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Heritage Lever Release Automatic Knife - Wood Grain

Price:

12.69


Gentleman’s Snap Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Polished Wood
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Heritage Lineage Lever-Release Automatic Knife - Wood Grain

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/1914/image_1920?unique=cd71498

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Automatic knife for sale that actually respects its lineage: a lever-release wood-handled auto with a clean spear point blade and confident snap. The lever lock gives you positive control—press, deploy, and the blade is there, solid on the backspring, ready to work. Stainless steel, classic wood scales, and a pocket clip make this feel like a heritage piece tuned for modern EDC. This is for buyers who care how an automatic opens, not just that it does.

12.69 12.69 USD 12.69

SB106SW

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

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Heritage Lineage Lever-Release Automatic Knife for Sale

This isn’t a novelty switchblade. It’s a heritage-style lever-release automatic knife for sale built for people who care about how a blade opens, locks, and carries. Wood grain scales, classic bolsters, and a spine-mounted lever lock give it that old-world automatic look, but the pocket clip and stainless blade move it squarely into modern EDC.

Why This Lever-Release Automatic Knife Belongs in a Serious Collection

Lever-release automatics occupy a very specific corner of the automatic knife world. Where button-lock autos push you to fire with your thumb pad, a lever-lock rides the spine of the handle. On this knife, that lever controls both deployment and lockup. Flip the safety off, press the lever, and the backspring drives the 3.5-inch spear point blade open with a clean, mechanical snap. Release the lever and the tang shoulders seat into the lock, giving you a positive, mechanical engagement you can feel through the wood scales.

Unlike many budget autos that rely on vague, mushy buttons, the lever here gives you real tactile feedback. There’s a defined start of travel, then the spring catches, and the blade commits. That distinction matters to enthusiasts: you know exactly when the knife is going to fire, and you can run it with or without gloves.

Action and Lock: How the Lever-Release System Actually Works

Mechanically, this is a traditional side-opening automatic, not an OTF and not a gimmick. The blade pivots on a standard hinge at the bolster, powered by an internal backspring. The lever on the spine cams a locking bar away from the tang when pressed. The stored energy in the spring does the rest, driving the spear point out to full extension where the lock re-engages behind the tang. You get three layers of control: safety, lever, and the inherent resistance of the spring system.

It’s a deployment you can run dozens of times a day without it feeling cheap or vague. For collectors, that repeatable snap and lock sound is half the appeal.

Steel, Edge, and Real-World Cutting

The blade is stainless steel with a matte finish, ground to a spear point with a plain edge and a subtle swedge. No mirror polish, no drama—just a working finish that shrugs off fingerprints and doesn’t glare. In this price and size class, that stainless is tuned for corrosion resistance and easy touch-ups over exotic hardness numbers. It’ll take a fine working edge quickly on a basic stone or ceramic rod.

The spear point geometry gives you a centered tip for controlled piercing and enough straight edge to handle everyday slicing: boxes, rope, light food prep, and that constant stream of utility cuts any real EDC knife sees. You’re buying a true automatic knife you can actually cut with, not just open and close at the table.

Automatic Knives for Sale with Heritage Style and Modern EDC Reality

At 3.5 inches of blade and about 9 inches overall, this automatic knife sits squarely in the full-size EDC category. Closed, it’s 5.25 inches with a pocket clip that keeps it riding consistent and accessible. The 5.8-ounce weight says “solid,” not skeletonized. Bolsters, multiple handle screws, and exposed backspring construction give you that classic lever-lock profile and the durability to back it up.

If you’re used to ultralight flippers, this will feel like stepping into a different era: more presence in-hand, more warmth from the wood, and a more deliberate deployment. That’s the point. It’s an automatic knife for people who like their tools to feel like tools, not fidget toys.

Collector Details: Where This Knife Earns Its Spot

The obvious collector hook is the lever-release mechanism. Button-lock autos are everywhere. Quality lever-lock automatics for sale that don’t look like cheap tourist knives are a lot thinner on the ground. A wood grain handle with clean bolsters, a centered spear point, and a proper safety lock hits the sweet spot: it looks like something your grandfather might have carried, but it fires like a modern auto.

The spine lever and exposed backspring are also visual tells collectors recognize. Set this next to a generic side opener or a double-action OTF and the lineage is instantly clear—this is rooted in old European lever-lock patterns that have been refined for decades.

Legal Context: When Is an Automatic Knife Legal to Carry?

Any time you buy an automatic knife online, legality has to be part of the conversation. In the United States, federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act) primarily regulates interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives and switchblades. It restricts certain shipments across state lines but does not itself decide what you can carry day to day—that’s up to your state and sometimes your city or county.

Some states now allow automatic knives for everyday carry with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, restrict concealed carry, or ban automatic and switchblade mechanisms outright. A few still treat any automatic, whether lever-release or push-button, the same way.

Translation for real buyers: before you carry this automatic knife, check your local and state laws specifically for “automatic knife,” “switchblade,” or “spring-operated knife.” Even if an automatic knife is legal to own, carry rules can be very different. This description is not legal advice; you’re responsible for knowing and following the rules where you live.

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 main concern is interstate shipping, import, and sale across state lines under the Federal Switchblade Act. That law doesn’t directly control your daily pocket carry—your state and local laws do.

Some states now explicitly allow automatic knives for EDC, sometimes with blade length limits. Others classify any automatic, including lever-release models like this, under “switchblade” bans. A few cities and counties add their own rules on top. Before you buy or carry, look up your state statutes and local ordinances for terms like “automatic knife,” “switchblade,” and “spring-assisted” so you know exactly where this kind of blade stands in your area.

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

“Automatic knife” is the broad mechanical category: a blade that opens fully by pressing a button, lever, or similar control, with spring power doing the work. This knife is a side-opening automatic: the blade pivots out from the side on a hinge when you press the lever.

OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels in line with the handle and exits the front. They can be single-action (automatic out, manual retraction) or double-action (automatic out and in). “Switchblade” is a legal term that many statutes use to describe automatic knives—either side-opening or OTF. Collectors will distinguish by mechanism; laws often do not. Calling this piece an automatic lever-lock side opener is mechanically accurate.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Three things: mechanism, feel, and heritage. The lever-release lock gives you a distinctive, historically rooted automatic action that feels different from every push-button in your rotation. The wood grain handle and metal bolsters deliver that classic pocket-knife aesthetic without sacrificing the speed and convenience of an automatic deployment.

Size-wise, it hits a practical EDC sweet spot: a 3.5-inch spear point blade with a plain edge, stainless construction, and a pocket clip that actually makes carrying a traditional-looking auto realistic. For the price of a disposable gas station knife, you’re getting an automatic that understands its own lineage and invites you to use it.

Own an Automatic Knife That Respects Its Heritage

If your idea of the best automatic knife for EDC is something that feels like a real tool, not a prop, this lever-release wood grain auto deserves a slot in your roll. It wears its history openly—lever lock, backspring, wood scales—but it’s built to be carried, opened, and put to work. For enthusiasts and collectors who judge an automatic knife for sale first by its mechanism and action, this one answers with a confident snap and a lock you can trust.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Weight (oz.) 5.8
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Lever
Theme Historical
Pocket Clip Yes