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Inferno Dragon Talon Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Pocket Knife - Stonewash Steel

Price:

6.08


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Inferno Talon Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Red Dragon

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This is a spring assisted pocket knife built for people who care how a blade actually moves. The flipper-driven action snaps that stonewash talon blade into play with authority, backed by a liner lock that doesn’t flinch. Steel, not fantasy, does the work—while the inferno dragon handle art gives it presence in any collection. If you like an EDC that feels tuned, not toy-like, this dragon earns its pocket clip.

6.08 6.08 USD 6.08 8.50

PWT427BK

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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Inferno Talon Spring Assisted Pocket Knife Built for Real Use

The Inferno Talon Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Red Dragon is what happens when fantasy art gets bolted onto a mechanism that would still be worth carrying even if the graphics vanished tomorrow. This isn’t an automatic knife or OTF switchblade pretending to be tactical. It’s a tuned, spring assisted pocket knife with a flipper tab, a stonewash talon blade, and a liner lock that actually earns trust.

Not an Automatic Knife for Sale – and Why That Matters

Let’s be precise. This knife is not an automatic knife for sale in the legal sense. You don’t hit a button and watch the blade jump. You start the movement with the flipper tab, and the internal assist spring finishes the job. That distinction matters to anyone who’s ever had to explain their gear to a cop, a lawyer, or a judge. Automatic knives and OTF switchblades are a different legal animal. Spring assisted keeps you in a safer lane in most jurisdictions while still giving you that fast, decisive deployment.

Action and Deployment: Where the Mechanism Earns Respect

The whole point of a spring assisted folder is the hand-off between your thumb or index finger and the coil spring. With the Inferno Talon, the flipper tab gives you positive purchase even with cold or damp hands, and the detent is tuned so it won’t ghost open in your pocket but will fire cleanly once you commit.

Flipper-First Design with Real-World Control

That curved talon-style blade pairs with a spine ramp and jimping that actually do something. Once the spring kicks in and the blade hits lock-up, your thumb finds the jimping and your index finger locks behind the flipper tab, now acting as a guard. It’s a simple, effective mechanical story: initiate, assist engages, liner locks, hand indexes into a secure grip. No gimmicks, just a solid assisted mechanism doing its job.

Stonewash Steel Blade with Utility-Driven Geometry

The 3-inch stonewash blade is shaped like a talon, but it isn’t a pure fantasy recurved nightmare. You get a continuous cutting edge with enough belly for slicing and a fine tip for detail work or light piercing. The stonewash finish hides wear, shrugging off the micro-scratches that make satin blades look tired after a week of real EDC. It’s a working finish, not a display-only polish.

Everyday Carry Reality: Pocket, Grip, and Balance

Closed, this assisted pocket knife runs about 4.5 inches; open, roughly 7.5. That’s the sweet spot for serious EDC—enough blade to matter, not so much handle it prints like a boat anchor. The aluminum handle keeps weight down while still feeling more substantial than plastic, and the contouring plus jimping along the spine and handle give you directional feedback in the hand.

The pocket clip lets it ride ready without screaming for attention. Pull, index on the flipper, and the spring assist does the rest. This is what you want if you like the feel of an automatic knife deployment but don’t want to swim in full switchblade legal waters.

Collector Appeal: Dragon Theme with Mechanism to Match

Plenty of dragon knives exist that are really just wall-hangers. This one earns its keep in a rotation. The inferno dragon graphic—red and gold on black aluminum—with a red pivot accent works because the blade shape echoes the theme. That curved talon profile feels like a claw to match the dragon on the handle. Theme isn’t just printed on; it’s built into the geometry.

For a collector, this sits right in that fun lane: visually loud, mechanically competent, and priced where you don’t have to baby it. Toss it into a dragon- or fantasy-themed sub-collection, or park it next to your more serious automatics and OTFs as the spring assisted outlier that actually gets pocket time.

Spring Assist vs Automatic vs OTF: Setting the Benchmarks

If you’re used to double-action OTF knives or button-fired automatic knives, you know what bad deployment feels like—gritty, weak, hesitant. While this is a spring assisted folder, the standard is the same: clean track, consistent snap, confident lock-up. The Inferno Talon holds its own here. No blade play circus, no half-hearted assist. You get a crisp opening and a liner lock that engages fully and reliably.

Legal Context: Why Many Buyers Choose Assisted Over Automatic

In a lot of states, the language that tangles up owners talks about “automatic,” “switchblade,” and button-activated opening. A spring assisted pocket knife that requires manual initiation with a flipper tab or thumb stud, and does not open solely by pressing a button in the handle, usually falls into a friendlier category. That doesn’t mean you can ignore your local law books—it means you’re generally starting from a better position than with a true automatic knife or OTF switchblade.

If you want the speed and feel of a fast-deploying blade but you’re not ready to navigate full automatic knife statutes, this kind of assisted flipper is the pragmatic answer. Always check your state and local regulations, but know you’re not carrying a classical switchblade here.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (true switchblades) are regulated mainly in terms of interstate commerce—how they cross state lines and who can ship them. The bigger issue is state and local law. Some states allow automatic knives with few restrictions, others limit blade length or carry method, and a few still prohibit them outright. Spring assisted knives like the Inferno Talon often live in a different legal category because you must start the blade manually with a flipper tab before the assist takes over. That said, you should always verify your specific state and municipal laws before carrying any knife, automatic or assisted.

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

Mechanically, a switchblade is the broad family: a knife where a blade opens automatically by pressing a button, lever, or similar device in the handle. An automatic knife is the same thing in modern terms—press a button, the spring fires, the blade opens. An OTF knife (out-the-front) is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels along the handle’s long axis and exits from the front instead of pivoting from the side; many are double action, meaning the same slide or switch deploys and retracts the blade. A spring assisted knife like the Inferno Talon is different: you begin opening the blade manually with a flipper or stud, and only then does the assist spring kick in. No handle button, no pure automatic classification.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

If we’re speaking in enthusiast shorthand about fast folders, this “automatic” earns its slot on three fronts. First, the deployment: a well-tuned flipper and assist that deliver an authoritative snap and solid liner lock engagement. Second, the blade geometry: a talon-style, stonewash-finished edge that’s actually useful, not just theatrical. Third, the build: aluminum handle, proper jimping, and a dragon theme that’s integrated into the shape, not just sprayed on. It’s a knife you can carry hard and still appreciate as a themed piece in your collection.

Closing the Loop: A Collector’s Assisted Knife with Automatic Attitude

If you’re deep into automatic knives for sale, OTFs, and classic switchblades, you know not every piece in the case needs to be a button-fired showpiece. The Inferno Talon Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Red Dragon gives you that aggressive, fast-opening feel with the legal and practical advantages of an assisted folder. It’s the right call for the buyer who understands mechanisms, cares how a blade actually moves, and wants a pocket knife that looks like fantasy but works like a real tool.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Dragon
Safety Liner Lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock