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Night Wing Dual-Edge Assisted Opening Knife - Blue Titanium

Price:

7.19


Stealth Lock Rapid-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black G10
Stealth Lock Rapid-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black G10
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Batwing Twin-Assist Dual Blade Pocket Knife - Rainbow Titanium
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Nightfall Predator Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Blue Titanium

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For the buyer who understands action, this is not an automatic knife for sale—it’s a spring-assisted, dual-blade statement. The Nightfall Predator fires a 3-inch spear point from either end with tuned assisted opening and a solid liner lock to back it up. Blue titanium-coated blades and a bat-wing profile mark it as a display-ready fantasy piece, but the steel edges and pocket clip make it real-world usable. You’re not buying a toy; you’re buying a themed mechanism that actually works.

7.19 7.19 USD 7.19

934BL

Not Available For Sale

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Not an Automatic Knife for Sale – A Dual-Blade Assisted Mechanism with Bat DNA

If you’re here hunting for an automatic knife for sale, you’re in the right neighborhood—but this piece is a different animal. The Nightfall Predator Dual-Blade Assisted Knife - Blue Titanium is a spring-assisted, dual-spear folding knife built for the collector who cares more about mechanism and silhouette than marketing buzzwords. It looks like a superhero prop, but it opens like a tuned piece of gear.

This is a bat-themed, dual-edge, spring-assisted knife: both blades are manually started and then driven open by an internal assist spring, locking on a liner lock. No buttons, no hidden switches, no confusion about what you’re buying.

Why This Belongs Beside Your Best Automatic Knives for Sale

Any serious enthusiast browsing automatic knives for sale is really shopping for one thing: action that feels intentional. The Nightfall Predator earns its place in that lineup because of how its assisted opening behaves. Each 3-inch spear point rides on a pivot designed to snap into lockup with a decisive, mechanical click once you nudge the flipper or tang.

Is it a true automatic? No. But if you appreciate the way a well-tuned automatic knife deploys—clean break, confident lock, no lazy travel—you’ll recognize those same values here. The dual opposing blades give you symmetry and presence you simply don’t get on a single-blade EDC.

Dual Opposing Blades: Form, Function, and Fantasy

The most obvious play here is visual: bat-wing silhouette, blue titanium-coated spear points, and a central bat emblem anchoring the handle. But the dual-blade layout isn’t just for show. Each blade gives you a plain-edge spear point—excellent for piercing tasks, light utility slicing, package work, and clean cuts where tip control matters.

Collectors who already own a stable of OTFs and side-opening automatics will appreciate this as a themed counterpoint: same pocketable footprint, entirely different personality.

Assisted Action vs. Automatic: How the Mechanism Actually Works

The Nightfall Predator is a spring-assisted folding knife. That means:

  • You start the blade manually—usually via flipper or exposed tang.
  • Once you overcome a set resistance, an internal torsion spring takes over.
  • The blade snaps open the rest of the way into a fixed, locked position.
  • A liner lock bar engages the tang to keep it open under use.

Compare that to a true automatic knife, where a button or hidden actuator releases a fully spring-loaded blade from a closed position with no manual pre-load. The Nightfall’s assisted system gives you that satisfying snap without crossing into push-button automatic territory.

Mechanics First: Steel, Lock, and Carry Reality

Under the fantasy skin, this is a straightforward working mechanism. Both blades are steel spear points with a titanium blue finish—more corrosion resistance and visual drama than bare steel. Edge retention will comfortably handle everyday cutting tasks: breaking down boxes, cord, light plastic, and the usual daily clutter.

The liner lock is the unsung hero on a knife like this. On deployment, a cut-out section of the internal liner flexes into place behind the blade tang, bracing it against closing pressure. Done right, it gives you one-handed open-and-close while still feeling positive and secure. That’s what you’re getting here—no wobble circus, no mushy pseudo-lock.

Balance and Pocket Clip: How It Actually Rides

At 5.75 inches closed and just under six ounces, the Nightfall Predator is not a featherweight minimalist EDC. It’s a pocketable statement piece. The aluminum handle keeps the weight reasonable, while the central hardware and dual pivots add a reassuring density.

The pocket clip rides low, keeping the bat-wing profile mostly buried and discreet. The silhouette is bold when drawn, but in your pocket it behaves like any other mid-size assisted folder. If you’re used to carrying OTF knives of similar length, the footprint will feel familiar.

Legal Context: Where This Sits Compared to an Automatic Knife for Sale

Legal clarity is non-negotiable in this category. While many buyers are searching for an automatic knife for sale, the Nightfall Predator is technically a spring-assisted folding knife, not a push-button automatic or classic switchblade.

In many jurisdictions, assisted opening knives are treated differently from automatic knives and switchblades. Because you must manually start the blade and there is no button in the handle that fully deploys it, this design often falls into the same bucket as conventional folders with opening aids. That said, knife law is a state and city game, not a single federal rulebook for carry.

Translation for serious buyers: this knife is generally easier to justify carrying than a true automatic knife or traditional switchblade, but you should always confirm your local and state regulations before you clip it into your pocket.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act), automatic knives—defined as blades that open automatically by push-button, inertia, or gravity—have restrictions mainly around interstate commerce and importation, not simple ownership. Actual carry and possession rules are set by states and, often, cities.

Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few limits. Others restrict blade length, carry method, or who can legally carry them. A handful still ban them outright. Assisted opening knives like this dual-blade design are commonly treated more leniently than full automatics because you must start the opening manually, but that’s not universal.

Best practice: check your current state and local laws, including city ordinances, and remember that what’s legal to own at home may not be legal to conceal carry in public.

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

Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade (side-opening): A button, slide, or hidden actuator releases a spring-loaded blade from a fully closed position. The blade pivots out the side and locks. "Automatic knife" and "switchblade" are often used interchangeably in law and enthusiast circles for this mechanism.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: The blade travels in line with the handle and emerges out the front. In a double-action OTF, the same control both deploys and retracts the blade via spring tension. In a single-action OTF, the spring only drives deployment; you manually reset it.
  • Assisted opening (this knife): You begin opening the blade manually. Once you overcome a detent, a torsion spring finishes the job and snaps it into lockup. No button, no fully spring-driven start, and legally distinct from many switchblade definitions.

The Nightfall Predator is a spring-assisted, dual-blade folder—not an OTF, not a classic switchblade, and not a push-button automatic knife.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

Collectors don’t need another anonymous assisted folder; they need something that earns its pocket space. This knife does that in three ways:

  • Dual-blade symmetry: Two opposing spear points create a bat-wing profile that jumps in a display case and still cuts like a straightforward utility edge.
  • Assisted action with real snap: The mechanism delivers that automatic-adjacent satisfaction when it opens—intentional, crisp, and repeatable.
  • Display-ready theme, usable build: Blue titanium-coated blades, bat emblem, and aluminum handle give you fantasy styling on a framework you can actually use and carry.

If your collection already includes side-opening automatics and OTF switchblades, this is the themed, assisted outlier that fills a different slot: comic-book energy with practical mechanics.

For Enthusiasts Who Know the Difference – Not Just Any Automatic Knife for Sale

This piece isn’t pretending to be an automatic knife for sale. It’s a spring-assisted, dual-spear, bat-inspired folder that stands comfortably on its own engineering. The action is tuned, the lock is honest, and the visual language is unapologetically nocturnal.

If you’re the buyer who can explain the difference between a double-action OTF and a side-opening switchblade without checking your phone, you already understand where the Nightfall Predator fits in your rotation. It’s the knife you reach for when you want your carry to say something—about your taste for mechanics, for themed pieces that aren’t toys, and for gear that deploys with intent every time you touch it.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 11
Closed Length (inches) 5.75
Weight (oz.) 5.81
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Titanium
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Bat Theme
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock