Stealth Grid Double-Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
4 sold in last 24 hours
This automatic knife for sale is a true double-action OTF built for people who care how an action feels. A spine-mounted slide drives the 3.25" double-edge dagger out and back with a clean, positive snap, helped by that rubberized grid handle locking your grip. It carries slim at 5.75" closed, rides deep on the clip, or bolts to gear via the MOLLE sheath. If you buy automatic knives for the mechanics, this one earns its pocket space.
Automatic Knives for Sale That Put the Mechanism First
If you’re going to buy an automatic knife, it should earn its keep the second your thumb hits the actuator. This Stealth Grid Double-Action OTF Knife - Matte Black is built around that moment: a spine-mounted slide, a double-edge dagger blade, and a grip that actually locks in when your hands are cold, wet, or gloved.
At 5.75 inches closed and 9 inches overall, this is a full-size automatic knife for sale that still carries like a serious EDC. The profile is lean, the hardware is low-visibility, and the entire package is purpose-built for people who care as much about the mechanism as the steel.
Automatic Knife for Sale: Double-Action OTF, Not Just a Generic Switchblade
Mechanically, this is a double-action OTF automatic knife: same slide, same hand position to send the blade out and to pull it back. No separate re-cock, no two-hand ritual. The slide rides the spine of the handle so your grip doesn’t have to shift—push forward for deployment, pull back for retraction. The tension is tuned for a confident snap without fighting you, which is exactly where a working OTF needs to live.
That matters, because not every automatic or switchblade does this well. On a sloppy OTF, the blade can feel like it’s rattling along the channel. Here, the dagger blade tracks straight, the play is kept to the tiny tolerance an OTF needs to run, and you feel that clean engagement each time the internal lock seats. It’s the kind of feedback that tells you the knife is actually locked, not just somewhere near locked.
Two-Tone Dagger Geometry With Real-World Intent
The 3.25-inch double-edge dagger blade is built for penetration and directional neutrality. Symmetrical grinds, central fuller, and lightening holes keep the blade balanced without getting cute. The dual edges give you the same cutting and thrusting profile whether you’re drawing forward or reversing your stroke—one of the reasons many collectors favor dagger-style OTFs over standard clip-point automatics.
Stainless steel gives you corrosion resistance you won’t get from carbon steels left wet in a duty sheath or on a rig. It’s not pretending to be a high-end boutique steel; it’s built to hold a working edge and shrug off sweat, humidity, and disinterest in babying your gear.
Grip Grid Handle: Why the Rubberized Texture Matters
The handle is where this automatic knife pulls away from the commodity crowd. That rubberized, matte black “grip grid” pattern isn’t just decoration—it’s functional geometry. The raised grid elements bite into your palm without tearing skin or gloves, and the rubberized surface damps sweat, oil, and rain in a way bare aluminum never will.
When you drive a double-action OTF, you’re putting directional force into a narrow spine-mounted slide. A slippery handle means lost energy and lousy control. This grid texture keeps your hand anchored so you can run the slide decisively and still have a locked-in grip the moment the blade fires.
Buy Automatic Knife With Real Carry Options, Not Gimmicks
Automatic knives for sale live or die by how they carry. This one gives you both pocket and gear-mounted options that actually work. The deep-carry pocket clip tucks the handle low, keeping that matte black profile quiet and discreet. No bright hardware, no high-riding billboard announcing you’re carrying an OTF.
When pocket carry isn’t the move, the included MOLLE-compatible nylon sheath lets you rig this automatic knife on plate carriers, belts, or bags. The 9-inch overall length means you get a full, confident grip when it’s drawn, but the profile is still slim enough that it doesn’t become dead weight on your kit.
Mechanics That Earn Collector Respect in an Automatic Knife for Sale
If you’re a collector, you’re not just buying an automatic knife, you’re buying an action. The Stealth Grid stands out in three specific ways: the tuned slide tension, the controlled blade track, and the end-to-end design coherence.
- Slide Tension: The actuator has deliberate resistance both forward and back, preventing accidental activation while still feeling snappy and responsive. It’s not "hair-trigger easy"—it’s duty appropriate.
- Blade Track: The blade rides its internal rails without excessive rattle. There’s the expected minimal OTF play, but no lazy side-to-side slop you see in bottom-tier double-action switchblades.
- Design Coherence: Dagger blade, grid handle, glass-breaker pommel, and low-profile hardware are all speaking the same language: modern tactical, not mall-ninja spectacle.
For an enthusiast who already owns side-opening automatics and traditional switchblades, this OTF fills the “straight-line deployment” slot in the collection: a blade that leaves the handle on the same axis as your grip, with a double edge to keep that profile consistent in any orientation.
Everyday Use, Tactical Intent
With a 5.75-inch closed length, this automatic knife lands in the sweet spot between pocket hog and underbuilt toy. It’s large enough to feel like a real tool in the hand, yet compact enough that you won’t talk yourself out of clipping it on before you leave the house.
The glass-breaker style pommel isn’t just a visual cue; in emergencies it gives you a dedicated impact point that keeps the blade folded away from what you’re striking. On a true duty-focused automatic, that separation matters.
Automatic Knife Legal Context: What Responsible Buyers Need to Know
Owning and carrying an automatic knife, OTF knife, or any form of switchblade in the United States is a combination of federal and state law. Federally, automatic knives are regulated mainly under the Federal Switchblade Act, which restricts interstate commerce and certain forms of shipping, especially across state lines and into specific jurisdictions. That doesn’t mean they’re automatically illegal to own, but it does affect how they can be sold and transported.
Where it really matters for you is at the state and local level. Some states allow OTF automatic knives for everyday carry with few restrictions, others limit blade length, deployment type, or who may carry them (for example, law enforcement or active-duty military exemptions), and some still ban automatic or switchblade mechanisms outright for general carry. City or county ordinances can be stricter than state law.
Before you decide this is the best automatic knife for EDC in your rotation, verify your local laws by checking your state statute and any local municipal codes. Look specifically for terms like “automatic knife,” “OTF knife,” and “switchblade” since the law may distinguish between them. When in doubt, talk to a local attorney or law enforcement agency that’s familiar with knife laws in your area. Responsible ownership is part of being a serious knife enthusiast.
What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife
Are automatic knives legal?
In the U.S., automatic knives—including OTF and switchblade-style designs—exist in a legal patchwork. Federally, the Switchblade Act restricts interstate shipment and import of certain automatic knives, but it does not by itself make simple possession illegal for most individuals. The real deciding factor is state and local law.
Some states fully allow automatic knives for everyday carry, others restrict blade length or concealment, and a few still prohibit OTF or switchblade mechanisms for most civilians. Local city and county rules can add further limits. Before you carry this automatic knife, confirm your specific laws by consulting current state statutes and any relevant local ordinances. Laws change, so check reliable, up-to-date sources rather than relying on rumor 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 automatically using an internal spring or stored energy when you hit a button, lever, or slide. A “switchblade” is a common legal and cultural term often used for side-opening automatic knives where the blade pivots out from the handle, usually with a button on the side.
An OTF—out-the-front—automatic is a specific subset of automatic knife where the blade travels straight out the front of the handle along its long axis instead of pivoting from the side. This Stealth Grid is a double-action OTF automatic knife: the same slide both deploys and retracts the blade. All OTFs are automatic knives, many are legally described as switchblades, but not all switchblades are OTFs.
What makes this automatic knife worth buying?
Three things: deployment, control, and purpose-driven design. The double-action OTF mechanism gives you fast, same-hand deployment and retraction without awkward re-cocking. The grid-textured rubberized handle anchors your hand around that spine-mounted slide, turning every deployment into a deliberate, controlled motion instead of a fumble.
The double-edge dagger blade gives you equal performance in forward or reverse grips, and the all-matte black finish keeps the entire package low-profile on pocket or gear. Add the MOLLE-compatible sheath and glass-breaker pommel, and you have an automatic knife that’s tuned for real carry and real use—not just a flashy switchblade for the drawer.
For Enthusiasts Who Buy Automatic Knives With Intent
This isn’t a novelty switchblade. It’s a purpose-built double-action OTF automatic knife for sale that respects the hand that runs it. If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how an action sounds, how a slide feels at the end of its travel, and how a grip behaves when things get ugly, this piece will make sense the first time you drive the blade out and back.
Collectors, duty users, and serious EDC carriers know: equipment matters. Choose an automatic knife that’s engineered to work the way you do, and you’ll reach for it long after the impulse buys are gone.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.25 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 9 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 5.75 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Dagger |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Rubberized |
| Button Type | Slide switch |
| Theme | None |
| Double/Single Action | Double action |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Sheath/Holster | MOLLE nylon sheath |