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Rescue Patriot Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - USA Flag Aluminum

Price:

5.71


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Liberty Rescue Spring-Assisted EDC Knife - USA Flag Aluminum

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/7174/image_1920?unique=52857f6

15 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a toy-store flag folder. It’s a spring-assisted EDC built around real work: a 3.5" 3Cr13 clip point with partial serrations for rope and webbing, paired with a liner lock and positive flipper/thumbnail deployment. The USA flag graphic runs blade to handle, backed by anodized aluminum scales, seatbelt cutter, and glass breaker. It rides low on a pocket clip, opens with authority, and earns its patriotic look every time it moves from pocket to problem.

5.71 5.71 USD 5.71 7.99

MTA705AF

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Finish
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  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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  • Deployment Method
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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Serious Assisted EDC: Where This Patriot Actually Belongs

If you spend any time around real enthusiasts, you know not every fast opener is an automatic knife for sale, and not every flag print is worth carrying. This piece is a spring-assisted EDC with rescue bones and a patriotic skin – built for the buyer who can tell the difference between actual mechanism and marketing.

The Liberty Rescue Spring-Assisted EDC Knife wears the USA flag from tip to tail, but the mechanics under the paint are what matter: coil-assisted deployment, liner lock, partial serrations, and a full rescue tail with cutter and glass breaker. It’s aimed squarely at the EDC crowd who want a knife that looks like it belongs in a first-responder kit, not a souvenir rack.

Buying an "Automatic Knife" for Sale? Know Your Mechanism First

Search for an automatic knife for sale and you’ll see everything from true push-button autos to cheap spring-assists all thrown into the same bin. Mechanically, this knife is not a switchblade and not an OTF automatic. It’s a spring-assisted folding knife with dual manual starters: a flipper tab and a blade cutout.

Here’s the distinction that matters if you actually care about action:

  • Assisted folder: You start the blade moving with a manual input (flipper or thumb hole). Once it hits a certain point, an internal spring helps drive it to lockup. That’s this knife.
  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Blade deploys from fully closed with a button, lever, or slide. No initial manual rotation, just a safety and a trigger.
  • OTF automatic: Blade rides inside the handle and shoots out the front on a track, usually single-action or double-action, with a thumb slide.

This Liberty Rescue lives in that spring-assisted lane: legal in more places, familiar to most EDC users, and mechanically simpler to maintain than a true OTF. When you buy an automatic knife online, you’re often paying for the extra complexity and legal baggage. Here, you’re getting fast, positive deployment without crossing into full-auto territory.

Mechanics, Steel, and Real-World Use: Why This Action Works

The blade is 3.5 inches of 3Cr13 stainless in a clip point profile, with a partial serrated section near the choil. In steel-snob terms, 3Cr13 is not exotic – but it’s honest. It sharpens quickly, shrugs off corrosion, and is exactly what you want in a rescue-style piece that might spend time in a truck, a gear bag, or a damp pocket.

Deployment and Lockup You Don’t Have to Baby

The spring-assisted action relies on a coil spring paired to a traditional pivot. Start the blade with either the flipper tab or the thumb hole; once you break detent, the assist takes over and snaps it into place. It’s not a show-table custom automatic, but the practical upside is clear: fewer tiny parts, straightforward tuning, and a liner lock that does exactly what it’s supposed to.

Jimping on the spine and at the finger guard gives you traction when you bear down. For an EDC that wants to live in a glove box, range bag, or duty belt as a backup, that tactile control matters more than chasing microgap perfection.

Rescue Tail: Glass Breaker and Seatbelt Cutter

Where this knife quietly steps beyond “patriotic novelty” is the rear hardware. The integrated seatbelt cutter is set into the handle tail, shielded enough to avoid accidental snags but open enough to bite quickly into webbing. The glass breaker tip is there for the moment you hope you never need – punching out tempered auto glass without sacrificing your main edge.

Collectors who focus on rescue and first-responder style knives will recognize the layout: blade for primary cutting, dedicated cutter for straps, and a hardened point at the extreme end. It’s a configuration that actually earns the tactical look.

