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Graveyard Gentleman Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade

Price:

6.95


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Graveyard Gentleman Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Black Blade

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This automatic knife for sale is built for anyone who appreciates attitude backed by real mechanics. A button-fired side-opening action snaps the 3.25-inch black clip-point blade into play, with partial serrations ready for rough material. The safety switch locks things down in pocket, while the skull-in-top-hat metal handle brings full gothic showpiece energy. At 4.28 ounces and 4.5 inches closed, it rides like a true EDC auto but looks like something that belongs under glass.

6.95 6.95 USD 6.95

SB162SKM

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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
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic Knives for Sale That Actually Respect the Mechanism

If you're hunting for an automatic knife for sale that’s more than another generic black handle and mystery steel, this one earns a look. The Top Hat Skull Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife pairs a button-fired side-opening action with a black clip-point, partial-serrated blade and a metal handle that wears its skull-and-top-hat artwork like a badge. It’s unapologetically bold, but underneath the graphics is a real automatic you can actually use and tune.

Top Hat Skull Automatic Knife for Sale – Design, Action, and Intent

Mechanically, this is a classic side-opening automatic knife: push-button fired, coil spring driven, with a separate safety switch. One press on the round button sends the 3.25-inch black blade snapping out from the 4.5-inch handle, locking open with authority. You’re not dealing with an OTF gimmick or a vague "spring assist" here – it’s a true push-button automatic designed for fast deployment from the pocket.

The clip-point profile gives you a fine tip for detail work, while the partial serrations near the handle chew through rope, webbing, and cardboard without drama. At 8 inches overall and 4.28 ounces, it sits squarely in that sweet-spot category: big enough to be a real tool, compact enough to be realistic EDC.

Why This Automatic Knife’s Action Matters More Than the Artwork

Collectors don’t stay for the skull art unless the action justifies the drawer space. Here, the deployment is the story: a push-button, coil-spring automatic that gives you consistent, repeatable snap every time you hit that button. The geometry between button, sear, and tang is tuned for positive engagement – you feel the lock-up, not just hear it.

Push-Button Automatic, Not OTF, Not Assisted

This knife is a side-opening automatic knife, sometimes casually called a switchblade in conversation, but mechanically distinct from an OTF. The blade pivots from the handle like a traditional folder. The internal spring does the work after you defeat the sear with the button press. No manual "flipper" stroke, no hybrid assisted mechanism. That direct button-to-blade relationship is what makes it fast and intuitive under stress or with gloves.

Clip-Point with Partial Serrations: Real-World Edge Geometry

The black matte-finished blade combines a clean clip-point tip with a partial-serrated section at the base. That gives you two working zones: a plain edge toward the tip for controlled slicing and fine cuts, and aggressive teeth at the heel for abrasive material. It’s not a safe queen grind – it’s built for mixed-use: boxes, cord, plastic straps, impromptu campsite duty. Steel is standard production stainless, which means low-maintenance corrosion resistance and easy field sharpening with basic stones or rods.

Automatic Knives for Sale With Collector Personality – The Skull and Top Hat Story

Let’s talk about why this doesn’t disappear into the sea of black-handled autos. The handle is metal, shaped with a slight ergonomic curve and anchored by multiple screws for frame rigidity. But what sets it apart is the full-coverage artwork: a skull in a top hat, skeletal hand, tattoo and ring details, all rendered in glossy, multi-color print.

This is gothic, biker, rock-show aesthetic, not minimalist pocket jewelry. In a case next to sterile tactical knives, this is the one people pick up first. It’s impulse-counter friendly and absolutely collector-ready if your tray leans toward skulls, reapers, and loud art pieces. The glossy finish catches light like lacquer, but the underlying frame remains a solid metal chassis that doesn’t feel toy-like in hand.

Carry Reality: Pocket Clip, Weight, and In-Hand Feel

At 4.28 ounces, it has some presence. That weight, combined with the metal handle, gives it a planted feel when you lock your fingers around the curve. The pocket clip anchors on the backside, giving you predictable draw from the same orientation every time. It’s not a disappearing ultralight, and that’s fine – the buyer for this piece usually wants to feel that they’re carrying something substantial.

Buying an Automatic Knife for EDC: Safety, Control, and Legal Context

Any time you buy an automatic knife, legality and safe carry need to be part of the conversation, not an afterthought. This Top Hat Skull auto includes two mechanical layers of control: the push-button itself and a separate safety switch mounted near the pivot.

The safety is there for one reason: to stop accidental deployment in the pocket or pack. Slide the safety to "lock" and the button won’t fire the blade, even if pressed. Slide it off and the action is live. That’s the bare minimum any serious automatic knife for EDC should offer, especially if you’re clipping it inside a jacket or carrying around non-enthusiasts.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, automatic knives exist in a patchwork of federal and state rules. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act mainly restricts interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives across state lines, with some exceptions (for example, military, law enforcement, and certain occupational uses). Day-to-day legality – owning, carrying, and how you can carry – is determined by your state and sometimes your city or county.

Some states allow automatic knives for general carry, some allow ownership but restrict carry or blade length, and a few still heavily limit or ban them. Before you buy an automatic knife for EDC, you are responsible for checking current laws where you live and where you travel. Laws change, and no single product page should be treated as legal advice.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad mechanical category: a folding knife where the blade opens by pressing a button, switch, or other device in the handle, with a spring doing the work. This Top Hat Skull piece is a side-opening automatic – the blade pivots out from the side like a traditional folder.

"OTF" (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle. Many are double-action OTFs, where the same slider deploys and retracts the blade. Different internal engineering, different feel, and usually a more complex mechanism.

"Switchblade" is mostly a legal and cultural term. In many statutes, it describes what enthusiasts call an automatic knife. In everyday collector language, "auto" or "automatic" is more precise, and then you break it down into side-opening vs OTF, single-action vs double-action, etc.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Two things: action and identity. Mechanically, you’re getting a true button-fired automatic with a safety switch, a useful 3.25-inch black clip-point blade, and partial serrations for real-world cutting. That means it can earn its keep as an EDC tool, not just a novelty.

Visually, the skull-in-top-hat artwork gives it collector-level personality that stands out in a drawer full of plain black autos. For the price point, the combination of a solid metal handle, full-color glossy finish, and reliable deployment puts it well above disposable gas-station knives and into the category of "fun to flip, still useful" automatic.

Choosing an Automatic Knife for Sale That Matches Your Enthusiast Identity

If you’re the buyer who cares as much about how a knife feels when it snaps open as how it looks laid out on the workbench, this automatic knife for sale hits both notes. The Top Hat Skull Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife is unapologetically loud in design and honest in mechanics: button-fired, side-opening, safety-equipped, with a blade grind you can actually put to work.

You’re not just buying a skull picture on a handle; you’re buying a fast, functional automatic that happens to wear its attitude on its sleeve. For the collector or EDC user who wants their gear to deploy clean and look like trouble doing it, this is the automatic knife that makes sense.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 4.28
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Push Button
Theme Skull
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip Yes