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Silver Flow Precision Butterfly Knife - Satin Steel

Price:

13.61


Shadowflow Tactical Butterfly Knife - Black Steel
Shadowflow Tactical Butterfly Knife - Black Steel
13.61 13.61
Steel Flow Precision Butterfly Knife - Silver
Steel Flow Precision Butterfly Knife - Silver
13.61 13.61

Skeleton Glide Butterfly Knife - All Stainless Steel

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5 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a toy balisong; it’s a full stainless Skeleton Glide Butterfly Knife built for smooth, repeatable flips. The CNC-machined handles, starbit pivots, and Teflon bushings give you that controlled, low-friction swing balisong guys look for. A 3.5" clip point stainless blade, solid bottom latch, and all-silver monochrome profile make it a clean, durable piece to actually train and carry. If you appreciate a well-tuned butterfly knife more than loud colors, this one makes sense.

13.61 13.61 USD 13.61

BFJL03A

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

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Skeleton Glide Butterfly Knife for Sale – Built for the Flip, Not the Hype

If you’re here for a real butterfly knife, not a rattly gas-station toy, this Skeleton Glide Butterfly Knife for sale earns a spot in your rotation. All stainless, CNC cut, tuned on Teflon bushings – this is a balisong that feels like it was built by someone who actually flips.

The all-silver finish is deliberate. No neon, no fake tactical paint. Just clean satin stainless that shows off the machining and the mechanics. Every cutout, every pivot, every latch is there to serve the action.

Why This Butterfly Knife’s Action Feels Better Than the Price Suggests

The first test of any butterfly knife is the swing. Does it chatter, bind, or hesitate – or does it track clean through an opening combo? This one leans hard into the latter.

Teflon-Bushing Pivots for Low-Friction Flipping

Look at the gap between blade and handles – it’s tight, consistent, and rides on Teflon bushings. That permanent lubricity is why the blade glides instead of grinding its way open. You get a smooth, damped feel that’s noticeably more refined than simple washer-based pivots at this price point.

The starbit pivot screws are oversized for a reason: they give you a wider bearing surface and better stability under repetitive flipping. It’s the kind of hardware detail knife-show people notice immediately.

All-Stainless Construction with Real-World Balance

At 8.25" overall with a 3.5" clip point blade and 6.35 oz weight, this butterfly knife sits in that sweet spot where you feel the momentum without fighting it. The skeletonized handles pull a bit of weight out while keeping the swing authoritative. It’s not a featherlight competition balisong – it’s a solid, confidence-building flipper with enough mass to track your motion.

Clip Point Blade That’s Meant to Cut, Not Just Spin

A lot of entry-level butterfly knives cheat with soft mystery steel and fat edges. This one doesn’t bother playing that game. You get a satin-finished stainless clip point blade with a plain edge that actually wants to take and hold an edge.

The grind lines are visible where the edge is honed – this isn’t a decorative trainer. It’s a live blade balisong that will absolutely cut if you treat it like a toy. The clip point profile gives you a fine tip for detail work and piercing, with enough belly to handle basic EDC tasks if you decide to put it in pocket instead of on the shelf.

Bottom Latch That Actually Stays Put

The bottom latch is properly tuned to snap into place and stay there. Closed, it keeps the handles locked enough that the knife doesn’t rattle open in a bag. Open, it anchors the handles and helps the whole piece feel like one solid unit, not two loose arms hanging off a blade.

That secure latch-up matters if you’re practicing manipulation or carrying it. An unreliable latch is how you end up chasing your knife across the floor, or worse, getting bitten by your own blade mid-trick.

Automatic Knife vs. Butterfly Action – Why This Balisong Still Belongs in an Auto Collector’s Case

If you collect automatic knives, OTFs, and classic switchblades, you’re already tuned into mechanical nuance. This butterfly knife isn’t an automatic knife in the legal or mechanical sense – there’s no spring that fires the blade on a button press. Instead, it’s a pure manual balisong, powered by your hands and gravity.

But here’s why it still fits into the same enthusiast lane as your favorite automatic knife for sale: you’re buying action quality. Where a double-action OTF lives or dies by its track and spring tuning, a butterfly knife lives or dies by its pivots, handle geometry, and latch design. This stainless balisong checks those boxes with the same seriousness a good auto brings to its button, sear, and coil spring.

For the collector who already knows how a crisp automatic knife should feel when it fires, this Skeleton Glide gives you that same satisfaction – just stretched across a flip instead of a snap.

Legal Context: Where a Butterfly Knife Sits Next to Automatic Knives and Switchblades

Any time you buy an automatic knife, OTF, switchblade, or butterfly knife, the law has to be part of the conversation. Federally in the U.S., automatic knife and switchblade regulations are driven by the Federal Switchblade Act, which focuses heavily on interstate commerce and autos with push-button or gravity-assisted opening.

A butterfly knife (balisong) like this is a manual folder: there’s no spring that automatically propels the blade, and deployment requires deliberate manipulation of the handles. That said, some states and cities treat butterfly knives similarly to switchblades or automatic knives for purposes of carry or ownership.

The bottom line: laws vary widely by state, and sometimes even by county or municipality. Before you buy, carry, or flip this knife in public, check your local and state regulations on balisongs, automatic knives, and switchblades. When in doubt, consult current statutes or a qualified legal source – not just forum hearsay.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (including most push-button switchblades and many OTF designs) are regulated under federal law mainly for interstate sale and shipping, but the real complexity lives at the state level. Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few restrictions, others limit blade length or carry type, and a few largely prohibit them.

This butterfly knife is not an automatic knife, but many jurisdictions lump balisongs into the same legal conversations as autos. Always check your specific state and local laws on automatic knives, OTFs, switchblades, and balisongs before carrying. If you’re crossing state lines, re-check – legality doesn’t travel with you.

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

Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:

  • Automatic knife: A folding or OTF knife where a spring drives the blade open when a button, lever, or switch is activated. You don’t move the blade manually; the spring does the work.
  • OTF (Out-The-Front): A subtype of automatic knife where the blade deploys straight out the front of the handle, often single-action (fire, then manually reset) or double-action (button/switch both fires and retracts).
  • Switchblade: In common U.S. legal language, essentially the same as an automatic knife – a spring-driven blade that opens via a button or similar device in the handle.

This Skeleton Glide is a butterfly knife / balisong: a manual folding design with two handles that rotate around the tang. There is no spring-fired automatic action; deployment is all manual manipulation.

What makes this butterfly knife worth buying?

For an enthusiast, it’s the sum of the mechanical details. You’re getting CNC-machined stainless handles, Teflon-bushed pivots, oversized starbit hardware, a properly tuned bottom latch, and a real cutting blade – not a toy trainer. The action is predictably smooth, the construction is durable, and the all-silver, skeletonized profile gives it that clean, modern balisong aesthetic.

If you already own an automatic knife or two and want a butterfly knife that respects the same engineering mindset – not just a flashy prop – this piece gives you honest mechanics at a price you don’t have to baby.

For the Collector Who Buys on Action, Not Hype

Whether your case is full of automatic knives, OTFs, or classic switchblades, a good butterfly knife earns its slot by how it moves. The Skeleton Glide Butterfly Knife delivers a tuned, repeatable flip, stainless durability, and a clean, unapologetically mechanical look.

If you’re the kind of buyer who listens to the sound of a lockup, watches the blade track through the swing, and notices pivot hardware before paint jobs, this is the sort of knife you add on purpose – not by accident.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 6.35
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Satin
Handle Material Stainless steel
Theme None
Latch Type Bottom latch
Is Trainer No