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Honor Medallion Quick-Deploy Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife - Matte Black

Price:

6.75


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Honor Medallion Tactical Rescue Spring-Assisted Knife - Matte Black

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An automatic knife for sale doesn’t have to be flashy to earn respect—this Honor Medallion spring-assisted rescue piece proves it. The 3.5-inch matte black, partially serrated clip point snaps open with authoritative spring assist, then locks solid on a liner lock. A glass breaker, seatbelt cutter, and Army medallion in the metal handle turn it into a purpose-built rescue and tribute tool. Pocket clip carry, one-handed deployment, and full blackout finish make it a dependable, no-nonsense EDC.

6.75 6.75 USD 6.75

TD941AR

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Handle Finish
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  • Pocket Clip
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Automatic Knives for Sale Meet Real-World Rescue Duty

When you’re looking at automatic knives for sale, it’s easy to get distracted by gimmicks. This piece doesn’t play that game. The Honor Medallion Tactical Rescue Spring-Assisted Knife - Matte Black is built around one idea: when things go sideways, your knife should open fast, lock hard, and get out of the way so you can work. The Army tribute medallion and ARMY script aren’t decoration; they’re a reminder this design language comes from people who’ve actually needed a blade under pressure.

Why This Spring-Assisted Rescue Knife Belongs Next to Any Automatic Knife for Sale

Mechanically, this isn’t an automatic in the legal sense—it’s a spring-assisted folding knife. That matters. Instead of firing from a button like a classic switchblade or an OTF, this platform uses a thumb stud and internal torsion spring. You start the motion; the assist takes over, driving the 3.5-inch matte black clip point into lockup with a confident snap. To an enthusiast comparing options, that means you get near-automatic speed with fewer legal headaches in many jurisdictions.

The overall length hits around 8 inches open, which puts it squarely in the working-knife category, not novelty gear. Closed, it rides at 4.5 inches—compact enough for pocket carry, big enough for gloved hands to get a firm purchase. This is where a lot of cheaper assisted knives fall apart: too small in hand, too vague in lockup, too smooth in the wrong places. This one gets the ergonomics right with a slightly curved, textured metal handle that guides your grip into position instinctively.

Mechanics That Earn a Spot Beside Any Automatic Knife for Sale

The blade is a partially serrated clip point—because rescue and utility don’t care about internet arguments over pure plain edge versus serrations. A straight section up front gives you control for detail work and point-driven cuts. The serrated section closer to the handle chews through webbing, seatbelts, and heavy cord where you can put maximum leverage behind it.

Action, Lockup, and One-Handed Reality

The deployment is driven by a spring-assisted mechanism paired with a thumb stud. Start the opening stroke, feel the spring pick up the load, and the blade snaps into place with a clean, audible confirmation. No lazy half-open wobble, no guessing whether it locked. A liner lock engages behind the tang, giving you a familiar, serviceable lock type that’s easy to disengage one-handed with a practiced thumb.

For buyers used to automatic knives and OTFs, this action will feel like a slightly lighter initial push, followed by a similar payoff—the blade is either open and locked or it isn’t, and here, it is. That inevitability is what separates a serious assisted knife from the junk bin.

Rescue Tool Integration: Glass Breaker and Cutter Done Right

At the butt, you get a carbide glass breaker—purpose-built for tempered auto glass—not a decorative spike. Right alongside it is a dedicated seatbelt cutter slot in the handle. This is the quiet engineering detail that matters: a recessed cutting channel lets you strip webbing or clothing without blindly swinging the main blade around in tight spaces. When you’ve seen real rescue knives used, you know this layout is the difference between control and chaos.

Where This Knife Fits in the Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade Landscape

If you’re browsing automatic knives for sale, you’re likely also looking at OTF knives and traditional switchblades. Mechanically, here’s the honest breakdown:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Blade deploys fully with a button, lever, or hidden actuator. You don’t assist the blade; you just release it.
  • OTF (out-the-front) knife: A subtype of automatic where the blade travels straight out the front of the handle, single- or double-action.
  • Spring-assisted folding knife (this one): You start the opening with a thumb stud or flipper; an internal spring completes the deployment.

Functionally, this rescue knife gives you near-automatic deployment speed with a simpler, more familiar folding format and, in many areas, a more permissive legal status. It’s for the buyer who appreciates automatic action but wants a blade they can realistically carry in more places.

EDC and Carry: Army Tribute Without the Billboard

From an everyday carry perspective, this knife hits a balance serious users look for. The matte black blade and handle keep reflections down and visual profile low. The pocket clip is mounted for conventional tip-down carry, keeping the glass breaker and cutter accessible if you draw under stress. Metal handles mean a little more weight than polymer, but that mass pays you back in recoil control during hard cuts and a more confident strike with the glass breaker.

The Army medallion set into the handle and ARMY text on the blade carry the tribute theme, but the overall presentation stays subdued—no neon, no over-designed chaos. It reads as a working knife that happens to honor service, not a souvenir pretending to be gear.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly restricts the interstate commerce and mailing of true automatic knives and switchblades, especially via USPS. It does not outright ban ownership nationwide, but many states and localities layer on their own rules about possession, carry, blade length, and where you can bring them.

This knife is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic or OTF, and in many jurisdictions that places it in a more permissive category. However, several states treat assisted openers similarly to automatics, and local ordinances can be stricter than state law. The only correct rule is this: always check your current state and local knife laws before you buy or carry, and don’t rely on marketing terms alone to determine legality.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife (often called a switchblade in law and common speech) has a spring-loaded blade that deploys fully at the press of a button, lever, or similar control. You don’t continue to move the blade; you just release it.

An OTF knife is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle rather than pivoting from the side. OTFs can be single-action (auto open, manual close) or double-action (auto open and auto close via the same control).

This rescue knife is a spring-assisted side-opening folder. You start the blade moving via a thumb stud; once it passes a certain angle, a spring accelerates it into lockup. Enthusiasts put it in the assisted-opening category, distinct from true automatics and OTFs, even though to the untrained eye the rapid deployment can look similar.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

For a buyer comparing automatic knives for sale, this piece earns its space on the short list by combining purpose-built rescue features with assist-driven speed and a service-minded tribute theme. The partially serrated clip point handles both controlled cuts and aggressive material removal. The integrated glass breaker and seatbelt cutter form a coherent rescue system, not afterthought add-ons.

The Army medallion and blacked-out finish give it collector appeal for service members and supporters, while the assisted mechanism keeps it fast, simple, and, in many places, more carry-friendly than a full automatic or OTF. It’s a knife you can actually put to work, not just admire on a shelf.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their Gear on Purpose

If you’re the type who reads specs, knows the difference between an automatic, OTF, and assisted opener, and still wants a knife that says something about who you are, this Honor Medallion rescue platform belongs in your rotation. It stands on its mechanics first—spring-assisted deployment, positive liner lock, real rescue tools—then layers on the Army tribute in a way that feels earned, not ornamental.

Whether you’re cross-shopping dedicated automatic knives for sale or looking for the best automatic-style knife for EDC without stepping fully into switchblade territory, this matte black medallion-backed rescue piece hits that intersection of function, respect, and identity that serious knife people recognize immediately.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.0
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Theme Army Tribute
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock