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Verdant Groove Ball-Bearing Butterfly Knife - Green Aluminum

Price:

10.71


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Grooved Velocity Ball-Bearing Butterfly Knife - Green Aluminum

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This butterfly knife is built for people who actually flip. Ball-bearing pivots drive a fast, linear swing, while milled green aluminum handles tell your fingers exactly where to land. A matte black drop point blade keeps the profile purpose-built and easy to maintain, locked down by a simple T-latch. At 5 inches closed, 9.25 overall, and 4.31 oz, it lives in that rare balance of pocketable and performance-ready—a balisong you’ll keep reaching for because the action just feels right.

10.71 10.71 USD 10.71

BF295AGN

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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
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

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You know in three rotations whether a butterfly knife earns a place in your kit. This one does it on contact. The Grooved Velocity Ball-Bearing Butterfly Knife - Green Aluminum is a modern balisong built around action first: ball-bearing pivots, milled anodized handles, and a matte black drop point blade tuned for real use, not just Instagram spins.

Butterfly knife for sale built around bearing-driven control

This isn’t another wall-hanger. This butterfly knife for sale is centered on a bearing system that changes how the blade moves through space. Ball-bearing pivots at both handles reduce friction to almost nothing, which means the swing is linear, repeatable, and easy to predict. When you’re dialing in openings, aerials, or just fast deployment, that predictability is what keeps the knife where it belongs—between your fingers, not on the floor.

At 5 inches closed and 9.25 inches overall, the proportions hit the classic balisong sweet spot. There’s enough handle length for solid indexing, but not so much that it feels like a trick trainer. The 4.125-inch matte black drop point blade keeps the cutting edge honest: clean belly, controllable tip, and no gimmicks to get in the way of actual work.

Why this butterfly knife feels right from the first flip

Most buyers can tell within seconds whether a butterfly knife deserves to be called an EDC balisong. This one passes that test because the mechanics and ergonomics are aligned. The green anodized aluminum handles are milled with long, straight grooves that do more than look good—they give your fingers directional feedback. On a fast opening, you can feel when you’re sliding into home position without needing to stare at the knife.

Aluminum keeps the weight at 4.31 oz, landing in that middle zone most flippers prefer: heavy enough to build momentum, light enough to control mid-air corrections. Steel handles can feel like you’re swinging a crowbar. Ultra-light skeleton builds can get twitchy. Here, the balance between handle mass and blade weight is tuned for controlled velocity, not brute inertia.

Ball-bearing pivots vs. washer builds in a balisong

Washers on a butterfly knife can absolutely work, but they demand a tighter tolerance stack and more time spent tuning. Bearings, when properly implemented, widen the performance window. On this butterfly knife, ball-bearing pivots let the handles accelerate with less effort and decelerate with more control. You feel that as a consistent, glide-like opening and closing, even when your grip is slightly off. For newer flippers, that extra forgiveness shrinks the learning curve. For veterans, it just makes the flow smoother.

T-latch simplicity and carry confidence

The T-latch on this balisong is old-school in the best way: simple, predictable, and quick. Closed, it keeps the blade contained in pocket or bag. When it’s time to work, the latch clears without drama so the swing can start immediately. There’s no overbuilt gimmickry here—just a latch that does its job and stays out of the way of the flip.

Modern balisong design: green anodized handles, black working blade

The visual story is straight, not ornamental. Green anodized aluminum handles bring the color pop that stops a buyer at the display, but the machining keeps it serious. Long milled channels add traction without turning the knife into a cheese grater. Black hardware and a matte black blade finish pull it back into modern tactical territory—the overall look says EDC tool, not novelty toy.

The plain-edge drop point blade keeps maintenance simple. No serrations to catch on material or complicate sharpening, and the matte finish hides wear lines better than polish. For a knife that’s meant to see pocket time, that matters. You get the aesthetic of a purpose-driven balisong with the practicality of a daily cutter.

Butterfly knife for sale that actually works as EDC

Plenty of butterfly knives for sale are built to sit on a shelf. This one is built to live in a pocket. At 5 inches closed, it disappears until you need it. The 4.31 oz weight rides light enough that you don’t notice it until you reach for it, but substantial enough that, once in hand, it feels like a tool, not a toy.

Functionally, a balisong gives you a two-stage experience: deployment and cutting. The bearing pivot system and T-latch handle the first. The straightforward drop point profile and full-length plain edge handle the second. Whether you’re opening boxes, cutting cord, or just running drills, the mechanics support the work instead of fighting you.

Collector detail that separates it from budget balisongs

Collectors pay attention to fit, finish, and especially action. On this knife, the small but important details add up: centered blade, even handle milling, and a bearing system that doesn’t feel gritty out of the box. The contrast of green anodizing against the black hardware and blade gives it a presence in a case or on a stand, but the performance is what earns its slot in a rotation.

What buyers ask before purchasing an automatic knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Legality depends on where you live and how you carry. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (switchblades) are restricted mainly in interstate commerce and certain federal jurisdictions, but most day-to-day rules are set by individual states and even cities. Some states broadly allow automatic knives, some allow them with blade length or carry restrictions, and others largely prohibit them. This particular piece is a manual butterfly knife, not an automatic or switchblade, but the same rule applies: always check your state and local knife laws before carrying, and confirm whether balisongs fall under any “gravity knife” or “switchblade” definitions in your area.

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

Mechanism and direction of travel are the key distinctions. An automatic knife—what most people casually call a switchblade—is a folding knife that opens by pressing a button or actuator; a spring drives the blade out from the closed position. A switchblade is simply the traditional name for that same automatic mechanism. An OTF (out-the-front) automatic knife also uses a spring, but the blade travels straight out of the handle’s front instead of pivoting from the side. This Grooved Velocity knife is a butterfly (balisong): it’s manually operated, with two handles that rotate around the tang. No buttons, no internal spring deployment—your hand provides the motion and control.

What makes this butterfly knife worth buying?

Mechanically, it offers bearing-driven pivots, proper handle milling, and a functional blade profile—all at a size and weight that work both on the flip and in the pocket. Collectors will appreciate that it’s a modern balisong with deliberate design choices: anodized aluminum for tuned balance, matte black hardware for a tactical aesthetic, and a T-latch that does its job without overcomplication. For an enthusiast, it checks the boxes that matter: smooth, predictable action; useful edge geometry; and a look that reads “purpose-built” instead of “gas-station special.”

Where this butterfly knife fits in a serious collection

In a drawer full of folders and an assortment of automatic knives for sale, a good balisong fills the role of mechanical fidget piece and capable cutting tool. The Grooved Velocity sits in that hybrid lane: you can flip it hard, carry it daily, and not feel like you compromised either way. It’s not pretending to be a custom; it’s a well-executed production butterfly knife that respects the fundamentals—action, balance, and usable blade.

If you’re the kind of buyer who compares pivot systems, studies handle geometry, and actually reads steel and mechanism specs, this is a knife built with you in mind. Add it next to your favorite automatic knife for sale and your go-to EDC folder, and you’ll have a balisong that earns pocket time on merit, not novelty.

Blade Length (inches) 4.125
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.31
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme None
Latch Type T-latch
Is Trainer No