Skip to Content
Deer Trail Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Wood Grain

Price:

4.95


Skullguard Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black
Skullguard Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black
4.75 4.75
Eagle Crest Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Wood Grain
Eagle Crest Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Wood Grain
4.95 4.95

Deer Camp Quick-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife - Wood Grain

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/2111/image_1920?unique=8465156

4 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a wall-hanger; it’s a working assisted opening knife built for the woods. The Deer Camp Quick-Deploy rides light in the pocket, yet snaps open with a decisive spring-assisted kick and a sure-footed liner lock. The matte black drop point handles field tasks cleanly, while the wood grain scale and gold deer motif give it a campfire pedigree. For the hunter or outdoorsman who wants a fast, one-handed folder that still looks at home next to a rack of antlers.

4.95 4.95 USD 4.95

A47DR

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Deer Camp Quick-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife - Wood Grain

The Deer Camp Quick-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife is what happens when a classic hunting aesthetic collides with modern one-handed speed. Warm wood grain, a gold deer motif, and a matte black drop point aren’t just decoration—they frame a spring-assisted action built for real-world use in the field and around camp.

Why This Assisted Folder Belongs Next to Your Best Automatic Knife for Sale

Serious enthusiasts don’t lump everything sharp into one bucket. You know the difference between a true automatic knife, an OTF, and an assisted opener—and you buy accordingly. This knife is an assisted opening folder, not an automatic knife, but it earns a place in the same conversation because of how its mechanism behaves: fast, predictable, controlled.

Spring-assisted action gives you a hybrid experience. You start the motion with the flipper tab; the internal spring takes over and snaps the blade into lockup. That means no accidental pocket launches, no surprise deployments when you don’t want them, and a satisfying, repeatable snap every time you intend to use it.

Action and Mechanics: The Assisted Opening Deployment That Actually Deserves Pocket Time

The heart of this piece is the assisted opening mechanism paired with a liner lock. The flipper tab acts as your index trigger—press or pull it, and once you clear a short detent, the torsion spring drives the matte black drop point into position. Enthusiasts will notice a few things on first deployment:

  • Clean detent: Enough resistance to keep the blade secure in-pocket, but not so stiff you’re fighting it with cold or gloved hands.
  • Positive lockup: The liner lock engages the tang with a confident click, without overtravel or squishiness at the bar.
  • Thumb purchase: Jimping on the spine gives your thumb a defined landing zone for control during fine cuts.

This is the kind of action you appreciate on day 50 as much as on day one—no gimmicks, just a straightforward assisted mechanism tuned for reliability. It’s not an OTF, it’s not a full automatic knife or switchblade, and that’s exactly the point: you get one-handed speed with a simpler legal footprint in many areas.

Steel and Edge Reality in the Field

This knife is built for real-world outdoor tasks: breaking down light packaging at camp, trimming cord, opening feed bags, and handling the small chores that come with a day in deer country. The matte black coated drop point favors control over flash, helping with basic corrosion resistance and reducing visual glare. Edge retention is tuned for practicality—easy to touch up on a pocket stone or field sharpener, rather than chasing super-steel bragging rights on a budget-friendly work knife.

Handle, Ergonomics, and That Deer Motif

The handle tells the story before the blade ever opens. A wood grain front scale channels traditional hunting knives—the kind your grandfather carried—while the darker, textured rear portion adds modern grip and visual contrast. The gold deer graphic isn’t cheap clip art; it ties the whole design back to what this knife is for: the woods, camp, and the people who live for deer season.

The handle arc and finger relief give a natural three-finger or full-hand grip, depending on your glove size. Combined with the liner lock and jimping, you get a secure, non-fussy hold that doesn’t require babying or perfect hand placement.

EDC Reality: How This Hunting-Themed Folder Actually Carries

Plenty of knives look good on the table and feel terrible in the pocket. This isn’t one of them. A deep-carry pocket clip lets the Deer Camp Quick-Deploy ride low and out of sight until you need it. The assisted opening knife profile is slim enough for front-pocket carry without printing like a brick, and light enough that you forget it’s there until you reach for the flipper.

In day-to-day use, this is a classic crossover knife: part hunting-inspired, part everyday carry. It’s the knife you use to slice up an apple after glassing a field, then open mail on Monday morning without feeling overbladed or out of place.

Where This Knife Sits in the Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade Conversation

You’ll see this knife on the same table as an automatic knife for sale, OTF models, and the occasional high-end switchblade because buyers who appreciate one-handed deployment often cross-shop all three. Mechanically, though, this is an assisted opening folding knife:

  • Assisted opener: User starts the blade; spring finishes the deployment.
  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Press a button or release, and the blade deploys under spring power without manual pre-load.
  • OTF automatic: Blade travels straight out the front of the handle, single- or double-action, under spring tension.

Why it matters: assisted opening knives often face fewer legal restrictions than automatic knives or OTF switchblades, while still offering fast, one-handed action. That’s a real advantage for buyers who want speed without instantly stepping into the strictest category of knife laws.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, there’s a crucial distinction between federal and state law. Federally, automatic knives and switchblades (including many OTF models) are regulated primarily in interstate commerce under the Federal Switchblade Act. That law restricts how automatic knives for sale can move across state lines, but it doesn’t outright ban ownership for most individuals. The real complexity is at the state and sometimes local level: some states allow automatic knives and OTF switchblades with few limitations; others restrict blade length, carry method, or limit them to law enforcement and military; a few prohibit them almost entirely.

This Deer Camp knife is an assisted opening folder, not an automatic knife or OTF. In many jurisdictions, assisted openers are treated differently and more leniently than full switchblades, but you cannot assume. Always check your current state and local laws on automatic knives, assisted opening knives, and switchblades before you buy or carry. Laws change, and ignorance won’t help you curbside with a patrol car behind you.

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

Collectors often use "automatic knife" and "switchblade" interchangeably, and in practice they usually refer to the same thing: a knife that deploys its blade under spring power when you press a button, lever, or similar actuator. An OTF automatic knife is a specific style of automatic where the blade travels out the front of the handle rather than pivoting from the side; many are double-action, deploying and retracting with the same control.

This Deer Camp model is an assisted opening folder. You start the blade manually with a flipper or thumb, then an internal spring completes the opening and the liner lock holds it in place. It behaves quickly—sometimes as fast as an automatic knife—but the mechanism is distinct, and that distinction matters to both enthusiasts and lawmakers.

What makes this assisted knife worth buying?

Three things justify a spot in your rotation. First, the mechanism: a clean, reliable assisted opening system with a sure liner lock and proper jimping is what separates a throwaway folder from a trusted EDC. Second, the design language: wood grain, deer motif, and matte black blade create a coherent hunting narrative, not random decoration. Third, the carry manners: deep-carry clip, manageable footprint, and practical edge geometry give you a usable tool, not just a themed novelty.

If you already own full automatic knives for sale in your collection, this is the knife you clip on when you want that deer-camp heritage vibe with fewer legal headaches and a simpler, lower-profile mechanism.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their Gear on Purpose

Owning the Deer Camp Quick-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife is about more than adding another blade to a drawer. It’s about having a field-ready, one-handed folder that speaks the same language as your favorite automatic knife or OTF—speed, reliability, mechanical satisfaction—while wearing the traditional face of wood grain and a deer in gold. If you’re the kind of buyer who reads the fine print on action types and cares how a liner lock engages, this assisted opening knife will feel right at home alongside the rest of your collection.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Wood
Theme Deer Motif
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock