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Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger - Blue Blade

Price:

5.53


Shadow-Guard Close-Quarters Push Dagger - Midnight Black
Shadow-Guard Close-Quarters Push Dagger - Midnight Black
5.29 5.29
Signal Red Backup Push Dagger - Black T-Handle
Signal Red Backup Push Dagger - Black T-Handle
5.53 5.53

Neon Retention Close-Quarters Push Dagger - Blue Blade

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The Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger locks into your hand like it belongs there. A double-edged, spear-point blue blade sits under a textured black T-handle, built for instinctive indexing and close-quarters control. At 5.625" overall and 2.65 oz, it stays compact but substantial in the palm. The triple lightening holes, palm swell, and finger groove deliver fast orientation and confident retention—exactly what serious self-defense and tactical collectors expect from a purpose-built push dagger.

5.53 5.53 USD 5.53

FX641BL

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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Purpose-Built Push Daggers

If you're hunting for an automatic knife for sale, you already know action and intent matter. This Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger isn’t an automatic, OTF, or switchblade—it’s a fixed push dagger built for one specific job: close-quarters control with zero ambiguity about deployment. No springs, no buttons, no excuses. Just a compact spear-point blade that locks into your palm and stays there.

Collectors who buy automatic knives understand mechanical purpose. The same thinking applies here. Where an automatic knife uses a spring to fire the blade into position, this push dagger eliminates moving parts entirely, focusing on geometry, grip, and instinctive indexing. It’s a different answer to the same question: when things get close, can you trust what’s in your hand?

Why This Push Dagger Belongs Next to Your Automatic Knife for Sale Shelf

Look at most automatic knives for sale and you’ll see one story repeated: side-opening, button-fired, sometimes double-action, sometimes not. This Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger tells a different story visually and mechanically. The electric-blue, double-edged spear point with three lightening holes pulls the eye from across a display case, while the black T-handle tells anyone who knows knives that this is for retention and directional control, not fidget factor.

At 5.625 inches overall with a 2.875-inch blade and 2.65 ounces of weight, it hits that sweet spot where it disappears on the body but still feels anchored in the palm. It’s compact like a good EDC automatic, but when you close distance, the T-handle geometry is faster to orient than any folding knife—no pivot, no lock, no waiting on a spring.

Mechanics Without a Spring: The Engineering Behind the Palm-Lock

Automatic collectors obsess over action quality—the sound of the deployment, lockup, and blade play. With a fixed push dagger, the obsession shifts. You’re not grading the spring; you’re grading the interface between steel and hand.

Palm-Lock Geometry and Indexing

The Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger uses a pronounced finger groove, curved palm swell, and textured synthetic scales to create a true palm-lock. Once you slide your fingers around the T-handle, rotation is naturally limited. In a close-quarters grip, that matters more than any firing button placement on an automatic knife. You’re not worrying about blade alignment—the spear point is always inline with your forearm.

Double-Edged Spear Point with Lightening Holes

The double-edged spear point gives you thrust-oriented performance from either side of the blade. The three lightening holes down the center aren’t just visual flair; they slightly pull mass back toward the handle, helping the blade feel less tip-heavy in hand. It’s the same kind of balance discussion you’d have about a well-tuned automatic knife—only here it’s accomplished entirely through steel shaping rather than spring tuning.

Display Presence for Dealers Who Already Sell Automatic Knives

If you already buy automatic knives for your customers, you know display presence sells. The electric-blue metallic finish on this push dagger blade hits that tactical neon aesthetic: bold enough to catch attention, still serious enough to read as a tool, not a toy. Set it alongside your OTF and switchblade inventory and it will stop the same buyers who appreciate unique grinds, anodizing, and nonstandard finishes.

The contrasting black T-handle with aggressive texture grounds the look. It says “control” while the blade says “energy.” Collectors who already have more than one automatic knife for sale in their cases understand the value of a piece that visually separates itself from another black-on-black folder. This does that immediately.

Legal Context: Where a Push Dagger Sits in the Automatic Knife Conversation

Any serious buyer looking at an automatic knife for sale cares about legality. Here’s where this piece draws a clean line: it is not an automatic knife, not an OTF, and not a spring-fired switchblade. There is no mechanical assist, no button, no release. It’s a fixed-blade push dagger.

That doesn’t mean it’s legal everywhere. Many jurisdictions treat push daggers and double-edged blades as restricted or prohibited, even when fixed. While federal U.S. law focuses primarily on interstate commerce of switchblades and automatic knives, individual states and localities write their own rules about fixed defensive blades like this one.

Translation for the informed buyer: you avoid the federal automatic/switchblade import and mailing issues, but you still need to check your state and local laws on fixed-blade carry, double edges, and push daggers specifically before you strap this on for EDC.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) restricts the manufacture, sale, and interstate shipment of automatic knives—often called switchblades—under certain conditions. It does not outright ban owning one, and there are exemptions for military, law enforcement, and some one‑armed users. The real complexity comes from state and local laws: some states now allow automatic knives for general carry, some limit blade length or carry method, and others still ban them outright.

This Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger is not an automatic knife, but push daggers and double-edged blades have their own legal baggage. Before you buy any automatic knife, OTF, switchblade, or defensive fixed blade like this, you should check the current laws where you live and where you plan to carry. Laws change, and the responsibility is on the owner.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is a folding knife where the blade is deployed by a spring when you press a button, lever, or similar control. A switchblade is essentially the same concept—“switchblade” is the historic and legal term, while “automatic knife” is the modern enthusiast term. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is a subtype of automatic where the blade travels straight out of the handle’s front instead of pivoting from the side. OTFs can be single-action (spring deploy, manual retract) or double-action (spring deploy and retract).

This Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger is none of those. It’s a fixed push dagger: the blade is permanently locked in position relative to the handle, with no folding or spring action at all. That distinction matters for both mechanics and legality.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

If we’re being precise, this isn’t an automatic knife—it’s a purpose-driven push dagger that earns a place in the same collection. What makes it worth buying is the combination of palm-lock ergonomics, double-edged spear-point geometry, and high-visibility blue blade that actually serves a merchandising purpose. The triple lightening holes subtly shift balance, the T-handle locks orientation under stress, and the compact size makes it easy to stage alongside your automatics and OTFs as the close-quarters, no‑moving‑parts counterpart.

For a collector who already understands automatic actions and deployment nuance, this is the fixed-blade answer to the same retention question. It’s not just another novelty; it’s a mechanically honest tool with a visual punch.

For Enthusiasts Who Buy Automatic Knives and Respect Purpose-Built Steel

If your collection already includes an automatic knife for sale at every level—side-openers, OTFs, double-action showpieces—this Electric Edge Palm-Lock Push Dagger slots in as the straightforward, close-quarters specialist. No springs, no gimmicks, just a compact, blue spear point anchored to a palm-filling T-handle that does exactly what the geometry says it will. It’s the kind of piece a serious buyer picks up not because it’s trendy, but because they recognize a tool built for one thing and done right.

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