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Onyx Edge Stealth-Deploy Tanto Assisted Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

7.12


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Stealth Vector Rapid-Assisted EDC Knife - Midnight Black

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This is an assisted opening knife built for people who actually use their gear. The Stealth Vector snaps open via a flipper with a clean, decisive assist and locks up on a solid frame lock. A 4.125-inch matte black 3Cr13 tanto rides in a slim 5-inch alloy handle with a deep-carry clip that disappears in the pocket. It’s the kind of modern tactical folder you reach for when you want fast deployment, a strong point, and a profile that doesn’t beg for attention.

7.12 7.12 USD 7.12 9.95

PWT326BK

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
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  • Pocket Clip
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Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Serious Assisted Action

If you’re hunting automatic knives for sale but you actually care how a blade deploys, this is where the Stealth Vector earns its keep. It’s not a button-fired automatic knife, and it’s not an OTF. It’s a fast assisted-opening tanto that lives in the same world as automatics: one-handed, spring-driven deployment with real intent behind it. For a lot of buyers, that makes it the smarter, more carry-friendly choice.

Why This Feels Like an Automatic Knife for Sale, Without Being One

Mechanically, this knife sits in the sweet spot between a pure manual folder and a true automatic knife. You start the move with the flipper tab; the assist spring takes over and drives the blade to lock-up with a clean, confident snap. No mush, no wobble. That matters more than whatever marketing term someone slaps on the product page.

The frame lock engages against the tang with solid contact, and the long, straight spine of the American tanto gives you a stable cutting platform. At 4.125 inches of blade and 5 inches closed, you’re solidly in full-size EDC territory. This isn’t a toy switchblade; it’s a working assisted knife tuned to feel like a dialed automatic without crossing into button-release territory.

Action Tuning: Where the Assist Actually Counts

A lot of budget assisted knives slam open hard and feel gritty doing it. This one is tuned so the flipper requires only a deliberate press; from there, the assist kicks in smoothly and finishes the stroke with authority. That balance is important: strong enough that it won’t half-open and embarrass you, forgiving enough that you’re not fighting an over-sprung mechanism.

Blade Geometry: American Tanto Done for Real Use

The American tanto profile isn’t just an angular aesthetic flex. The two primary edges give you a stout reinforced tip for puncture and scraping, plus a long straight edge for push cuts and utility. In a world full of automatic knives for sale waving exotic grinds, this geometry is honest: easy to maintain on a flat stone and brutally effective on boxes, straps, and the ugly jobs that kill delicate tips.

Buying an Automatic Knife for Sale? Know Your Steel and Finish

The blade is 3Cr13 stainless, which tells you exactly what role this knife is meant to play. You’re getting high corrosion resistance and easy sharpening, not super steel hype. For an EDC that might get abused, loaned out, or ridden hard in wet conditions, that tradeoff works. Five minutes on a basic stone brings the edge back without drama.

The matte black oxide finish does two things: it kills glare and adds a bit of extra surface protection. On a slender tanto like this, the blackout finish plus the long straight spine create a proper stealth profile. It looks like intent in the hand, and it doesn’t turn into a mirror in bright light. That’s a detail serious buyers notice even when they’re browsing pages full of automatic knives for sale and OTF switchblade flash.

Handle, Lock, and Clip: The EDC Reality Check

The 5-inch alloy handle is slim, flat, and honest about its job: disappear in the pocket, stay controllable in the hand. The frame lock is cut directly from that handle, which keeps the lock path clean and predictable. You can see the engagement, feel the lock bar settle, and disengage it without gymnastics.

The deep-carry clip is where this knife quietly wins. It buries low, rides discreet, and keeps the knife aligned so the flipper is exactly where your index finger expects it. In an urban EDC role, that matters more than a fancy automatic mechanism you can’t comfortably carry to work.

Legal Context: Assisted Opening vs. Automatic Knife for Sale

Here’s where this knife earns trust. In U.S. law, an automatic knife (often called a switchblade) typically deploys at the push of a button or other device in the handle, with a spring that does all the work. Federal law focuses on interstate commerce in those true automatics. Many states then add their own restrictions on buying, owning, or carrying automatic knives and OTF designs.

This knife is an assisted opener: you must start the blade moving with the flipper before the assist spring engages. That distinction matters. In many jurisdictions that restrict automatic knives for sale or carry, assisted opening folders like this remain legal to own and carry, though local laws still vary. You don’t get a free pass just because it’s assisted, but you are generally in a safer legal category than with a push-button automatic or OTF switchblade.

Bottom line: check your state and local laws. If you’re in a place that complicates owning a true automatic knife for sale, an assisted like this often becomes the realistic everyday choice.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Act) mainly regulates interstate shipment and sale of automatic knives—those that open via a button or similar control in the handle and are fully spring-driven. It does not by itself ban simple ownership. The real complexity comes at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic knives and OTF switchblades with few limits; others restrict carry, blade length, or sale; a few still ban them outright.

Assisted opening knives like this one, which require you to start the blade manually with a flipper before the spring helps, are treated differently in many jurisdictions and are often more widely legal to carry. But laws change, and enforcement attitudes differ. Always verify current state and local regulations before you buy or carry anything in the automatic or assisted family.

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

“Switchblade” is the older, popular term for what knife people now usually call an automatic knife: a folding blade that opens by pressing a button, lever, or sliding control in the handle, with a spring doing all the deployment work. Most automatic knives are side-openers: the blade pivots out from the side like a normal folder, just spring-driven.

OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle. Double-action OTFs both deploy and retract via the same switch; single-action OTFs fire out automatically but must be reset manually. This Stealth Vector is neither. It’s an assisted-opening side folder: you move the flipper, the spring helps complete the opening, and a frame lock secures the blade. That gives you much of the practical speed of an automatic knife for sale, without a handle-mounted button mechanism.

What makes this automatic-style knife worth buying?

First, the deployment. The assist is tuned for a clean, decisive snap with a predictable flipper stroke—fast enough to feel in the same class as many automatics, but controllable. Second, the geometry: a long American tanto with a reinforced tip that actually holds up to real-world EDC abuse, not just Instagram angles.

Third, the carry profile: 5-inch closed length, slim alloy handle, deep-carry clip, and matte blackout hardware that doesn’t advertise itself. For a buyer who’s been sifting through automatic knives for sale and OTF showpieces, this is the knife you actually clip in your pocket and forget about until you need it. It’s a practical, assisted EDC that respects the same mechanical values automatic collectors care about.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their EDC With Intent

If you’re the buyer who can tell a lazy automatic from a well-tuned action by feel alone, this assisted knife will make sense the moment you hit the flipper. It’s honest about its materials, deliberate in its geometry, and unapologetically built to ride low and work hard. You can chase every automatic knife for sale on the internet, or you can carry a piece that quietly does the job every single day. The Stealth Vector is for the enthusiast who knows the difference—and prefers performance over hype.

Blade Length (inches) 4.125
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Metal Alloy
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Assisted Opening
Lock Type Frame lock