Automatic Knife for Sale or Patriotic Rescue EDC? How It Actually Carries

Specs tell you where this lives in the pocket:

  • Blade length: 3.5" – the sweet spot for EDC and glovebox tools
  • Closed length: 4.75" – full grip, still pocket-manageable
  • Overall length: 8.25" – enough leverage for real cutting
  • Handle: Anodized aluminum with USA flag overlay, textured black scales for traction
  • Lock: Liner lock with solid engagement

The pocket clip rides it along the spine side, keeping that flag graphic mostly out of sight until you draw. Balance is forward enough that the tip wants to work, but not so nose-heavy that it feels clumsy in detail cuts. The partial serration is aggressive enough to chew through rope and nylon without feeling like it’s competing with the plain edge.

In other words: this is the knife you throw in your truck or carry on a weekend, not the safe queen you baby. It’s built to take the dings and still look unapologetically American when it snaps open.

Legal Context: Where This Sits in the Automatic and Switchblade Landscape

Any time you see a fast-opening knife next to a big American flag, the legal question isn’t far behind. This knife is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a full automatic, not an OTF, and not a classic push-button switchblade.

Under U.S. federal law, the strictest rules and interstate shipping restrictions focus on true automatic knives (switchblades) that open via a button or device in the handle. Assisted openers like this typically fall into a different category because you must manually start the blade before the spring engages. That said, states and even local jurisdictions can define “switchblade” more broadly.

The responsible approach:

  • Check your state and local laws on assisted opening and automatic knives before you carry.
  • Do not assume that “not a switchblade” at the federal level means “legal everywhere.”
  • When in doubt, consult your local statutes or an attorney familiar with knife law.

If you’re specifically searching for an automatic knife legal to carry, this style of assisted EDC is often chosen because it sidesteps many of the automatic and switchblade restrictions – but the burden is always on the carrier to know their jurisdiction.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

At the federal level in the U.S., automatic knives (switchblades that open via a button, lever, or similar device in the handle) are regulated for interstate commerce and certain possessors, but they’re not outright banned nationwide. The real complexity is at the state and local level: some states fully allow automatic knives, some restrict blade length or carry type, and others prohibit them outright. Assisted openers like this Liberty Rescue are generally treated differently from true automatics, because you must initiate opening with the blade itself rather than a handle-mounted trigger.

However, a minority of jurisdictions define “switchblade” broadly enough that even assisted knives can be affected. Before you buy an automatic knife, switchblade, OTF, or assisted folder for carry, check your current state and municipal laws; they change, and ignorance doesn’t help you roadside.

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

In enthusiast terms:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Synonymous in most contexts. Blade opens from fully closed when you actuate a button, lever, or slide in the handle. The spring does all the work from rest.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: A subset of automatic knives where the blade travels along a track and exits the front of the handle. Often double-action (out and back on the same control) or single-action (fires out automatically, retracted manually).
  • Assisted opening knife (this product): The blade is on a side-folding pivot. You manually start it via a flipper or thumb stud/hole; an internal spring then assists the last part of the travel into lockup.

This Liberty Rescue is firmly in the assisted category. It gives you fast deployment and that satisfying snap without crossing into true switchblade or OTF territory.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

For the collector or EDC user, the value here is in the honest pairing of function and theme. You get a spring-assisted action that’s easy to live with, a 3Cr13 blade that’s dead simple to sharpen in the field, and a proper rescue configuration: partial serrations, seatbelt cutter, glass breaker, and a grip that feels secure even when wet or gloved.

Instead of slapping a flag on a generic folder, this design integrates the USA motif across a knife that actually earns the patriotic aesthetic through utility. It’s the piece you throw in a range bag or duty bag as a backup, knowing that if you ever need to cut a belt or punch glass, it’s more than just decoration.

For the Enthusiast Who Buys with Their Head and Their Gut

If you’re hunting automatic knives for sale because you love clean engineering and fast deployment, this Liberty Rescue sits in that adjacent lane: an assisted-opening EDC with rescue features, patriotic visuals, and enough mechanical integrity to respect. It’s not pretending to be an OTF or a high-dollar custom switchblade; it’s a working knife wearing the flag, tuned for the buyer who understands why that difference matters.

In a drawer full of generically "tactical" gear, this one stands out because it tells the truth: simple steel, honest assist, real rescue features, and an American theme that doesn’t need an apology.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Blade Color Multicolor
Blade Finish Printed
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material 3CR13 Steel
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme USA Flag
Safety Liner Lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock