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Blush Bolt Micro Automatic Knife - Matte Pink

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5.43


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Metro Snap Micro Automatic EDC Knife - Matte Pink

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This automatic knife for sale is a true micro EDC built for one-hand certainty, not drawer duty. Hit the push button and the 1.75-inch spear point snaps out with a decisive, honest automatic action. At 3 inches closed, it disappears into a coin pocket or clutch, but still gives you real edge when you need it. Collectors will appreciate the clean hardware, matte pink metal scales, and compact, no-clip profile that feels more custom-show than gas-station gimmick.

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SB101PK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
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  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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Micro Automatic Knife for Sale That Actually Earns Pocket Space

There are two kinds of tiny autos: the novelty keychain toys, and the serious micro automatic knife that just happens to run small. This automatic knife for sale sits firmly in the second camp. The blade is a polished 1.75-inch spear point, the handle is matte pink metal with real hardware, and the action is a true push-button automatic — not assisted, not flipper, not marketing spin.

Closed, it’s only 3 inches. Overall length is 4.75 inches. No pocket clip, no fake tactical flourishes, just a compact automatic that knows exactly what it is: a discreet, urban EDC with a clean deployment and enough steel to actually work.

Why This Compact Automatic Knife Belongs in a Serious Collection

If you’ve handled enough autos, you can tell in one deployment whether a knife is worth your time. This isn’t a showpiece OTF, and it’s not trying to be. It’s a side-opening automatic knife for sale built around three things that matter to real users: honest action, practical geometry, and carry reality.

One-Hand Push-Button Action That Snaps, Not Sputters

The push-button mechanism drives a side-folding spear point that opens with a clean, audible snap. That matters. A micro auto lives or dies on its spring tuning — too weak and it stalls, too strong and you’re fighting recoil and lock reliability. Here, the button travel is short, the release is predictable, and the blade locks up without the mushy feeling you get from bargain-bin switchblades.

Is this a custom double-action OTF? No — and it doesn’t pretend to be. It’s a straightforward side-opening automatic that does one job: deploys from closed to locked with one thumb, no wrist flick required.

Blade Geometry: Short Spear Point, Real Utility

The 1.75-inch spear point isn’t about intimidation; it’s about control. The symmetrical profile and centered tip give you precise point work for opening boxes, cutting tape, and light utility tasks, while the plain edge and polished finish are easy to maintain. You’re not batoning wood with this. You’re cutting cord, breaking down packaging, slicing zip ties, and handling the dozens of small cuts that make up real everyday carry.

Automatic Knives for Sale That Fit the City, Not Just the Display Case

Most people buying a micro automatic want something that disappears until it’s needed. At 3 inches closed, this knife drops into a coin pocket, clutch, organizer pouch, or the corner of a backpack without advertising itself. The matte pink handle finish does two things at once: it softens the visual footprint while giving the knife a distinctive, modern look that doesn’t scream “tactical.”

No pocket clip means two things: deeper, more discreet carry and a cleaner profile in hand. The rounded butt and smooth scales make it a natural fit for small or gloved hands, and the minimal guard at the pivot gives just enough indexing without turning into a snag point.

Handle and Hardware: Matte Pink Metal, All Business Underneath

The handle uses metal scales over a solid frame with visible hardware — screws, pivot, and button laid out like a scaled-down full-size auto. That’s what separates it from the pot-metal novelty crowd. The matte pink finish gives grip without being abrasive, and the hardware layout looks like something from a real knife maker’s table, not a toy rack.

Mechanics, Action, and the OTF vs. Automatic vs. Switchblade Question

This is where the language gets sloppy in most product descriptions, so let’s be clear. This piece is a side-opening automatic knife, sometimes called a push-button automatic or simply an auto. You press the button, a spring propels the blade from the handle into the open, locked position.

Not an OTF, Not a Gimmick Switchblade

OTF (out-the-front) knives deploy linearly, with the blade exiting through the front of the handle — single- or double-action — like the classic modern OTFs collectors chase. This knife is not an OTF. It’s a folding automatic. The blade swings out on a pivot. The term “switchblade” is a legal and cultural umbrella that can cover both autos and OTFs in statute language, but mechanically they’re not all the same.

If you’re the kind of buyer who hears someone call every auto a switchblade and winces, you’ll appreciate the honesty here: this is a compact, side-opening automatic, with a simple push-button, coil-spring style action tuned for short-blade deployment.

Legal Context: Carrying a Micro Automatic Knife Responsibly

Any time you buy an automatic knife, you’re stepping into a legal gray zone that changes dramatically by state and sometimes by city. Federally in the U.S., automatic knives are regulated primarily by the Federal Switchblade Act, which restricts interstate shipment and import under certain conditions but carves out allowances for law enforcement, military, and some other categories. The real deciding factor for you, though, is state and local law.

Some states allow automatic knives for everyday carry with blade length limits, some allow possession but restrict carry, and a few still prohibit autos outright. A compact 1.75-inch blade like this often falls under more lenient length rules where autos are legal, but that’s not universal. Before you carry this or any automatic, check your current state and local statutes — not just internet hearsay. If you’re buying as a collector and keeping it at home, you still need to make sure possession itself is legal where you live.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives exist in a patchwork of laws. Federally, the Switchblade Act restricts interstate commerce and import of switchblades and some other autos, but it doesn’t by itself tell you what you can carry on the street — that’s state and local territory. Some states now fully allow autos, some allow them with blade length or use restrictions, and some still prohibit them. City ordinances can add another layer. The only correct approach is this: before you carry, check current statutes and, when in doubt, talk to a qualified legal source in your jurisdiction. Treat any automatic knife — micro or full-size — as a tool that demands legal as well as mechanical respect.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any folding knife where pressing a button, scale, or hidden release triggers a spring to open the blade. This micro is a side-opening automatic: the blade pivots out from the side of the handle. An OTF (out-the-front) automatic drives the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually via a thumb slide — single-action (auto-out, manual-in) or double-action (auto-out and auto-in). “Switchblade” is often used in laws as a catch-all term for spring-driven, automatically opening knives, including both side-opening autos and OTFs, but enthusiasts use the terms more precisely. Legally, they may be grouped; mechanically, they’re distinct.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Three things. First, the action: for a micro, the push-button snap is decisive, not lazy, which is rare at this size. Second, the proportions: a 1.75-inch spear point on a 3-inch frame hits the sweet spot between utility and true compact carry. Third, the build: metal scales, real hardware, matte finish, and a clipless profile that feels purpose-built for pocket or clutch, not repurposed from a novelty mold. If you collect autos, this scratches the “micro city EDC” itch without feeling like a toy. If this is your first automatic, it’s a smart way to learn the platform without overcommitting on size.

Choosing an Automatic Knife for Sale That Matches Your Identity

The right automatic knife for sale doesn’t just open when you hit the button — it feels like it belongs in your daily life. This matte pink micro automatic is for the buyer who appreciates mechanical honesty in a small package: a real spring-driven action, a practical spear point blade, and an urban-friendly profile that hides until it’s needed. Whether it rides backup in a larger rotation or becomes your primary city EDC, it earns its spot the same way any serious auto does: with reliable deployment, useful steel on deck, and a design that respects both the law and the craft.

Blade Length (inches) 1.75
Overall Length (inches) 4.75
Closed Length (inches) 3
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Push Button
Theme None
Pocket Clip No