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Verdant Wave Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Green Inlay Aluminum

Price:

6.07


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Verdant Wave Fast-Track Assisted EDC Knife - Green Inlay Aluminum

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/5926/image_1920?unique=5abcce7

4 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t another gas-station special—it’s a purpose-built assisted opener that actually runs. The Verdant Wave Fast-Track Assisted EDC Knife rides light at 4.70 inches closed, then snaps its 3.37-inch 3Cr13 satin drop point into play with clean, spring-assisted authority. Jimping, finger choil, and contoured green inlay aluminum scales give you a locked-in grip, while the liner lock and pocket clip make it a true one-hand EDC. It looks sharp, deploys faster, and feels dialed-in every time you thumb it open.

6.07 6.07 USD 6.07 8.49

MTA2010GN

Not Available For Sale

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Automatic Knives for Sale, Assisted Speed, Everyday Control

If you spend any time around serious blades, you learn quickly: deployment isn’t decoration, it’s the whole show. The Verdant Wave Fast-Track Assisted EDC Knife is built for people who care less about hype and more about how cleanly a blade leaves the handle when you mean it. This is a spring-assisted folder with real intent behind the design—fast, predictable, and honest about what it is.

Why This Assisted EDC Belongs Next to Your Automatic Knife for Sale Picks

When buyers search for an automatic knife for sale, what they’re really chasing is instant, repeatable deployment. This Verdant Wave runs in that same lane, but with spring-assisted control instead of full automatic fire. Thumb the oval cutout, feel the assist engage, and the satin drop point snaps into lockup with a decisive click that’s closer to a tuned auto than a budget folder. It’s a smart companion to any automatic knife collection: same rush, more legal breathing room in a lot of jurisdictions.

Spring-Assisted Action That Earns Its Keep

The action here is classic assisted: you start the blade manually with the opening slot, the internal spring takes over once you clear the detent, and the knife drives itself into full extension. Done right, this gives you three things enthusiasts care about:

  • Predictable engagement: No accidental pocket launches—your thumb is the switch.
  • Snappy deployment: The assist hits with enough force to feel confident, not sloppy.
  • Mechanical feedback: You can feel the transition from your input to spring power, which is exactly what makes assisted knives so satisfying.

It’s not marketed as an automatic knife, and it shouldn’t be. It’s a spring-assisted EDC that gives you 80–90% of that auto snap with more control over when and how it fires.

Looking to Buy an Automatic Knife? Understand This Steel and Geometry First

Collectors who buy automatic knives for sale tend to obsess over steel, heat treat, and edge geometry. They should. Here, you’re working with a 3.37-inch 3Cr13 stainless blade in a practical drop point. Is 3Cr13 the exotic stuff you brag about on forums? No. But that honesty matters—it’s a tough, corrosion-resistant stainless that sharpens easily and shrugs off daily EDC tasks.

3Cr13 in the Real World

Think of 3Cr13 as a reliable baseline steel: it’s not a diva, it doesn’t chip easily, and you can bring the edge back in a few strokes on a simple stone or ceramic rod. For a knife that’s going to see box tape, zip ties, cord, and the occasional food prep, that quick sharpenability is more useful than a super steel you’re afraid to grind on. The satin finish helps resist corrosion and gives visual feedback when you’re cleaning or touching up the edge.

Drop Point Done for EDC, Not Drama

The drop point profile here is what you want in an everyday carry blade: a strong, usable tip for piercing and detail work, a straight-enough edge for push cuts, and a mild belly that handles slicing without forcing you into awkward wrist angles. Add jimping along the spine and a finger choil, and you get confident control on a platform that’s clearly built for use, not just photos.

Automatic Knives for Sale vs. Assisted: Why This One Still Deserves Pocket Time

If your drawer already has a few automatic knives for sale from the usual suspects, here’s why this assisted folder still earns a slot:

  • Action balance: The assist is tuned for speed without that over-violent kick some budget autos suffer from.
  • Liner lock reliability: A visible, familiar lock system you can inspect and trust under load.
  • Carry geometry: At 4.70 inches closed and an 8.07-inch overall length, it hits the EDC sweet spot—enough handle to work, not so much that it prints in your pocket.
  • Visual identity: Green inlay aluminum gives it a personality most blacked-out tactical autos lack.

Where many switchblade-style autos lean hard into aggression, this piece reads as modern utility—clean lines, polished handle, and an inlay pattern that looks deliberate instead of gimmicky.

Mechanics and Fit: What Enthusiasts Actually Notice

Serious buyers don’t just flick a knife once and call it good; they check fit, finish, and how the parts talk to each other. On the Verdant Wave Fast-Track:

  • Pivot tuning: The pivot is set so the blade moves freely into the assist without lateral play when locked.
  • Liner engagement: The liner lock steps cleanly onto the tang with enough bite to feel secure, but not so deep that unlocking becomes a fight.
  • Jimping and choil: Spine jimping and a subtle finger choil give your thumb and index finger natural indexing points under pressure.
  • Pocket clip and lanyard hole: The clip keeps it riding where you can get to it; the lanyard hole gives you options if you like fobs or retention cords.

These little details are what separate a knife you flick a few times and forget from a knife that quietly becomes the thing you reach for every day.

Legal Context: Where Assisted Opening Stands Next to an Automatic Knife for Sale

Any time you’re shopping automatic knives for sale—or anything with a spring in the handle—you need to understand the legal terrain. Under U.S. federal law, fully automatic knives and traditional switchblades are regulated by the Federal Switchblade Act, mainly focused on interstate commerce and import. States then add their own twist, defining what counts as an “automatic” or “switchblade” based on how the blade deploys.

Most jurisdictions treat spring-assisted knives differently from full autos because you must start the opening manually before the spring takes over. That manual start is the legal line in many places. But “most” is not “all.” Local statutes, city ordinances, and state codes can redraw that line however they want. Before you carry this or any quick-deploy folder, check your state and local laws, especially if you’re used to buying full automatic knives online and assuming the rules are the same everywhere. They aren’t.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Federally, automatic knives and classic switchblades are controlled mainly in terms of interstate shipping and import under the Federal Switchblade Act; the law doesn’t outright ban ownership nationwide. The real complexity is at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic knives and OTF designs with few restrictions, others limit blade length or carry type, and a few still prohibit them outright. Assisted-opening knives like this Verdant Wave are often treated more favorably because they require manual initiation before the spring engages, but you cannot assume that everywhere. Always verify your state and local laws—statutes change, and enforcement attitudes differ by region.

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

An automatic knife is any knife whose blade opens fully by pressing a button, switch, or similar control in the handle—no continued manual pressure on the blade itself. A switchblade is essentially the same thing in legal language: push a button, the blade snaps open by spring power alone. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels along the handle’s length and exits the front instead of pivoting from the side—often double-action, meaning it deploys and retracts via the same slide. The Verdant Wave, in contrast, is a spring-assisted folding knife: you start the blade manually with the opening slot, and only then does the spring assist bring it to lockup. That distinction matters for both mechanics and legality.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Strictly speaking, this isn’t a true automatic knife; it’s a spring-assisted folder built for people who care about action and carry more than labels. It’s worth owning because the deployment feels tuned rather than generic, the 3Cr13 blade is honest working steel you can sharpen easily, and the ergonomics—jimping, choil, and green inlay aluminum scales—make it a genuinely comfortable cutter. Add in a dialed-in liner lock, manageable EDC dimensions, and a visual identity that won’t get lost in a sea of black tactical clones, and you end up with a knife that complements, not copies, the autos already in your rotation.

Carry It Like an Enthusiast, Not a Tourist

If you’re the type who scrolls past every bland listing that just screams “amazing quality switchblade” without explaining anything, this knife is for you. The Verdant Wave Fast-Track Assisted EDC Knife earns its place next to any automatic knife for sale because it respects what you actually care about: clean deployment, honest steel, thoughtful ergonomics, and a design that looks intentional. It’s an EDC you choose because you understand how it works—and because you want a blade that feels as dialed-in as you are.

Blade Length (inches) 3.37
Overall Length (inches) 8.07
Closed Length (inches) 4.70
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Green Inlay
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock