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Field-Slide EasyGrip Mini OTF Knife - OD Green Aluminum

Price:

21.76


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Field-Slide EasyGrip Mini Automatic OTF Knife - OD Green Aluminum

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An automatic knife for sale that doesn’t waste motion or pocket space, this mini OTF runs a clean single-action front slide with confident lockup. The 3-inch spear point rides light in OD green aluminum and deploys straight out the front, no wrist theatrics required. At 2.85 oz, it’s a true compact OTF you’ll actually carry—front switch, glass breaker, pocket clip, and sheath included. It’s the kind of mechanism-driven EDC that rewards anyone who cares how their knife fires as much as how it cuts.

21.76 21.76 USD 21.76

SB167GNB

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Automatic Knives for Sale Built Around the Action, Not the Hype

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife and you care more about how it runs than how it gets marketed, this Field-Slide EasyGrip Mini Automatic OTF Knife - OD Green Aluminum earns its pocket time. It’s a compact, single-action out-the-front that focuses on clean deployment, controlled retraction, and honest utility—no mall-ninja drama, just a mechanism that does what it’s supposed to do every time you drive that front switch.

Why This Mini OTF Automatic Knife for Sale Deserves a Spot in Your Rotation

Start with what it is mechanically: a single-action OTF automatic knife. You thumb the EasyGrip front slide forward, the spring drives the spear point blade straight out the front, and it locks with a reassuring, positive stop. To retract, you manually draw the blade back using the same switch. That single-action configuration keeps the internals simpler than a true double-action automatic knife, which means fewer failure points and a more authoritative launch when you need it.

The 3-inch spear point gives you a symmetric, dual-sided grind that tracks straight through cardboard, plastic, and packaging without wandering. At 7.25 inches overall and 2.85 ounces, it hits that rare balance of enough knife to work, not so much knife that you leave it on the dresser. This isn’t a novelty switchblade; it’s a compact automatic you’ll actually clip to your pocket and use.

Mechanics That Make Sense: Action, Lockup, and Real-World Use

Collectors and serious EDC users don’t argue about whether a knife opens fast—they argue about how it opens fast. The EasyGrip front switch on this mini OTF is a textbook example of action done right. The textured slide gives you immediate purchase even with wet or gloved hands, and the travel is long enough to be deliberate but not fatiguing. There’s no vague mush in the stroke: you feel the spring load, you hit the break, and the blade snaps out with a clean, linear drive.

Single-Action OTF: Why It Matters

Compared to a double-action automatic knife that fires and retracts under spring power, this single-action OTF channels all its stored energy into deployment. That usually translates into a more decisive launch and simpler guts. For a buyer who wants an automatic knife for sale that can handle daily opening duties without getting finicky, that simplicity is a feature, not a compromise.

Blade Geometry and Steel Usage

The spear point profile, fullers, and plain edge grind emphasize control and easy maintenance. You’re not fighting recurves or aggressive serrations—just a straightforward edge you can reset on a stone or ceramic rod in a few passes. The matte black finish kills glare and adds a bit of surface protection, while the silver flats highlight the grind lines and fuller, a small but satisfying collector detail when you actually look at the blade under light.

Automatic Knife for Sale, Built for EDC: Carry, Grip, and Control

Most people who buy automatic knives talk themselves into something too big. This one doesn’t make you compromise your pockets to enjoy an OTF. At 4.375 inches closed, the rectangular OD green aluminum handle disappears alongside your phone or keys. The tip-down pocket clip tucks the knife low, with just enough butt showing to grab without printing like a tactical billboard.

The OD green aluminum scales run a matte finish with subtle contouring and jimping along the sides. The result is grip that locks in under pressure but doesn’t chew up your hand or your pockets. The handle geometry tracks straight—no gimmicky curves—so indexing the blade edge relative to your knuckles becomes second nature after a few days of carry.

On the back end, the glass breaker / strike tip extends the utility past cutting. It’s not a toy spike tacked on for looks; on a compact automatic like this, it becomes your emergency glass option when your seatbelt cutter is out of reach or nonexistent.

When You Buy an Automatic Knife, Legal Context Matters

Any serious dealer putting automatic knives for sale owes you clarity on legality. In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) primarily restricts the interstate shipment and importation of automatic knives and switchblades, with specific carve-outs for military, law enforcement, and certain occupational uses. Retail buyers usually run into the state and local laws first, not the federal ones.

Some states allow you to buy an automatic knife and carry it openly or concealed with few restrictions. Others regulate blade length, limit carry to one type (for example, no concealed OTF switchblade but folding automatics are allowed), or ban automatic knives and OTF mechanisms outright. Whether this particular automatic knife is legal to carry where you live depends on your state and sometimes even your city.

Translation: before you drop an automatic knife or OTF switchblade into your pocket, check current laws in your jurisdiction. This knife is sold as a tool and collector’s piece; it’s on you to understand your local rules about carry and transport.

Collector Details: What Sets This Mini OTF Apart

To a casual buyer, this is "a little green switchblade." To someone who’s owned a few automatics, the details land differently:

  • Front switch ergonomics: The EasyGrip texturing, length of travel, and stop points tell you someone actually thought about repetitive use, not just a single Instagram video deployment.
  • Balanced proportions: A 3-inch spear point in a 4.375-inch handle keeps the blade-to-handle ratio respectable without compromising the internal OTF track.
  • Two-stage carry system: Pocket clip for immediate use, plus a dedicated sheath for secure transport in a bag or kit—useful when you want to travel with it but not have it loose.
  • OD green tactical aesthetic: The colorway reads "field-ready" without screaming for attention. It’s modern duty gear, not costume jewelry.

For a collector building out an automatic knife drawer, this piece checks the "mini OTF workhorse" category nicely—mechanically honest, visually coherent, and compact enough that it doesn’t overlap with your full-size OTF or side-opening automatics.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives and switchblades exist in a patchwork of laws. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act regulates interstate commerce and importation of automatic knives, but it doesn’t directly tell you what you can carry in your pocket day to day. That’s handled at the state and local level. Some states fully permit automatic knives, OTFs, and switchblades; others allow ownership but restrict concealed carry or blade length; a few ban them outright. Before you buy an automatic knife or treat this OTF as your daily carry, verify the current knife laws in your state and municipality—statutes change, and the responsibility to comply is yours.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad category: any knife where the blade deploys via a spring or stored energy when you hit a button, switch, or lever. "Switchblade" is the older, popular term for the same general class, often used in legal language. "OTF"—out-the-front—describes the specific mechanism and direction of travel: the blade comes straight out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. This Field-Slide EasyGrip is a single-action automatic OTF knife: you use the front switch to fire the blade forward under spring power, then manually draw it back to reset.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, you’re getting a clean, single-action OTF with a front slide that actually feels tuned, not slapped together. The proportions hit that sweet spot for EDC—3-inch blade, 2.85 oz, aluminum chassis that won’t weigh you down. The OD green tactical styling, glass breaker, and dual carry options (clip and sheath) round it out as a tool, not a toy. If you care how your automatic knife deploys, how sure the lockup feels, and how realistically you’ll carry it, this mini OTF offers a lot of functional value in a compact package.

For the Enthusiast Who Chooses Their Automatic Knife on Feel, Not Hype

If you’re the kind of buyer who flips an automatic knife three times before you even look at the logo, this Field-Slide EasyGrip Mini Automatic OTF Knife - OD Green Aluminum is built with you in mind. It’s an automatic knife for sale that delivers on the fundamentals: honest single-action OTF mechanics, practical blade length, real-world carry weight, and a handle that locks into your hand without shouting for attention. It’s a compact, tactical-leaning piece you’ll be glad you added to your automatic lineup—because the action, not the packaging, is what wins you over.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.375
Weight (oz.) 2.85
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Front Switch
Theme Tactical
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Yes