTF with a tuned slide actuator and solid lockup—meaning the blade doesn’t feel loose or tentative once it’s out. Visually, the blue Damascus clip point and carbon fiber weave inlays give it that modern tactical aesthetic without drifting into fantasy territory.

In the hand, the 9-inch overall length, 3.5-inch blade, and 5.5-inch closed profile put it right in the usable EDC automatic category. The pocket clip, lanyard option, and flat-carry profile make this realistic to actually carry, not just photograph. If you’re the type who buys automatic knives for both the action and the engineering, this OTF hits the sweet spot between hard-use tool and showpiece.

Why This Automatic OTF Belongs in a Serious Collection

Automatic knives for sale are everywhere now, but most of them feel like they were built to meet a price, not a standard. This Carbon Weave Lightning-Deploy OTF Knife - Blue Damascus feels like it was built by someone who actually understands why enthusiasts obsess over action, track, and materials.

You get a single-action OTF mechanism with deliberate slide resistance and positive lockup, a blue Damascus clip point that looks as good in hand as it does on a shelf, and carbon fiber inlays that do real work in grip and indexing. It carries like a functional EDC automatic and displays like a custom-inspired piece.

If you see your gear as tools first and collectibles second, this is the kind of automatic knife you buy: not because it’s loud online, but because the mechanism, steel, and design choices all line up when you hold it.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 6.7
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Damascus
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Slide
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes