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Blue Line Honor Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Black Flag Etch

Price:

6.08


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Stealth Etch Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Midnight Black
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Honor Guard Rapid-Deploy Assisted Knife - Blue Line Black

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An automatic knife enthusiast will appreciate this spring assisted knife that behaves like a well-tuned tool, not a gimmick. The flipper-driven, coil-assisted action snaps the black flag-etched blade into a solid liner lock with repeatable confidence. At 7.75 inches overall, it carries like a serious EDC while the Thin Blue Line handle and blue hardware turn it into a working tribute. This is for the owner who cares how a knife deploys, not just how it looks.

6.08 6.08 USD 6.08 8.50

PWT447C

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
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Automatic Knives for Sale Start with the Action Story

If you collect automatic knives for sale, you already know the truth: deployment is the whole game. This isn’t a novelty folder pretending to be tactical. The Honor Guard Rapid-Deploy Assisted Knife - Blue Line Black is a purpose-built spring assisted EDC that lives in the same world automatic knife buyers care about—fast, repeatable action and a lockup you can trust.

Mechanically, this is a flipper-driven, spring assisted folding knife. That means you start the blade with deliberate pressure on the flipper tab, and a coil assist takes over to snap it open. It’s not a push-button automatic knife; it’s an assisted opener tuned to give you near-automatic speed without crossing into full switchblade territory.

Why an Enthusiast Looks at This Like an Automatic Knife for Sale

When serious buyers go to buy automatic knife platforms, they’re not just hunting for a name—they’re hunting for action quality. This knife sits right on that line where assisted-opening performance starts to feel like a well-tuned automatic. The detent is set so you don’t get accidental pocket pops, but once you hit the threshold, the spring assist drives that 3.25-inch clip point into lock-up with authority.

The liner lock engages fully on the tang, with enough surface to inspire confidence without creating a bear trap to disengage. That balance—fast deployment, positive lock, clean close—is exactly what separates real gear from gas-station glitter. Add the pocket clip and lanyard hole, and you’ve got an EDC-ready package that deploys with the kind of speed automatic knife fans actually care about.

Mechanics That Earn Respect from Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade Collectors

If you’ve handled true automatic knives, OTFs, and traditional side-opening switchblades, you’ve already built a mental scale of what good action feels like. This spring assisted knife lands on the right side of that scale. The flipper tab geometry gives you enough leverage to overcome the detent without strain, and the assist kicks in smoothly—no gritty start, no half-hearted open.

Action and Lockup: Where It Actually Matters

The blade rides on a pivot tuned for repeatability, not Instagram fidget tricks. The steel clip point deploys to a clean, predictable stop every time, then drops back into the handle smoothly once you clear the liner lock. No blade play in normal use, no questionable flex when you choke up for detail work. It’s the kind of consistent behavior that automatic knife collectors look for when they judge a piece, even if the mechanism here is technically assisted rather than full-auto.

Blade, Steel, and Real-World Cutting

The black-etched clip point blade gives you a versatile working profile—enough belly for general slicing, a defined point for detail and puncture work, and a plain edge that actually sharpens easily. The steel is a work-ready stainless, chosen for toughness and corrosion resistance over spec-sheet bragging rights. This is the kind of blade you can tune on a basic stone and send right back into rotation without babying it.

Collector Appeal Beyond the Typical Automatic Knives for Sale

Most automatic knives for sale lean on either tacticool overload or soulless minimalism. This piece walks a different line: it’s a Thin Blue Line tribute that still respects the fundamentals of a working EDC. The black blade carries a white USA flag motif with the blue line running clean and bold, while the handle reinforces the theme with molded stars, police insignia elements, and blue-accent hardware at the pivot and spine.

None of that would matter if the ergonomics weren’t there, but they are. At 4.5 inches closed, the handle fills the hand without becoming a pocket anchor. Textured grip areas and the star relief pattern give you real purchase, especially when you’re driving that clip point into tougher material. The pocket clip is set up for practical everyday carry—secure enough to stay put, discreet enough not to scream for attention until you want it to.

Legal Reality: Where an Assisted Knife Differs from a Switchblade

Any serious buyer looking at an automatic knife for sale should also know where the legal lines live. Under U.S. federal law, a true automatic or switchblade opens by pressing a button, spring, or other device in the handle itself. This is not that. This is a spring assisted knife: you manually start the blade with the flipper tab attached to the blade, and only then does the assist spring take over.

That distinction matters. In many states, assisted openers are treated differently—and often more leniently—than full automatic knives or switchblades. But the keyword here is many, not all. State and local laws vary widely. Some jurisdictions lump assisted knives in with automatic or switchblade restrictions; others don’t. It’s on you to check your specific state and city rules before you carry. The mechanism puts this in a better legal position than a true button-fired automatic knife, but it’s never a one-size-fits-all answer.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law regulates interstate commerce of automatic knives and switchblades but doesn’t directly control simple possession for most civilians. The real complexity is at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic knives, OTFs, and switchblades with few restrictions; others limit blade length, carry type (open vs. concealed), or ban them outright. This particular piece is an assisted opener, not a true automatic knife, which often places it in a more permissive category—but that’s not guaranteed. Always check your state statutes and local ordinances on automatic knives, switchblades, and assisted openers before you carry.

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

“Automatic knife” is the broad term: any knife where a spring drives the blade open when you hit a button or similar control. “Switchblade” is the classic legal term—usually a side-opening automatic where a button in the handle fires the blade out of the side like a regular folder, just powered. “OTF” (out-the-front) is a specific automatic where the blade travels straight out the front of the handle, either single-action (fires out, manually retracted) or double-action (fires and retracts via the mechanism). This Honor Guard knife is none of those—it’s a spring assisted flipper. You start the blade manually with the tab; the spring simply helps finish the stroke.

What makes this automatic-adjacent knife worth buying?

The value here is in the intersection of mechanism, meaning, and carry reality. Mechanically, you get near-automatic deployment speed with the simpler, more legally manageable assisted design. The liner lock is honest and solid, the clip point blade is a practical working profile, and the 7.75-inch overall length hits that sweet spot between pocketable and serious. Add the Thin Blue Line flag etch, police tribute handle graphics, and blue hardware, and you have a knife that isn’t just another black folder—it’s a functional salute that actually performs.

For the Enthusiast Who Buys More Than Just a Name

If you’re the person who reads past the word “tactical” and wants to know how the action is tuned, this belongs in your rotation. You get a spring assisted flipper that lives comfortably in the same world as the automatic knives for sale you already track, but with its own mechanical character and a clear Thin Blue Line narrative. It carries like a tool, deploys like a purpose-built piece, and looks like it means exactly what it says.

This isn’t about cosplay gear. It’s about owning a knife that respects the mechanics, respects the carry, and respects the people it quietly honors every time that black flag blade snaps into place.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 7.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Etched
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme USA Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock