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Lone Wolf Quick-Assist Assisted Opening Knife - Matte Black

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2.61


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Silent Range Wolf-Assisted EDC Knife - Matte Black

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This assisted opening knife isn’t pretending to be anything it’s not. The Silent Range Wolf-Assisted EDC Knife snaps to attention with a flipper-driven assist that’s fast, controlled, and easy to repeat one-handed. The matte black drop point keeps reflections down and cuts clean; the liner lock engages with a confident bite. Wolf-and-forest handle art gives it a backcountry attitude, while the deep-carry clip and jimped grip make it a realistic daily carry, not just a display piece.

2.61 2.61 USD 2.61 3.95

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Assisted Reality: What This Wolf EDC Actually Is

If you’re shopping automatic knives for sale and you’ve landed here, let’s start by calling the mechanism what it is. The Silent Range Wolf-Assisted EDC Knife is not a true automatic knife or switchblade. It’s an assisted-opening folder: you start the motion with the flipper tab, and an internal spring finishes the job. That distinction matters—mechanically, legally, and for how you carry it every day.

Collectors who buy automatic knives, OTFs, and assisted folders know this: the joy is in the action. This wolf-themed knife earns its place in that conversation because the assist is tuned for a clean, confident snap without the unpredictable kick of a cheap coil spring auto. You’re in control from the first millimeter of movement.

Buying an Automatic Knife for Sale? Why an Assisted Opener Still Belongs in Your Rotation

Serious buyers who search for an automatic knife for sale usually already own a few side-opening autos or even a double-action OTF. What they add next is often an assisted-opener that’s easier to carry, easier to explain legally, and more forgiving in daily use. This wolf knife hits that slot: fast like an automatic, but with a deliberate first push that keeps deployment predictable and pocket-safe.

The flipper tab and assist work together: a small, consistent press of the tab overcomes the detent, the assist spring kicks in, and the blade glides into lock-up with a quiet, confident click. No excessive recoil, no handle twist, and no need to choke up to control it. The liner lock engages fully and releases with a familiar, one-handed motion that most EDC users can run blindfolded (don’t, but you get the idea).

Mechanics That Matter: Action, Lockup, and Carry Geometry

An enthusiast doesn’t ask, “Is it fast?” They ask, “How is it fast?” This assisted opener answers that with a tuned, repeatable action and sensible ergonomics.

Flipper-Driven Assisted Action

The primary deployment is the flipper tab. You’re not relying on a tiny button or thumb stud that shifts under pressure. The flipper gives you a positive index point, even with gloves or cold fingers. Once you break the detent, the assist takes over and drives the matte black drop point into position. It’s the kind of snap that feels mechanical, not violent—more precision tool than novelty flick knife.

Liner Lock Confidence and Real Grip Features

The liner lock seats with a clear, tactile stop. No half-hearted engagement, no wandering lock face. Add in the jimping and finger grooves on the handle, and you get a grip that stays put when you bear down on a cut. This isn’t an art knife that falls apart when you actually use it; the wolf scene is printed over a handle shape designed for control.

Where This Wolf Knife Fits in a Collector’s Automatic and OTF Lineup

Most collectors shopping automatic knives for sale already own a hard-hitting side-opening automatic or at least one double-action OTF. This assisted opener occupies a different, complementary role: the piece you can clip in a pocket, loan to a friend who respects knives, or take on a camping trip without babying it.

The wolf wilderness artwork—wolves, trees, a cabin—gives it a distinct identity in a tray full of black and gray tactical blades. It’s the knife that still works like a serious EDC while nodding to the backcountry. The matte black blade finish keeps the visual noise on the handle from becoming a liability; the business end stays subdued, non-reflective, and focused on cutting.

Deep-Carry Clip and Real-World EDC

The deep-carry style pocket clip lets the knife ride low in the pocket—less visual signature, less catching on seatbelts or pack straps. Add the lanyard hole at the handle end and you’ve got multiple ways to stage and retrieve it. This is the kind of detail EDC people notice: a knife that disappears until you need it, and then comes out cleanly without dragging half your pocket’s contents along for the ride.

Legal Context: Automatic Knife, Assisted Opener, and How Lines Are Drawn

When buyers search for an automatic knife for sale, the next tab they open is usually about laws. Here’s the clear framework: under U.S. federal law, a true automatic knife/switchblade opens fully at the press of a button, switch, or similar device without the user manually moving the blade. Interstate commerce and mailing of those knives are regulated by the Federal Switchblade Act, with exemptions for certain uses and agencies.

An assisted opening knife like this wolf EDC requires the user to start blade movement manually—typically via a flipper or thumb stud—before the assist mechanism engages. Many U.S. states and municipalities treat assisted openers differently from automatic knives or OTF switchblades, often more leniently. However, knife law is highly state- and even city-specific, and it changes over time.

Nothing here is legal advice. Before you carry any automatic knife, OTF, switchblade, or assisted opener, check your current state and local laws. Look for specifics like blade length limits, definitions of “spring-assisted,” and any restrictions on concealed carry. The mechanical distinction between a full automatic knife and an assisted opener is exactly what some jurisdictions build their rules on—know which side of that line your knife sits.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (often called switchblades) are governed by both federal and state law. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act restricts interstate shipment, import, and certain sales, with carve-outs for military, law enforcement, and other specific uses. Day-to-day carry legality, though, is largely a state and local issue. Some states now allow automatic knives with few restrictions; others limit blade length, carry method, or ban them outright. Assisted opening knives, like this wolf EDC, are usually treated separately—because you must start the blade movement manually. Always verify current laws where you live and where you travel; don’t rely on old forum posts.

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

Mechanically:

  • Automatic knife (side-opening): A folding knife whose blade opens from the side when you press a button or switch. The spring does all the work from a fully closed position.
  • Switchblade: In U.S. legal language, this usually means the same thing as an automatic knife—spring-opened at the press of a button or similar device.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: A blade that moves straight out the front of the handle, powered by a spring. Double-action OTFs both deploy and retract under spring tension; single-action deploys automatically but must be manually reset.
  • Assisted opener (this knife): Looks like a manual folder, but has a spring that helps once you start opening the blade with a flipper or thumb stud. It will not open from fully closed without that initial manual input.

This wolf knife sits firmly in the assisted opening category: flipper-initiated, spring-assisted, side-opening, with a liner lock.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

For a buyer used to scanning automatic knives for sale, this assisted EDC justifies its pocket space in a few specific ways. The flipper-driven assist gives you auto-like speed without the harsher recoil or legal baggage of a full switchblade in many jurisdictions. The matte black drop point is practical: good general-purpose geometry, reduced glare, and easy indexing on cuts. The wolf wilderness handle art gives it a distinct collector identity without sacrificing ergonomics—finger grooves, jimping, and a deep-carry clip are still doing real work. It’s the kind of knife you can actually use while still enjoying the aesthetics every time you flip it open.

For Enthusiasts Who Know Why Mechanism Matters

If you’re the buyer who can feel the difference between a sloppy gas-station flicker and a properly tuned assisted action, this knife will make sense in your hand. It won’t replace a premium automatic knife for sale in your collection, but it will stand beside those autos, OTFs, and switchblades as the piece you clip on when you want speed, control, and a little wolf-in-the-treeline attitude in your everyday carry.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Theme Wolf Theme
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock