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Longhorn Stampede Double-Action Out-the-Front Knife - Black Zinc Alloy

Price:

20.86


Stealth Grid Quick-Deploy Double-Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
Stealth Grid Quick-Deploy Double-Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
8.95 8.95
Mission-Ready Field-Curated Lock Pick Set - Black Nylon
Mission-Ready Field-Curated Lock Pick Set - Black Nylon
5.50 5.50

Stampede Grit Texas Pride OTF Knife - Black Zinc Alloy

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This automatic knife for sale is a Texas-forward double-action OTF built for people who actually use their gear. The top-mounted thumb slide drives a fast, positive deployment and solid lockup, sending that two-tone American tanto blade out the front with authority. Partial serrations chew through rope and strap, while the glass-breaker pommel and MOLLE nylon sheath make it truck, ranch, or range-ready. If you buy an automatic knife for honest work and Lone Star pride, this one earns pocket time.

20.86 20.86 USD 20.86

SB194LHBKTS

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Automatic Knife for Sale With Real Texas Attitude

If you're going to carry an automatic knife for sale with Texas stamped down the side, it better have the mechanics to back the swagger. The Stampede Grit Texas Pride OTF Knife - Black Zinc Alloy isn’t a novelty piece; it’s a double-action out-the-front that snaps to attention with a top-mounted thumb slide and locks up with the kind of confidence you feel in your hand, not just in the product copy.

At nine inches overall with a 3.625-inch American tanto blade, this is a full-size OTF automatic built for people who understand the difference between a toy switchblade and a working out-the-front knife.

Automatic Knives for Sale That Celebrate the Mechanism

When you buy an automatic knife, the only thing that really matters after the steel is the action. This one runs a double-action OTF mechanism: thumb forward to fire, thumb back to retract, same control, same track. No separate release, no manual reset ritual. The slide rides the spine of the handle where it belongs on a serious OTF, giving your thumb a straight-line drive directly in line with the blade.

The action is tuned for a positive, decisive deployment — not the dainty, half-hearted jump you get on bargain-bin switchblade clones. That zinc alloy chassis adds mass, and mass in an OTF is your friend. It damps vibration, stabilizes the blade on lockup, and gives the mechanism a solid foundation instead of a flexy rattle trap.

Double-Action OTF You Can Actually Work With

Double-action out-the-front systems live or die on their track and timing. Here, the blade rides cleanly in a straight channel, driven by a coil spring that’s balanced to punch the blade out with authority but still be controllable when you’re gloved, wet, or cold. You feel a firm, tactile ramp in the slide — deliberate enough to prevent pocket misfires, smooth enough that repeated cycles don’t chew up your thumb.

OTF guys know this: a good automatic knife should cycle hundreds of times without feeling gritty or lazy. This one is built to be flicked, run, and trusted.

Two-Tone Tanto With Real-World Bite

The blade is classic American tanto with a strong secondary point — the geometry you reach for when puncture strength matters more than pure slicing. The two-tone finish isn’t just for looks; the contrast lines highlight the grind and give you a visual cue on that transition point when you’re indexing the tip in low light.

Partial serrations on the lower section of the edge let you attack fibrous material — rope, webbing, banding — without sacrificing a clean, straight primary edge up front for controlled push cuts. The fuller and blade holes lighten the profile slightly and add that industrial, tactical aesthetic collectors gravitate toward in OTF and switchblade-style builds.

Buy Automatic Knife Engineering, Not Just Graphics

Yes, the Texas longhorn and TEXAS wordmark on the handle are unapologetically bold. But underneath the artwork is a rectangular, matte black zinc alloy frame with cutout panels and jimping that keep this from being a slick brick in the hand.

At 5.5 inches closed and over eight ounces, this automatic OTF is unapologetically substantial. That weight means when the blade locks open, it feels anchored. No tinny echo, no flexy handle. Pocket clip is tip-down and mounted to keep the knife riding deep without burying it so far you can’t get a full purchase on the draw.

Carry Reality: Truck, Range, and Ranch

Some automatic knives for sale are clearly built for desk-drawer duty. This one shows up with a MOLLE nylon sheath, which tells you exactly where it expects to live: on a belt, vest, or pack, not just in a display case. The glass-breaker pommel with lanyard hole is more than a design flourish — it turns the knife into an impact tool for emergencies and gives you a secure tie-down point in rough country or in a truck cab.

For EDC, the footprint is rectangular and predictable in the pocket. This is not a featherweight gentleman’s switchblade; it’s a worker. But if your daily carry includes boots and a belt, the size and weight make sense the first time you pop that blade out the front on a real task.

Steel, Edge, and Why It Matters to Enthusiasts

Serious buyers don’t just ask if a knife is automatic — they ask what the blade can actually do when it gets there. Here you’ve got a steel blade built for practical utility: the American tanto tip shoulders the hard work, the straight edge handles your clean cuts, and the serrations do the ugly jobs that ruin polished edges on lesser knives.

On a double-action OTF, the steel has to play nicely with the mechanism. The grinds are crisp enough that the blade doesn’t drag in the channel, and the spine is straight enough to keep the track honest. That’s the difference between a knife that feels like it’s scraping its way out versus one that drives forward like it’s on rails.

Automatic Knife Legal Context: What Texas Pride Can and Can’t Do

Any time you see automatic knives for sale — especially OTF or switchblade-style pieces — legality isn’t a footnote, it’s a purchase filter. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives are restricted primarily in interstate commerce to certain channels and exceptions, but day-to-day carry is governed by state and sometimes local statutes.

Some states now allow automatic, OTF, and traditional switchblade knives with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, restrict concealed carry, or ban certain mechanisms outright. A handful still treat any automatic opening knife as contraband. Texas itself has become far more automatic-friendly in recent years, but that doesn’t magically legalize this knife in every jurisdiction you travel through.

You are responsible for knowing your local and state regulations before you buy an automatic knife or clip one into your pocket, duty belt, or pack.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knife legality is a two-layer equation. Federal law (notably the Switchblade Knife Act) restricts manufacture, import, and interstate shipment of automatic knives, with specific exemptions for military, law enforcement, and certain uses. But whether you can carry an automatic knife, OTF, or traditional switchblade day-to-day is decided by your state and, in some cases, your city or county.

Some states fully permit automatic knives for adults; others impose blade-length caps, limit concealed carry, or only allow them for law enforcement or active-duty military. A minority still prohibit them outright. Before you buy an automatic knife or strap an OTF to your gear, check current laws where you live and where you travel — don’t rely on internet myth or outdated forum posts.

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

“Automatic knife” is the broad category: any knife that opens its blade using a spring or stored energy when you activate a button, lever, or slide that’s integral to the handle. A side-opening automatic looks like a normal folding knife but snaps open from the side.

“OTF” — out-the-front — describes the blade path, not the law. An OTF automatic like this Texas Pride model drives the blade straight out the front of the handle along a track. This particular knife is a double-action OTF, meaning the same thumb slide both deploys and retracts the blade.

“Switchblade” is a legal and cultural term usually referring to side-opening automatics, but many laws use it to cover all automatic knives, including OTF designs. Mechanically, all OTFs in this category are automatic knives; legally, many jurisdictions call them switchblades as well.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, you’re getting a true double-action OTF with a positive, track-stable deployment — not a springy novelty flicker. The two-tone American tanto blade with partial serrations is designed for real tasks: puncturing, controlled cutting, and ripping through webbing or rope without babying the edge.

Structurally, the black zinc alloy handle gives the mechanism a rigid backbone and satisfying in-hand heft, while the glass-breaker pommel, pocket clip, and MOLLE nylon sheath push it firmly into the truck-and-ranch EDC lane rather than the display-case-only category. Add the unapologetic Texas longhorn theme, and you’ve got an automatic OTF that actually earns its space in a collector drawer or on a working belt.

For Collectors Who Buy Automatic Knives With Purpose

If your collection is more than a row of safe queens and you judge an automatic knife for sale by its action first and paint job second, the Stampede Grit Texas Pride OTF Knife belongs in the conversation. It’s a double-action out-the-front that feels like a tool, not a movie prop — tuned for repeated deployment, built on a solid zinc alloy frame, and finished with a Texas motif that’s earned, not faked.

For the enthusiast who wants an automatic OTF that can live in the truck, work on the range, and still stand up in an OTF and switchblade collection, this is the kind of knife you buy once and remember why every time you thumb that slide forward.

Blade Length (inches) 3.625
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 8.24
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Zinc alloy
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme Texas Longhorn
Double/Single Action Double Action
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster MOLLE nylon sheath