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Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black

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7.31


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Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife - Matte Black

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Automatic knife buyers will clock this as a purpose-built spring assisted stiletto the second it hits their hand. A 5.25-inch matte black spear-point in 1065 German steel rides a tuned flipper and liner lock, giving you decisive, one-hand deployment without OTF complexity. The slim steel handle, textured scales, and gold accent bands deliver that classic stiletto line with modern EDC control. This is a knife you choose because you care how an assisted action feels when it fires—clean, confident, and ready.

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P406BG

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Automatic Knife for Sale Alternatives: Why This Spring Assisted Stiletto Exists

If you're hunting for an automatic knife for sale but still want mechanical control and broader carry options, this Midnight Stiletto Rapid-Deploy Assisted Folding Knife in matte black hits a very specific niche. It takes the attitude and silhouette of a classic automatic stiletto and delivers it through a tuned spring assisted action and flipper tab that you command every time.

This isn't an OTF experiment or a novelty switchblade. It's a long, spear-point assisted folder built for people who care about how a blade rides the pivot, how the detent is tuned, and how the lock settles when the steel hits home.

Buying an Automatic Knife: Why Some Enthusiasts Choose Assisted Instead

When serious buyers go to buy automatic knife options, they usually land in one of three camps: full auto side-opening, OTF, or assisted. This piece is for the third group—the ones who like a fast, decisive deployment but still want a finger on the trigger, literally.

The spring assisted mechanism here is simple and honest: you start the motion with the flipper tab, the internal spring completes the stroke, and the liner lock catches the blade with authority. You get automatic-class speed but with more deliberate engagement than a push-button switchblade or double-action OTF. That matters for control, safety, and in a lot of jurisdictions, legality.

Mechanics That Matter: Action, Steel, and Geometry

Spring Assisted Action with Purposeful Tuning

The action on this knife is built around a straightforward recipe: a dialed flipper tab, a reliable spring, and a liner lock that actually inspires confidence. The detent is firm enough that the blade stays put in the pocket but tuned so that once you commit on the flipper, the blade snaps to lockup in one clean motion.

This is where assisted stands apart from many budget "automatic knives for sale" you see floating around. There’s no vague, lazy action or gritty deployment. The pivot and spring combination deliver a consistent arc, and the slim stiletto profile means there’s less blade mass fighting the mechanism—resulting in a crisp, repeatable open instead of a sluggish, wandering one.

1065 German Steel and a Long Spear-Point Blade

The 5.25-inch spear-point blade in 1065 German surgical steel is the heart of the design. 1065 is a tough, impact-friendly high-carbon steel that takes a keen edge easily and shrugs off abuse better than some harder, chippier alloys. For a long, stiletto-inspired blade that may see everything from packaging duty to rough utility work, that trade-off makes sense.

The spear-point geometry, symmetric and narrow, gives you a needle-precise tip with a long, usable plain edge. This isn't a thick, wedge-shaped pry bar. It’s a linear cutter meant to pierce, slice, and move through material with minimal resistance, helped by the matte black finish that cuts glare and visual noise.

Automatic Knives for Sale vs Assisted Stilettos: Collector and Carry Reality

Collectors who buy automatic knives for sale usually chase three things: mechanism, lineage, and aesthetic. This spring assisted stiletto checks all three without pretending to be something it isn’t.

  • Mechanism: A true spring assisted flipper with a liner lock—no button, no OTF track, no mystery internals.
  • Lineage: A modern take on the Italian stiletto profile, adapted into a folding EDC platform.
  • Aesthetic: Matte black blade and handle with gold accent bands that break up the length, giving it a visual rhythm instead of just a black bar of steel.

At 11.25 inches overall and 6 inches closed, you’re getting serious reach in a package that still folds into a pocket. The pocket clip keeps it riding consistently, the lanyard hole gives you another retention option, and the 4.59 oz weight sits in the pocket like a real tool, not a toy.

