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Golden Razor Micro-Profile OTF Knife - Anodized Gold

Price:

10.73


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Ingot Edge Micro OTF Knife - Anodized Gold

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This automatic knife for sale is a true micro OTF built for people who care how an action feels. The double-action thumb slide drives the black tanto blade out and back with crisp, confident engagement. At 2 inches of cutting edge in a 3.5-inch body, it disappears in the pocket but works like a real tool, not a toy. The anodized gold handle gives you that ingot-in-the-hand feel—light, rigid, and ready for the EDC minimalist who actually uses their gear.

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SB7065GD

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic Knives for Sale That Actually Respect the Mechanism

If you're looking for an automatic knife for sale that doesn't treat the action like an afterthought, this micro OTF belongs in your hand at least once. The Ingot Edge Micro OTF Knife - Anodized Gold is built around one idea: compact doesn't have to mean compromised. It's small, yes. But the double-action out-the-front mechanism, the thumb slide geometry, and the profile of that black tanto blade are all tuned for people who notice mechanical details.

Micro OTF Automatic Knife for Sale with Real Double-Action Cred

This isn't a generic "switchblade." It's a double-action OTF automatic. That means the same thumb slide both deploys and retracts the blade along a rail system inside the alloy handle. Thumb forward: the 2-inch tanto blade drives out from the front and locks with a decisive click. Thumb back: the internal springs and track let it ride home just as cleanly. No half-hearted engagement, no mushy slider.

At 5.5 inches overall and 3.5 inches closed, this automatic knife lives in the micro category, but the action feels full-size. The ribbed thumb slide gives you enough purchase to run it even with cold or wet hands, and the internal alignment keeps the black blade tracking straight out of the gold chassis. If you're the type who cycles an OTF a few dozen times just to feel the lockup, this one will make sense immediately.

Double-Action OTF That Rewards Repeated Use

The appeal of a double-action OTF automatic knife isn't just speed; it's repeatability. The more you run it, the more you notice whether the track, spring tension, and latch geometry were done right. This micro OTF holds its own: consistent deployment, audible lock confirmation, and a retraction that doesn't feel lazy or under-sprung.

Tanto Profile That Makes a 2-Inch Blade Count

A 2-inch Tanto blade sounds small until you realize what that tip geometry does. You get a strong reinforced point for controlled piercing cuts, plus a straight primary edge that's easy to maintain and predictable on draw cuts. In a compact out-the-front platform, that means your "micro" automatic knife actually behaves like a legitimate EDC cutter, not just a novelty.

Why This Automatic Knife for Sale Works as a Real EDC Tool

Most automatic knives for sale in this price and size class lean toward gimmick. This one leans toward utility. The matte black blade finish knocks down reflections and hides wear. The anodized gold handle isn't just about looks; anodizing hardens the surface, so pocket carry, keys, and incidental bumps don't turn it into a scratched-up mess on week one.

At 1.7 ounces, the weight hits that EDC sweet spot: light enough to disappear, heavy enough that the action doesn't feel toy-like. The rectangular handle shape gives you a surprisingly secure three-finger grip, and the machined grooves along the handle keep it from rotating in the hand when you actually cut with it. The tip-down pocket clip does its job without turning the knife into a pocket anchor.

Mechanics, Materials, and the Collector Angle

If you buy automatic knives, OTFs, and even the occasional classic switchblade because you appreciate the engineering, this micro piece earns a spot on the tray. It's a great example of how far you can push the automatic OTF format down in size without losing the core experience of that out-the-front snap.

The alloy handle keeps the chassis rigid without adding unnecessary bulk, which matters on a double-action OTF. A soft or flexing frame can make the blade feel sloppy in the track. Here, the hard-anodized surface over a solid alloy body gives the internal mechanism a stable foundation, which translates into a cleaner, more confident deployment.

Why the Gold/Black Contrast Matters

Collectors notice visual discipline. The combination of a black matte blade and a gold anodized frame gives this automatic knife a "pocket bullion" aesthetic—flashy enough to stand out, serious enough not to look like a toy. Laid out next to your larger tactical OTFs and traditional switchblades, it reads as a micro tactical piece, not a novelty.

Legal Context: Carrying a Micro Automatic Knife the Smart Way

Anytime you're looking to buy an automatic knife, legal context matters as much as deployment speed. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (including OTF and side-opening switchblades) are regulated primarily for interstate commerce and shipping—federal law restricts certain shipments but does not by itself decide what you can carry in your pocket day to day. State and local law is where the real rules live.

Some states allow automatic knives and OTF knives with few restrictions. Others limit blade length (a micro 2-inch blade like this can sometimes fit under those thresholds), restrict concealed carry, or ban automatic and switchblade mechanisms outright. A few cities and counties layer their own ordinances on top. Before you carry this or any other automatic knife, check your state statutes and local codes, including terms like "automatic knife," "switchblade," and "gravity knife"—different jurisdictions use different definitions.

This micro OTF's compact size and out-the-front configuration can make it more acceptable in some length-limited areas, but that is entirely dependent on your local laws. Know the rules where you live and where you travel; that's part of being a serious automatic knife owner.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

At the federal level in the U.S., automatic knives, OTFs, and switchblades are regulated mainly in terms of manufacture, import, and interstate shipment. Federal law limits mailing and certain sales but doesn't directly dictate what you can carry day to day in your own state. Legality of carry and ownership is a state and local issue.

Some states fully allow automatic knives and OTFs; others allow them only for law enforcement or military, restrict blade length, or ban possession outright. On top of that, cities and counties can have stricter rules. Before you buy an automatic knife or out-the-front knife for carry, you should check your current state statutes and local ordinances and, if necessary, consult up-to-date legal resources. Laws change, and "I didn't know" never works as a defense.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad category: any knife that opens with a button, switch, or slider that releases spring tension to deploy the blade. Within that family, OTF (out-the-front) knives like this one send the blade straight out of the front of the handle along an internal track. Switchblade is often used loosely, but in traditional and legal terms it usually refers to side-opening automatics—blades that swing out from the side of the handle when a button or switch is pressed.

This particular piece is a double-action OTF automatic knife: the same thumb slide both fires the blade out and draws it back in. It's automatic, it's OTF, and many people will casually call it a switchblade, but mechanically it's distinct from classic side-openers.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

It earns its place on two fronts: mechanical feel and carry reality. Mechanically, the double-action OTF system is surprisingly crisp for a micro-format knife. The blade tracks straight, the lockup is positive, and the slider has enough texture and resistance to inspire confidence instead of accidental deployment.

In carry terms, the 2-inch tanto blade, 3.5-inch closed length, and 1.7-ounce weight make it an easy, all-day EDC that still feels like a real tool in use. The anodized gold handle resists wear, the pocket clip keeps it oriented and accessible, and the overall profile drops cleanly into a front pocket or backup slot in a pack. For collectors, it's a compact out-the-front automatic that showcases how far you can push size without sacrificing the OTF experience.

For the Enthusiast Who Chooses Their Automatic Knife on Purpose

This isn't the biggest automatic knife for sale, and it's not trying to be. It's the piece you reach for when you want a double-action OTF in a micro footprint that still respects the mechanics. If your collection already has the heavy-duty out-the-fronts and the classic side-opening switchblades, this gold-and-black micro fills the niche for a discreet EDC automatic that fires like a proper OTF and carries like it isn't even there.

Buy this automatic knife because you care how an OTF behaves under your thumb, not because you needed another shiny object. The Ingot Edge Micro OTF Knife - Anodized Gold is for the buyer who knows the difference.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Weight (oz.) 1.7
Blade Color Black
Blade Style Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Alloy
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes