Skip to Content
Kalashnikov Legacy Tactical Automatic Knife - Black Serrated Tanto

Price:

47.42


Carbon Talon Rapid-Deploy Karambit OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber
Carbon Talon Rapid-Deploy Karambit OTF Knife - Black Carbon Fiber
35.00 35.00
BK HNDL SL TANTO BLD OTF
BK HNDL SL TANTO BLD OTF
20.86 20.86

Rifle-Born Tactical Automatic Knife - Black Tanto Serrated

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/8585/image_1920?unique=66757bb

11 sold in last 24 hours

This automatic knife for sale is the Kalashnikov done right: a side-opening, push-button auto with a black D2 tanto blade and practical serrations. The action snaps open with that confident, rifle-inspired authority the series is known for, locking on a solid plunge lock. Textured black aluminum, deep finger grooves, and jimping give you real control under pressure. This is for the buyer who wants a proven automatic, not a toy — a hard-use tactical piece that still earns its place in a serious collection.

47.42 47.42 USD 47.42

BOKS102

Not Available For Sale

6 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

Automatic Knife for Sale Built on Rifle DNA, Not Hype

When you buy an automatic knife, you’re really buying a mechanism and a mindset. The Boker Kalashnikov series has been around long enough to separate itself from the flood of knockoff autos, and this Rifle-Born Tactical Automatic Knife - Black Tanto Serrated is the pattern distilled: side-opening, push-button automatic, tanto profile, and serrations that actually do work.

This is an automatic knife for sale that leans into its AK heritage without turning into cosplay. The handle feels like a stamped receiver translated into aluminum: slab-sided, grooved where it matters, with a plunge lock that engages cleanly and a button that fires the blade with a deliberate, mechanical snap — not a lazy flop, not a wrist-dependent assist.

Why This Automatic Knife’s Action Matters More Than Marketing

Mechanically, this is a classic side-opening automatic knife using a push-button plunge lock. That matters for three reasons:

  • Positive engagement: The coil spring is tuned to drive the D2 blade fully into lockup with authority, even after repeat firings.
  • Serviceable design: Plunge-lock side-opening autos are simpler to maintain than many OTF switchblade mechanisms with complex internals.
  • Controlled deployment: The button placement and handle geometry make it easy to index and fire under stress without shifting your grip.

The result is a tactical automatic knife that opens decisively every time without feeling over-sprung or twitchy. Collectors appreciate that repeatable action; users appreciate that it just works when they hit the button.

Steel and Edge: D2 With a Purpose

The 3.35" black-coated blade is D2 tool steel — not the newest alphabet soup, but still a serious work steel. D2’s semi-stainless nature and high carbon content give you:

  • Real edge retention: It holds a working edge far longer than basic budget steels.
  • Serration value: Those partial serrations near the handle chew through webbing, rope, and fibrous material without rolling immediately.
  • Tanto strength: The reinforced tanto tip and flat grind pair well with D2’s wear resistance for piercing and controlled push cuts.

This isn’t a safe-queen steel; it’s chosen for everyday cutting tasks and tactical utility, where you care more about consistent performance than chasing the latest powdered wonder-alloy.

Handle, Ergonomics, and Everyday Carry Reality

The black aluminum handle is not there for looks. The deep finger grooves and spine jimping lock your hand in under torque, wet, or gloved. At 7.87" overall and about 4.2 oz, this is right in the pocket for a full-size automatic EDC knife that doesn’t feel like a brick.

  • Tip-up pocket clip: Keeps the automatic ready to deploy and sits low enough for discreet carry.
  • Lanyard hole: For those who run retention lanyards or want quicker indexing from a pocket or pack.
  • Textured scales: The milling and grooves give tactile feedback without shredding your pockets.

It carries like a working knife, not a novelty. That’s the difference between a collector who actually uses their blades and one who just lines them up for photos.

Automatic Knives for Sale That Still Respect the Collector

Plenty of automatic knives for sale try to win you over with wild machining and questionable geometry. This one takes the opposite route: familiar lines, honest materials, and one smart collector touch — the AK magazine-style box. It’s subtle, but it tells you exactly what this design is tipping its hat to, without compromising the knife itself.

For a Kalashnikov-series automatic, the value proposition is simple:

  • Proven pattern: The Kalashnikov autos have years of real-world carry and owner abuse behind them.
  • Recognizable lineage: Collectors know the profile and the action; it’s a staple in many automatic knife collections.
  • Usable geometry: Tanto plus partial serration equals one blade that can slice, pierce, and saw through stubborn material.

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife that earns its spot both as a daily beater and a recognizable name in the drawer, this checks those boxes without pretending to be a custom piece.

Legal Context Before You Buy This Automatic Knife

Any time you see an automatic knife for sale, the first responsible step is understanding where you can actually carry it. In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly restricts interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives, with exceptions for military, law enforcement, and some other uses. Retail buyers mostly run into issues at the state and local level.

  • Some states: Fully allow ownership and carry of automatic knives with few restrictions.
  • Others: Allow possession but restrict concealed carry, blade length, or where you can bring them.
  • A minority: Still heavily restrict or effectively ban automatic or switchblade-style knives.

This is not legal advice. Before you buy an automatic knife like this Kalashnikov, check your current state and local laws on automatic knife and switchblade possession, carry, and transport. Many buyers search for terms like “automatic knife legal to carry” for a reason: the rules are not uniform, and the responsibility is yours.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (often called switchblades in legal statutes) sit under a mixed framework. Federal law mainly governs interstate shipment and import, but does not outright criminalize simple possession for most individuals. The real deciding factor is state and local law. Some states now treat an automatic knife much like any other folding knife, while others regulate blade length, carry method (open vs. concealed), or restrict them entirely.

Before you carry this or any other automatic knife, review trusted, up-to-date resources or consult local legal guidance. Laws do change, and enforcement attitudes can vary even within the same state.

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

Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): Like this Kalashnikov. The blade pivots out from the side of the handle when you press a button, and a spring completes the opening.
  • OTF automatic: “Out-the-front” knives have a blade that travels straight out of the end of the handle, usually driven by a spring via a slider (double-action) or button (single-action). More moving parts, different feel.
  • Switchblade: In everyday enthusiast language, a switchblade is any automatic-opening knife. In many state and federal laws, “switchblade” is the broad legal term that covers both side-opening autos and many OTF designs.

This Kalashnikov is a side-opening automatic knife with a push-button plunge lock — not an OTF. Knowing that is the difference between buying the right mechanism and just buying a name.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

For a buyer who already owns a few autos, this model earns its keep on three fronts:

  • Proven action: The Kalashnikov’s coil-spring, push-button deployment has a track record for reliable, positive lockup.
  • Workable steel and grind: D2 in a flat-ground, black-coated tanto with partial serrations gives you a blade that cuts, pierces, and saws with equal confidence.
  • Collector pedigree: The Kalashnikov series is one of the more recognizable production automatics out there, with the AK-inspired theme and magazine-style box giving it instant context in a collection.

If you’re hunting for the best automatic knife for EDC in this price and style range, this one’s appeal is simple: it behaves like a serious cutting tool first and a themed piece second.

For the Enthusiast Who Actually Uses Their Automatic Knife

Owning an automatic isn’t about having a toy that goes “click.” It’s about having a mechanism you trust and a design that makes sense in the hand. This Kalashnikov-based automatic knife for sale was built for the person who wants to feel that spring drive the blade into lock, who notices the difference between cheap serrations and properly cut teeth, and who appreciates an AK magazine box as a nod, not a gimmick.

If you see your knives as tools with stories, not just props, this is the kind of automatic you add to your rotation — and actually carry.

No Specifications