Carry Geometry and Balance

Long stilettos can feel awkward if the handle geometry is off. Here, the straight, textured steel handle and slim profile keep the knife from twisting or rolling in the hand, even with that extra blade length. The balance point sits back toward the pivot, so you’re not fighting a nose-heavy tip when you index the knife for precise cuts.

This is the kind of detail that separates a "cool-looking knife" from something you actually reach for. Auto buyers know the difference the first time they open and cut with it.

Legal Context: Where This Fits Next to an Automatic Knife

Anytime someone looks for an automatic knife for sale, the next thought is usually, "Can I actually carry this?" Legally, spring assisted knives are often treated differently from traditional automatic knives and switchblades—but the exact rules depend on your jurisdiction.

In many U.S. states, a knife that requires manual pressure on a flipper or thumb stud to begin opening, with a spring that only completes the action, is classified as an assisted opener rather than an automatic. Classic switchblades and many automatic knives, by contrast, deploy the blade fully with a button, lever, or hidden release, with no need to start the blade manually.

However, there is no single nationwide rule that covers every detail. Federal law primarily regulates interstate commerce in switchblades and automatic knives, while state and local laws decide what you can carry day to day. Before you treat this assisted stiletto as your regular EDC, check your state and local knife laws, including any length limits and assisted-opening definitions. When in doubt, verify with credible, up-to-date legal sources—don’t rely on rumor-level "it’s fine" advice.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knife and switchblade legality is a patchwork. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act restricts the manufacture, sale, and shipment of automatic knives across state lines, with specific exceptions (for example, certain military and law enforcement uses). Day-to-day carry, though, is mostly a state and local issue.

Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few restrictions, others limit them by blade length or user type, and a few still prohibit them outright. Assisted-opening knives like this one are often treated more leniently, because you must manually start the blade with the flipper before the spring engages.

None of this is legal advice. Laws change, and local ordinances can be stricter than state rules. Always confirm current regulations where you live and where you plan to carry.

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

Enthusiasts draw clear mechanical lines:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): A button or lever releases the blade from the handle, and a spring drives it out to lockup. You don’t need to start the blade manually.
  • Switchblade: In U.S. legal language, this is generally the same as an automatic knife—any knife where the blade opens automatically by a button, spring, or similar device.
  • OTF (out-the-front): A subtype of automatic knife where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Many are double-action, deploying and retracting with the same sliding control.

This knife is none of those. It’s a spring assisted folding knife: you apply pressure to the flipper tab, the blade begins to move, and only then does the spring take over. It gives you automatic-like speed while keeping the mechanism mechanically and legally distinct from a true auto or switchblade in most jurisdictions.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

If you’re in the market to buy automatic knife level performance without committing to a full auto, this piece earns its spot by combining reach, control, and honest mechanics.

  • A 5.25-inch spear-point blade in 1065 German steel that actually wants to cut and pierce, not just pose.
  • A clean, decisive spring assisted action with a real flipper—not a vague nail nick or half-hearted stud.
  • Full steel, textured handle with gold accent bands that nod to traditional stilettos while staying modern and functional.
  • Liner lock that engages with authority, giving you confidence the blade will stay where it belongs under use.
  • Carry-ready details: pocket clip, lanyard hole, and a closed length that fits real pockets without vanishing into toy territory.

Collectors and EDC users who live in the gray zone between "I love autos" and "my local laws don’t" will understand exactly where this belongs in the rotation.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their Gear on Purpose

If you’re the kind of buyer who reads spec sheets, argues about action quality, and knows that not every automatic knife for sale is worth the detent it rides on, this spring assisted stiletto speaks your language. It doesn’t pretend to be an OTF or a push-button switchblade. It’s a long, lean, matte black assisted folder built for people who care how a knife feels the hundredth time they open it, not just the first.

Choose it because you know why the mechanism matters—and because you want that knowledge to show in the knife you carry.

Blade Length (inches) 5.25
Overall Length (inches) 11.25
Closed Length (inches) 6
Weight (oz.) 4.59
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 1065 German surgical steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Steel
Theme Stiletto
Safety Spring-assisted
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock