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Rebel Banner Quick-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

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4.44


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Rebel Banner Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

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This is an assisted opening knife built for fast, no-drama deployment. A matte black spear point rides on a spring-assisted flipper, snapping into a solid liner lock with a decisive click. At 3.5 inches of blade and a slim aluminum handle, it carries light but feels ready. The rebel banner graphic on the scales turns a straightforward EDC into a statement piece, while the pocket clip keeps it where it belongs: accessible, tuned, and ready when a one-hand opener actually matters.

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KS1024RBB

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Rebel Banner Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

This isn’t an automatic knife. It’s an assisted opening EDC built for the guy who actually cares how a blade comes to life. You start the motion with the flipper; the internal spring takes over and finishes the deployment with a clean, confident snap. No mystery, no hype — just a well-tuned assist in a slim, rebel-themed package.

Looking for an Automatic Knife for Sale? Why This Assisted Action Still Belongs in the Conversation

If you’re hunting for an automatic knife for sale, you’re probably sorting gear by one metric first: action. How fast, how consistent, how controllable. This knife sits just to the side of true automatic territory — legally and mechanically — but lives in the same universe of fast, one-handed deployment. Instead of a button-fired automatic or OTF, you run the flipper tab, feel the detent break, and the spring-assisted mechanism does the rest.

For the collector who already owns a few switchblades or has an automatic knife or two in rotation, this piece earns its slot as the "always legal in more places" fast-deployment option with a loud, unmistakable rebel-banner handle.

Mechanics That Matter: Action, Lockup, and Everyday Reality

The people who buy automatic knives for sale aren’t impressed by marketing fluff; they’re impressed by mechanics that hold up after a few hundred cycles. This assisted opening knife is built around three fundamentals: a predictable detent, a decisive assist, and a simple, proven lock.

Spring-Assisted Flipper with Real-World Speed

The action starts at the flipper tab. You apply minimal pressure, the detent lets go, and the spring kicks the blade into full open. Done right, assisted opening feels almost like a side-opening automatic from the user’s perspective: one-hand, repeatable, and fast enough that the blade is locked before your grip has fully shifted.

This design keeps it that simple. There’s no button to hunt for, no safety to fuss with — just a flipper that works and an assist tuned for reliability over gimmick speed. For buyers cross-shopping an automatic knife for sale, that level of controlled, consistent deployment is where an assisted opener earns respect.

Liner Lock and Spear Point Blade Geometry

Once open, the liner lock engages behind the tang with a solid, audible click. It’s not trying to reinvent the wheel. Liner locks are used in serious production folders for a reason: they’re easy to maintain, easy to close one-handed, and proven under normal EDC loads.

The 3.5-inch spear point blade in matte black plays well with that setup. You get a centered tip for piercing tasks and a usable straight edge for everyday cutting — packages, light utility, the usual abuse most EDC knives quietly suffer. The long milled slot in the blade reduces a bit of weight and adds visual interest without compromising the spine.

Steel, Finish, and What You’re Actually Carrying

This isn’t a boutique steel conversation; you’re not getting exotic powdered metallurgy at this price point. What you are getting is straightforward stainless steel tuned for easy sharpening and decent edge holding in everyday use. For a hard-use work knife, you might chase higher-end alloys. For a themed assisted opener like this, the value is in how honest the package is about what it wants to be.

The matte black finish on the blade is more than just attitude. Low-glare coating earns its keep in real-world use — it hides scratches better than polished blades and doesn’t flash light when you don’t want it to. Combine that with the matching matte handle hardware and you get a visual that says “tactical” while the rebel banner print makes it impossible to mistake for anything subtle.

Aluminum Scales with Rebel Banner Graphic

The handle is aluminum — light, rigid, and familiar to anyone who’s carried modern assisted or automatic knives. What separates this piece from the commodity crowd is the full rebel-banner treatment on the scales. Red, white, and blue stars-and-bars branding turns a simple assisted opening knife into a statement piece, for better or worse, depending on who’s looking. From a collector’s perspective, that makes it a themed knife: you’re buying the graphic as much as the hardware.

Carry, Clip, and Why It Works as an EDC Companion

Numbers matter: 3.5-inch blade, 4.5-inch closed length, 8.125 inches overall, and 3.43 ounces. That puts this squarely in the “full-size but still pocketable” category. It’s not a dainty gentleman’s folder, and it’s not a brick either. For anyone used to carrying an automatic knife or assisted EDC, that weight and size will feel instantly familiar.

The pocket clip keeps it anchored where it belongs. You’re not getting deep carry stealth here; you’re getting straightforward, functional retention. The squared-off butt and slim handle profile make it easy to index as you draw, especially if you’re already in the habit of coming out of the pocket and going straight to the flipper.

Legal Context: Where Assisted Openers and Automatic Knives Part Ways

One of the main reasons some buyers look beyond a straight automatic knife for sale is legality. Under U.S. federal law, true automatic knives and switchblades are regulated under the Federal Switchblade Act — especially for interstate commerce and certain restricted locations. States then layer on their own rules, and some are still hostile to push-button automatics and OTF designs.

This knife is a spring-assisted opener, not a push-button automatic. You must start the blade manually via the flipper before the spring takes over. In many jurisdictions, that distinction keeps assisted opening knives legal where switchblades or fully automatic knives are restricted. That said, knife laws are highly state- and city-specific. If you’re used to shopping automatic knives for sale, you already know the drill: check your local statutes and regulations before carrying. The responsibility doesn’t ride on the blade; it rides on the owner.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives — including traditional side-opening switchblades and many OTF designs — are governed at the federal level by the Federal Switchblade Act. That law mainly targets interstate commerce, import, and certain restricted areas, not individual ownership. The real complexity comes from state and local laws: some states allow automatic knives with few restrictions, others limit blade length, carry type, or who can own them, and a handful still prohibit them outright for most civilians.

Assisted opening knives like this one are generally treated differently because the user must initiate blade movement manually. Many states that restrict automatic knives still allow assisted openers, but there are exceptions. Before you buy or carry any automatic knife, OTF, switchblade, or assisted opening knife, verify your local laws — don’t assume one category’s rules cover them all.

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

Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade (side-opening): You press a button or actuating device; the blade pivots out under spring power with no additional motion from you. "Automatic knife" and "switchblade" are often the same thing in legal language.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: The blade rides inside the handle and moves linearly out the front. In a double-action OTF, the same switch extends and retracts the blade; in a single-action OTF, it deploys automatically but must be manually reset.
  • Assisted opening knife: Like this one. You start opening the blade via a thumb stud or flipper. Once the blade passes a certain point, a spring takes over and drives it fully open. Legally and mechanically, it is not a true automatic.

Collectors who shop automatic knives for sale usually understand these distinctions and choose based on how they want the action to feel, plus what their local laws allow.

What makes this automatic-style assisted knife worth buying?

You’re not buying this as a grail-level custom; you’re buying it as a fast, loud EDC that knows exactly what it is. The assisted action gives you near-automatic deployment without crossing fully into restricted switchblade territory. The liner lock is simple and familiar. The spear point blade in matte black is practical and easy to live with. And the rebel banner scales turn it into a conversation piece in any collection that leans into themed knives — especially for collectors who already own a few true automatics or OTFs and want something visually different for everyday carry.

For the Enthusiast Who Knows Why Action Matters

If you’re the kind of buyer who compares an automatic knife for sale by detent feel, lockup, and reset consistency, you already understand why a good assisted opener deserves pocket time too. The Rebel Banner Rapid-Deploy Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black gives you quick, one-hand access, a familiar mechanical layout, and a handle that doesn’t apologize for being loud. It’s for the carrier who chooses a blade because they care how it moves, not just how it looks in a thumbnail.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.125
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 3.43
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Confederate Flag
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock