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Shadowstrike Momentum Spring-Assisted EDC Knife - Black/Blue Aluminum

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6.43


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Shadowline Velocity Assisted EDC Knife - Black/Blue Aluminum

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An automatic knife for sale doesn’t have to be loud to be fast. Shadowline Velocity is a spring-assisted EDC folder with a black oxidized 3.24-inch drop-point in 3Cr13 and a confident liner lock. The flipper rides on a tuned assist that snaps open cleanly, while the black-and-blue aluminum handle offers traction grooves and a discreet pocket clip. It’s the knife you buy when you care how an action feels every single time you deploy it.

6.43 6.43 USD 6.43 8.99

MTA2014BL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Handle Finish
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Automatic Knife for Sale, Tuned for Real-World EDC

If you’re hunting for an automatic knife for sale but actually care how the action feels, the Shadowline Velocity Assisted EDC Knife - Black/Blue Aluminum deserves a hard look. It isn’t pretending to be a full auto or OTF. It’s a purpose-built spring-assisted folder that leans into controlled speed, pocket-ready size, and a clean black-and-blue tactical profile.

This is the knife you buy when you want fast, one-handed deployment on demand, but still appreciate the mechanical conversation between your thumb, the flipper tab, and the liner lock. It’s an EDC tool first, tacticool decoration second.

Why This Spring-Assisted EDC Belongs Beside Your Automatic Knives for Sale

Mechanism matters. Shadowline Velocity is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a fully automatic switchblade or OTF. That distinction is more than legal semantics; it’s how the knife behaves in your hand.

The assist engages after you start the blade with the flipper tab. You initiate the motion; the internal spring takes over and snaps the black oxidized drop-point into lockup. That means:

  • More control over deployment in tight spaces
  • Less likelihood of accidental pocket fireworks
  • A reassuring, repeatable break point as the spring engages

The liner lock settles in behind the tang with a clean, audible click. No lazy lock bar, no mushy engagement. For an enthusiast who has handled a dozen assisted openers, that consistent lockup is exactly what separates a keeper from a drawer queen.

Action, Tuning, and Real Deployment Feel

The Shadowline’s appeal isn’t just that it opens quickly; it’s how it opens. The flipper tab is sized so you can run it with either a straight pull or a light preload and snap, and the jimping along the thumb ramp gives you bite once the blade is open. That combination makes repeated deployments feel intentional, not frantic.

In hand, the action lands in that sweet spot between too-stiff budget assist and over-eager snap. You feel the spring pick up the blade confidently without needing a death grip or exaggerated motion. It’s the kind of tuned assist that makes you cycle it at your desk just to feel the mechanics work.

Steel, Geometry, and Everyday Cutting Performance

The 3.24-inch drop-point blade is cut from 3Cr13 stainless steel, a sensible choice for an EDC folder at this price point. Nobody’s pretending this is a boutique super steel; it’s a corrosion-resistant work steel that sharpens quickly and forgives rough use.

3Cr13 Stainless: Honest Working Steel

3Cr13 won’t win internet arguments about edge retention, but it will quietly do the work. For the automatic knife enthusiast who actually cuts packaging, cordage, and light field material instead of spec sheets, here’s what it means:

  • Easy touch-ups on a basic stone or pocket sharpener
  • Good rust resistance with minimal maintenance
  • Enough toughness for everyday utility cuts

The drop-point geometry and plain edge keep things versatile: tip control for detail work, a long usable belly for slicing, and a spine that’s thick enough near the pivot to feel solid without turning the knife into a brick.

Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Spring-Assisted EDC: Where This Knife Fits

If your collection already includes full automatic knives, OTFs, and classic side-opening switchblades, Shadowline Velocity slides in as the practical EDC counterpart. The overall length at 7.75 inches (4.51 inches closed) and a lightweight anodized aluminum handle put it right in the everyday carry sweet spot.

The handle’s black finish with electric blue accents isn’t just cosmetic: the linear grooves and angular cutouts add real grip reference points. In wet or gloved hands, you feel those lines orient the knife instantly. Add the discreet pocket clip, and you’ve got a knife that rides low, draws clean, and doesn’t print like a tactical billboard.

Collector Detail: Design That Looks Fast Standing Still

Collectors notice when a knife’s visual language matches its mechanical behavior. The Shadowline’s black oxidized blade, blue-edge aluminum scales, and exposed pivot hardware create a cohesive, modern tactical look. The handle’s angular profile and cutouts near the butt echo the idea of movement and speed—exactly what you want from a spring-assisted EDC sitting next to your autos in a case.

Legal Context: Where a Spring-Assisted EDC Has the Edge

When you see an automatic knife for sale, your next thought is usually, “Can I actually carry this?” That’s where a spring-assisted folder like the Shadowline Velocity often makes more sense than a true automatic switchblade in many jurisdictions.

Under U.S. federal law, most knife restrictions target switchblades—fully automatic knives that deploy at the press of a button, push of a lever, or gravitational/inertial action. A spring-assisted knife requires the user to start opening the blade manually (via a flipper or thumb stud) before the assist spring engages. Many states treat these differently from full autos, though state and local laws vary widely.

Translation: in several regions where carrying a true automatic or OTF switchblade is restricted, a spring-assisted EDC like this is often more defensible. It gives you near-automatic speed with a mechanism that’s frequently viewed more favorably by legislators—though you must check your local and state regulations before carrying any edged tool.

Automatic Knives for Sale: How This Knife Complements a Serious Collection

For a serious buyer who already owns dedicated automatic knives, OTFs, and classic side-open switchblades, the Shadowline Velocity plays a different role: the beater you’re not afraid to use, the one that still respects the mechanical craft.

  • Action: A tuned assist that feels crisp without being twitchy
  • Carry: Pocketable dimensions with a discreet clip and light weight
  • Design: Black/blue tactical styling that looks at home next to higher-end autos
  • Mechanics: Reliable liner lock with clear engagement and easy one-handed close

It’s the knife you lend to a friend without flinching, but still enjoy flicking open yourself because the action actually delivers.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act) primarily regulates the interstate commerce of automatic knives and switchblades, especially concerning shipment across state lines and into federal jurisdictions. It does not outright ban ownership for most individuals, but it restricts how and where true switchblades and some OTF knives can be sold or transported.

The real complexity comes from state and local laws. Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few restrictions; others impose blade-length limits, carry restrictions (such as only allowing them on private property), or outright bans on carry or sale. A spring-assisted knife like the Shadowline Velocity is often treated differently from a true automatic knife, but definitions vary by statute.

Before you buy or carry any automatic, OTF, or spring-assisted knife, you should read your state and local laws directly or consult reliable knife law resources. Nothing here is legal advice—just the framework you need to know to ask the right questions.

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

Enthusiasts use these terms precisely, and so should any dealer:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: Side-opening knife that deploys the blade fully with the press of a button, lever, or similar control. You don’t have to start the blade moving yourself—the mechanism does the work.
  • OTF (Out-The-Front): A subtype of automatic knife where the blade travels along the handle’s axis and exits the front instead of swinging out from the side. Often double-action, meaning the same control deploys and retracts the blade.
  • Spring-assisted knife: A manually opened folding knife where you start the blade (with a flipper or thumb stud), and an internal spring takes over partway to finish the deployment. The Shadowline Velocity is in this category—not a full auto, not an OTF.

For buyers, that distinction affects legality, deployment behavior, and how the knife fits into your collection.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

If we’re speaking broadly about the automatic knife for sale category, the value always comes down to three things: action quality, lock integrity, and how honestly the steel matches the price point. With the Shadowline Velocity specifically, you’re getting near-automatic deployment speed from a spring-assisted mechanism, a solid liner lock, and a corrosion-resistant 3Cr13 blade in a black oxidized finish that shrugs off daily abuse.

Add in the black/blue anodized aluminum handle with functional grooves, a discreet clip, and pocketable dimensions, and you end up with a knife that behaves like a practical EDC but still earns a slot beside your autos. It’s not trying to be a grail piece; it’s trying to be the one you actually carry—and it succeeds.

For Enthusiasts Who Take Their Automatic Knife for Sale Choices Seriously

If your idea of an automatic knife for sale is more than a flashy thumbnail—if you’re the buyer who notices lock geometry, deployment tuning, and how aluminum feels after a long day in pocket—the Shadowline Velocity Assisted EDC Knife - Black/Blue Aluminum fits your lane. It delivers spring-assisted speed, honest working steel, and a design language that won’t embarrass your collection.

This is for the enthusiast who buys with both their hands and their head—and wants a knife that respects the difference between true automatic, OTF, switchblade, and a well-tuned assisted EDC built to be used.

Blade Length (inches) 3.24
Overall Length (inches) 7.75
Closed Length (inches) 4.51
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Black oxidized
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Anodized Aluminum
Theme Tactical
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock