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Shadow Ready Tactical Assisted Folding Knife - Midnight Black

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5.25


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Midnight Breach Assisted Tactical Folder - Black Aluminum

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This is a spring-assisted tactical folder built for real use, not glass cases. The Midnight Breach snaps open with a decisive, linear assist off the thumb stud, locking solidly on a steel liner. A 3.25" matte black drop point and full-length jimping give you control when you’re actually cutting, not just posing. Grooved aluminum scales, pocket clip, and lanyard hole round it out. It’s the knife you grab when you care more about deployment, grip, and profile than hype.

5.25 5.25 USD 5.25

KS1972BK

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Automatic-Grade Action Without the Legal Headache

If you like the way an automatic knife deploys but you live in a state that makes true autos a hassle, a well-tuned spring-assisted folder is the loophole that still respects the mechanics. The Midnight Breach Assisted Tactical Folder - Black Aluminum is exactly that kind of piece: decisively fast, mechanically honest, and built for people who actually cut things, not just collect photos.

This is not an automatic knife for sale in the legal sense. It’s a spring-assisted tactical folder that gives you automatic-adjacent deployment with manual initiation. You start the motion with the thumb stud; the internal assist spring takes over and drives the blade open with a snap that would make most budget "autos" blush.

Automatic Knife For Sale Alternatives: Why This Assist Matters

When enthusiasts search for an automatic knife for sale, what they’re really chasing is consistent, one-handed deployment. Mechanism is king. This assisted tactical folder hits that sweet spot where speed, control, and legality intersect.

The action is simple and effective: a lateral thumb-stud start, followed by a coil or torsion-style spring that completes the stroke once you break detent. No gimmicks, no flippers welded on as an afterthought. The dual elongated cutouts in the blade aren’t just styling—they lighten the blade slightly so the assist spring doesn’t have to fight unnecessary mass. That’s how you get a confident, repeatable snap instead of a half-hearted flop.

Deployment You Can Trust With Gloves On

The thumb stud placement and spine jimping work together. Under stress, or with cold fingers, you don’t want to search for a tiny switchblade button; you want tactile indexing points that guide your thumb. The grooved handle and jimped spine give you those anchors, so when the assist kicks, the knife stays where it should—locked in your hand, not twisting out of it.

Liner Lock That Backs the Action

A fast action is meaningless if the lock can’t keep up. The Midnight Breach runs a steel liner lock that engages reliably behind the tang. No weird experimental lock geometry here—just a proven, serviceable design that collectors and users both trust. Couple that with aluminum scales and you get a solid, 4.5 oz platform that feels substantial without being a brick in the pocket.

Choosing This Over an Automatic Knife For Sale

Plenty of buyers land on a product page wanting an automatic knife for sale and end up smarter once they see how assisted folders actually fit their reality. This piece makes that trade-off easy to justify.

  • Faster than a typical two-hand folder, but still manually initiated
  • Widely more acceptable than a push-button automatic in restrictive states
  • Mechanically simpler than many budget OTF designs, which often suffer from play and weak lock-up

If you’ve handled cheap switchblades or off-brand OTF knives, you know the story: mushy buttons, blade rattle, questionable steel. Here, you get a straightforward assisted mechanism, a drop point profile that actually cuts, and a pocket clip that lets it vanish against a pocket seam.

Blade, Steel, and Grind: Where the Work Happens

The 3.25" matte black drop point is purpose-built. You’re not buying a fantasy dagger; you’re buying a blade that will open boxes, cut cord, and handle field chores without drama. The drop point gives you a strong tip, usable belly, and a straight section for push cuts. No serrations to snag; just a clean edge you can maintain yourself.

The black finish reduces glare and visually integrates with the handle—important if you’re carrying in uniform or just prefer a low-profile EDC. While the specific steel grade isn’t stamped into the listing, the grind and geometry are tuned for real-world use: not a brittle show-knife edge that chips out the first time it meets a staple, but a practical working edge that sharpens up quickly on basic stones.

Ergonomics: Jimping, Choil, and Grooved Scales

Mechanically, the little things add up. Full-length spine jimping and a defined finger choil give you control in both standard and choked-up grips. The grooved aluminum handle scales add just enough traction without turning your pocket into sandpaper. You feel the indexing when you grip it, but it doesn’t tear up clothing or snag on the draw.

Carry Reality: EDC Over Hype

Specs matter, but how a knife rides day after day is what keeps it in your pocket instead of a drawer. Closed, this folder sits at 4.75" with an all-black profile. The pocket clip is set up for discreet spine-side carry. The weight at 4.5 oz hits that middle ground—enough heft to inspire confidence when you thumb the stud, not so much that it drags your pocket down.

For buyers who normally search for automatic knives for sale or even "best automatic knife for EDC," this assisted folder presents a compelling argument: similar deployment experience, simpler ownership, and fewer conversations with people who don’t understand knife laws.

Legal Context: Assisted vs. Automatic, and Why It Matters

One of the biggest reasons enthusiasts look beyond a pure automatic knife for sale is the legal landscape. In the United States, true automatic knives and switchblades are regulated more tightly under a mix of federal import/transport rules and a patchwork of state laws. Assisted openers sit in a different category.

This knife is a spring-assisted folder, not a push-button automatic, not an OTF, and not a classic switchblade in the legal sense. You must manually start the blade via the thumb stud; the spring only completes the motion. Many states treat that distinction as critical, allowing assisted knives where automatic knives and OTF designs are restricted or banned.

That said, knife laws are intensely local. Some cities and counties go beyond state law. Before you carry this—or any knife that behaves like an automatic—check your current state and local regulations, especially if you travel or cross state lines. The responsibility is yours; the advantage of this piece is that you’re starting from a friendlier legal position than a full automatic.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives and switchblades are governed by both federal and state law. Federal law (the Interstate Switchblade Act) mainly restricts interstate commerce, importation, and shipping of automatic knives, with some exceptions for military, law enforcement, and one-armed individuals. Day-to-day legality—owning, carrying, and using an automatic knife—depends on your state and sometimes your city or county. Some states allow automatic knives and OTFs broadly, others restrict blade length, carry type, or who may possess them, and a few ban them almost entirely. Assisted-opening knives like this one are generally treated more leniently because you must start the blade manually, but you still need to confirm your local rules before you clip anything to your pocket.

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

In enthusiast terms, a modern automatic knife usually means a side-opening folder with a button or lever that drives the blade to full lock with spring power from a fully closed position. A switchblade is the older legal and cultural term—federal law uses it to describe most push-button autos, whether side-opening or OTF. An OTF (out-the-front) knife deploys the blade straight out of the handle’s front, either single-action (auto out, manual in) or double-action (auto out and auto in via the same actuator). This Midnight Breach is none of those: it’s a spring-assisted folder. You manually move the blade with a thumb stud until the assist spring takes over, which is why it’s often treated differently by law.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

If you like automatic knife behavior but don’t want the baggage, this knife earns its keep on action and ergonomics alone. The assist is tuned for a clean, confident snap without feeling like it’s trying to jump out of your hand. The 3.25" drop point blade, matte blacked-out finish, and full-length jimping make it a legitimate cutting tool, not a novelty. Aluminum scales keep weight realistic for daily carry, and the liner lock/pocket clip/lanyard hole trio check the boxes serious users actually care about. It’s the kind of knife you can beat up daily without feeling like you’re risking a fragile collector-grade automatic.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Mechanism First

If you came here hunting for an automatic knife for sale, you already care about how a blade moves as much as how it looks. The Midnight Breach Assisted Tactical Folder - Black Aluminum is for that buyer—the one who wants real deployment speed, honest materials, and a carry profile that makes sense in the real world. It’s not pretending to be an OTF, and it’s not trying to pass off gimmicks as engineering. It’s a straightforward, assisted tactical EDC that respects your understanding of the mechanics—and that’s exactly the kind of knife that earns long-term pocket time.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 4.5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock