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Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Blue ABS

Price:

3.95


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Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife - Blue ABS

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An automatic knife for sale that actually keeps pace with you. The Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife pairs a 2.5-inch drop point blade with a push-button action that snaps open cleanly and locks with authority. The blue ABS handle offers textured grip without bulk, while the compact 5.75-inch overall length, pocket clip, and lanyard hole make it disappear until needed. For the enthusiast who values fast, controlled deployment over hype, this is the automatic you carry because it just works.

3.95 3.95 USD 3.95

SB980BL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic Knife for Sale That’s Built for Real-World Pace

The Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife is what happens when you strip an automatic down to what actually matters: clean push-button action, a practical 2.5-inch drop point, and a compact footprint that doesn’t fight your pocket. If you’re looking to buy automatic knife designs that favor everyday control over mall-ninja drama, this one earns its space.

Why This Compact Automatic Knife for Sale Deserves a Spot in Your Rotation

This is a true side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF and not a spring-assist pretending to be one. Hit the push button and the coil spring drives the blade out of the handle on a single axis, then the lock engages with a satisfying, audible confirmation. No rattle, no half-hearted deployment—you get consistent, one-handed opening from a closed length of just 3.35 inches.

With an overall length of 5.75 inches and a 2.5-inch plain-edge drop point, the Skyline Sprint stays inside the sweet spot for everyday carry: enough blade to actually cut, small enough to carry in any pocket without advertising itself. The matte silver blade resists glare, while the blue ABS handle gives you texture and control without punishing your jeans or work pants.

Mechanics That Matter: Action, Geometry, and Everyday Control

If you’re going to buy an automatic knife, the action either earns your trust or it doesn’t. The Skyline Sprint uses a push-button, side-opening automatic mechanism: press the button, the internal spring takes over, and the blade snaps into lockup along a single pivot. This is not an out-the-front (OTF) design, where the blade rides in a channel and fires linearly; it’s a classic automatic folder built for repeatable, familiar deployment.

Push-Button Automatic Action You Can Read in Your Hand

The deployment on this knife is tuned for control, not theatrics. The coil spring delivers enough force to seat the blade decisively without jerking the knife out of your grip. The button sits slightly proud of the blue ABS handle, making it easy to index by feel, yet the handle contour and pocket clip side help shield it from accidental activation in pocket carry.

Blade Shape and Edge Use in the Real World

The drop point profile is the quiet workhorse of blade geometry: a strong spine that tapers to a point you can actually steer, with enough belly for slicing tasks. On a 2.5-inch blade, that means controlled tip work for opening boxes, cutting cord, and basic utility without a fragile needle point. The plain edge keeps sharpening simple and efficient—no serrations to snag, no gimmicks, just a straight working edge you can tune on a stone or pocket sharpener in minutes.

Automatic Knives for Sale That Actually Carry Well

A lot of people talk about automatic knives like they live in a display case. The Skyline Sprint is built to live in a pocket. At 3.35 inches closed, it rides lighter than most phones, and the integrated pocket clip keeps it oriented for consistent draw and deployment. The blue ABS handle is textured where you need traction and smooth where you need to slide it past your pocket seam without tearing fabric.

The lanyard hole at the butt of the handle is more than decorative. For collectors and enthusiasts who swap gear often, a small fob or cord makes retrieval faster and keeps the knife from diving deep in a crowded pocket or pack. The handle screws are accessible along the spine, so if you’re the kind of owner who likes to check hardware and keep things dialed in, you’re not locked out of your own gear.

Legal Context: Buying an Automatic Knife the Right Way

Any serious buyer looking at automatic knives for sale knows the mechanism is only half the story—the other half is whether you can legally carry it. In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly regulates interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives and switchblades, especially through the mail. Where it really gets nuanced is at the state and local level: some states allow automatic knives and OTF designs with few restrictions, others limit blade length, carry method, or restrict them altogether.

This Skyline Sprint is a side-opening automatic folding knife with a 2.5-inch blade, which puts it on the more compact, EDC-friendly end of the spectrum. That can help in jurisdictions where shorter blades are treated more leniently, but it does not override local automatic knife laws. Before you buy automatic knife models like this for everyday carry, check your specific state and city regulations to confirm how and where an automatic knife is legal to carry.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (including many designs people casually call “switchblades”) sit in a mixed legal environment. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act restricts manufacturing, sale, and shipment of automatic knives across state lines through traditional channels, with certain exemptions for law enforcement, military, and some in-state transactions. The real deciding factor for you is state and local law: some states fully allow automatic knives for adults, others allow possession but limit carry, some set blade-length caps, and a few still prohibit them.

The Skyline Sprint, as a compact side-opening automatic, doesn’t change those rules—it just fits more comfortably in places where smaller EDC blades are favored. Always verify your own state and city laws before carrying any automatic knife, and remember that what’s legal to buy online may not be legal to carry everywhere you go.

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

Mechanically speaking, “automatic knife” is the broad category: a folding or OTF knife that opens by pressing a button, switch, or similar control, with spring power doing the work. The Skyline Sprint is a side-opening automatic folder—a blade that pivots out of the handle from a closed position when the button is pressed.

OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels in and out of the handle along a straight channel, firing forward through an opening in the front. Many OTF knives are double-action, meaning the same control both deploys and retracts the blade.

“Switchblade” is largely a legal and cultural term that overlaps with automatic knives—most laws use it to describe knives that open automatically with a button or similar device. Enthusiasts tend to speak in more precise mechanical terms: side-opening automatic, OTF, single-action, double-action, and so on. The Skyline Sprint is best described as a compact side-opening automatic EDC knife.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Several things set the Skyline Sprint apart from throwaway automatics. First is its tuned push-button action: crisp, reliable deployment without the overpowered kick that can knock a light knife off-line. Second is the practical geometry—a 2.5-inch drop point in a 5.75-inch overall package hits a proven EDC ratio that’s comfortable, controllable, and less likely to trip length limits.

Then there’s the carry reality: blue ABS scales that lock into your grip without tearing pockets, a proper pocket clip, and a lanyard option. For a collector or enthusiast, this makes a perfect “use it without guilt” automatic—an everyday piece you can loan, beat up, or keep as a reliable backup to your higher-end side-opening or OTF switchblade collection.

For the Enthusiast Who Buys Automatic Knives with Intent

If your idea of a good automatic knife for sale is one you don’t have to babysit, the Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic EDC Knife belongs in your lineup. It’s mechanically honest, sized for real-world pockets, and straightforward to maintain. Whether it rides as a primary EDC or a backup to your more exotic OTF and switchblade pieces, it gives you what an automatic should: fast, controlled deployment and a blade that’s ready when you actually need to cut something.

Blade Length (inches) 2.5
Overall Length (inches) 5.75
Closed Length (inches) 3.35
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material ABS
Button Type Push button
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes