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Carbon-Weave Urban Stiletto OTF Knife - Silver Blade

Price:

22.67


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Cityline Carbon Stiletto Automatic OTF Knife - Silver Blade

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This automatic knife for sale is a slim, urban stiletto built around a single-action OTF drive and a clean satin dagger blade. The side-mounted thumb slider snaps the blade straight out the front, then locks it back with the same decisive stroke. Carbon-fiber weave inlays keep the profile lean without feeling cheap or hollow. Clipped in pocket or riding in the nylon sheath, it’s the kind of OTF you buy because you appreciate fast, linear action that actually runs true down the rail.

22.67 22.67 USD 22.67

SB238SL

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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
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  • Double/Single Action
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Automatic Knife for Sale with True Urban Stiletto Lines

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife that actually respects the mechanics, this one earns a spot in the rotation. The Cityline Carbon Stiletto is a single-action OTF automatic, not a generic "switchblade" and not a side-folder pretending to be tactical. It’s a straight-line deployer: press the side-mounted thumb slider forward, the spring drives the dagger blade out the front, and you’re in business.

The silhouette is pure urban stiletto – slim, double-edge style grind, satin silver finish – but under the aesthetics, the geometry is honest. The blade tracks cleanly down the internal rails, and the handle length-to-blade ratio keeps everything compact enough for real EDC without feeling like a toy.

Why This Automatic Knife for Sale Feels Different in Hand

Every automatic knife for sale promises "fast deployment." That’s table stakes. What separates a serious OTF from a drawer filler is how that deployment feels. On this piece, the actuator throw is tuned: short enough to be quick, long enough to serve as a built-in safety. You’re working against deliberate spring tension, not a hair-trigger.

The single-action mechanism means you drive it out with the slider and then reset it manually, which keeps the internal layout simpler and more robust than many budget double-actions. Fewer moving parts, fewer weak points, less chance of the blade hanging up halfway when you actually need it to lock out.

OTF Rail, Blade Alignment, and Real-World Reliability

Mechanically, this is a track-and-rail OTF: the blade rides in a channel within the handle and is guided into lockup by that path. Done poorly, you get wobble and sloppy centering. Done decently, like here, you get a dagger that snaps out with a straight, confidence-inspiring line. Collectors notice that when they cycle it – there’s no gritty hitch halfway or mystery rattle in the handle.

Stainless Steel Dagger with a Purpose

The satin-finished stainless blade is ground in a dagger profile, with a central fuller and drilled accents near the base. Edge geometry here favors penetration and clean slicing over brute-force chopping – exactly what a slim OTF stiletto should be. In the real world, that translates to easy box work, quick package opening, and precise tip control, not baton duty. Think urban EDC, not camp axe replacement.

Carbon-Fiber Aesthetics and Practical Carry

The handle uses carbon-fiber weave inlays over a black frame. That’s not just for looks. Carbon fiber keeps the weight in check without going flimsy, and the flat inlay panels give you consistent traction without chewing up your pocket. At 4.5 inches closed and 7.75 inches overall, the proportions are dialed-in for front-pocket or waistband carry.

The pocket clip rides on the spine side, giving you a ready-to-draw orientation for right-handed users. When you don’t want it in-pocket, the included nylon sheath plays nice with belts and basic webbing setups – nothing exotic, but functional and MOLLE-friendly enough for bag or chest-rig mounting.

Balance, Weight, and Everyday Dynamics

At just over 6 ounces, this isn’t a featherweight, and that’s a good thing for an OTF. The mass in the handle damps the shock of deployment and makes the action feel solid instead of twitchy. Balance sits slightly handle-heavy, which is what you want on a straight-line automatic – the knife wants to sit stable in your grip when the blade kicks out, not dive forward out of your hand.

Automatic Knives for Sale with Honest Urban Use Cases

There are automatic knives for sale that are all cosplay and no spine. This one lands in the honest lane: urban tactical styling, real-world EDC usability. The dagger blade and stiletto profile nod to classic defense tools, but the dimensions, clip, and sheath make it a realistic everyday companion if your jurisdiction allows automatics.

It’s the kind of OTF you clip on for city nights, warehouse runs, or long shifts where opening, cutting, and re-stowing happen on repeat. No flipper tab, no thumb stud; you get pure thumb-slider action up the side of the handle. Once you’ve used an OTF that actually tracks well, side folders start feeling slow.

Legal Context Before You Buy an Automatic Knife

Before you buy an automatic knife like this OTF stiletto, you need to understand the legal terrain. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (including OTFs) are restricted mainly in terms of interstate commerce and federal property; individual states decide what you can own and carry day to day. Some states are now fully automatic-friendly, some allow ownership but restrict carry, and others still treat autos and traditional "switchblades" as prohibited weapons.

This knife is an automatic OTF — that means it is spring-driven and blade deployment is initiated by the handle-mounted actuator, not by manual opening. That classification matters legally. Always check your current state and local laws on automatic knives, OTF knives, and any statutory references to "switchblades" before you carry. When in doubt, treat it as a restricted item and transport discreetly until you’ve verified the rules where you live.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives sit in a gray zone that depends heavily on where you are. Federally, the main law is the Switchblade Knife Act, which regulates interstate shipment and possession on certain federal properties. It does not create a simple nationwide "legal/illegal" answer for everyday carry.

State and local laws do the real work. Some states now allow automatic knives and OTFs for both ownership and carry with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, restrict concealed carry, or ban autos and classic switchblades outright. Because laws change and enforcement attitudes shift, you should always consult current state statutes (and, if you’re smart, local ordinances) before you carry this or any other automatic in public.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad category: any knife where a spring or stored energy deploys the blade when you press a button, switch, or similar control. A "switchblade" is the traditional legal and cultural term for the same class of knives – most statutes still use that word. "OTF" (out-the-front) is a specific automatic mechanism where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting out of the side.

This knife is an automatic OTF with a single-action mechanism. You push the side slider forward to drive the blade out; retraction is manual. It’s absolutely accurate to call it an automatic knife, an OTF automatic, and, in legal language, it will fall under most states’ switchblade definitions, even though enthusiasts reserve "switchblade" as a more historical, catch-all label.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, the value is in the honest single-action OTF drive, the clean DAGGER-style grind with a satin finish, and the way the blade actually tracks straight out of the handle instead of wobbling down the channel. The carbon-fiber weave inlays give it a modern, urban edge and keep the weight in a sweet spot for repeated deployments.

As an automatic knife for sale in the real world – not on a movie poster – it offers a credible mix of speed, control, and carry options. You’re not just buying an OTF to say you own an OTF; you’re picking up a slim urban stiletto that rewards actual use and satisfies a collector eye that cares about rail alignment, actuator feel, and how the action sounds when it locks out.

For Enthusiasts Who Buy Automatic Knives With Intent

If you’re the kind of buyer who knows the difference between a side-opening auto and a true OTF – and you can feel when an action is tuned versus just "fast" – this automatic knife for sale lands squarely in your lane. It’s a purpose-built urban stiletto with a single-action OTF mechanism, carbon-fiber aesthetics, and a deployment that feels more serious than its price point suggests.

You’re not just buying a knife. You’re adding an automatic OTF that reflects why you carry in the first place: fast, controlled access to a blade that actually runs straight, fits your environment, and respects the mechanics as much as you do.

Blade Length (inches) 3.125
Overall Length (inches) 7.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 6.02
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish None
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type None
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Single
Safety None
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath