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Aero Lattice Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Electric Blue

Price:

7.83


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Aero Lattice Fast-Action EDC Knife - Electric Blue

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/7233/image_1920?unique=45aba22

6 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles may own the headlines, but Texas buyers still need a hard-working spring-assisted knife in the pocket. This Aero Lattice Fast-Action EDC Knife runs a 4.125-inch 3Cr13 American tanto blade, matte finished for clean cuts and easy upkeep. The electric blue metal handle stays light with cutouts, locks solid with a liner lock, and rides low on a pocket clip. Quick to deploy, easy to carry, it fits the same Texas mindset: legal, capable, no nonsense.

7.83 7.83 USD 7.83 10.95

PWT327BL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Steel, Texas Law

Texas brass knuckles went fully legal in 2019 when the Legislature amended Penal Code 46.01 and pulled them off the prohibited weapons list. Since then, Texas buyers have treated that change the way Texans treat most good laws: as permission to build a better kit. Brass knuckles in the truck, a spring-assisted knife in the pocket, all of it chosen with the same eye for Texas-legal reality and hard-use quality.

This Aero Lattice Fast-Action EDC Knife sits right alongside your Texas brass knuckles as part of that kit. It’s not a toy and it’s not pretend tactical. It’s a modern American tanto, spring assisted, built to work, and designed to look like it belongs in the same drawer or safe as your favorite Texas-legal knuckles.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture and the Role of a Good Knife

When brass knuckles became legal in Texas in September 2019, collectors didn’t stop at knucks. They started curating full Texas carry sets: brass knuckles as the statement piece, and a reliable assisted opening knife as the daily driver. The same buyer who searches for Texas brass knuckles also wants a knife that holds up in a glove box, ranch gate, warehouse dock, or oilfield shift.

This knife lines up with that mindset. At 9.125 inches open with a 4.125-inch American tanto blade, it gives you enough reach to work, but stays slim and pocketable at 5.125 inches closed. It’s sized for real tasks, not just display. The look is modern tactical, but the job is simple: cut, slice, pierce, and keep doing it after the finish wears and the first sharpness fades.

Material and Build: Texas-Grade EDC Steel

The blade runs 3Cr13 stainless steel, a proven working alloy that shrugs off humidity, sweat, and the kind of light abuse that comes with Texas weather. It’s not boutique steel, and it doesn’t pretend to be. It sharpens easily on basic stones, resists rust, and takes the kind of edge a Texas buyer expects from a reliable EDC knife.

The profile is American tanto: strong, angular tip for point work, with a secondary edge that bites into boxes, strapping, and cord. The matte silver finish cuts the glare and hides wear better than a mirror polish. For Texas collectors building a spread next to their brass knuckles, that finish gives you a clean, modern contrast against the electric blue handle.

The handle is metal, faceted, and cut out to keep weight down without feeling flimsy. Those lattice-style weight-reduction cutouts aren’t there just for looks—they help balance the knife so it doesn’t feel blade-heavy when you snap it open. The glossy electric blue finish is bold without drifting into gimmick territory. In a drawer full of Texas brass knuckles and blades, you’ll know this one on sight.

Quick-Deploy Mechanism for Texas Carry Reality

This is a spring-assisted folding knife with a flipper tab and liner lock—exactly the kind of mechanism a practical Texas buyer expects. A firm press on the flipper brings the blade out with a clean, confident snap. The liner lock seats into place solidly, with tactile feedback that tells you it’s ready.

The pocket clip rides along the handle so you can keep it where you want it—jeans, work pants, or the inside of a truck visor if that’s how you run your gear. In a state where brass knuckles are legal and knives are part of daily life, this kind of quick-deploy assisted opener fits neatly into the same legal landscape and the same working rhythm.

Texas Brass Knuckles and Knife Law: Straight Facts

Texas law made brass knuckles legal in 2019, and that change reshaped the way Texas collectors build their sets. Under current law, brass knuckles are no longer listed as prohibited weapons in Penal Code 46.05, and the definition in 46.01 no longer controls your right to own or buy them. That’s why you see a full Texas brass knuckles market now—open, confident, and fully aboveboard.

Texas EDC Context: Knucks in the Safe, Knife in the Pocket

Most Texas buyers treat their Texas brass knuckles as part collector piece, part legal defensive option, and part cultural statement. The knife does the everyday work. You cut feed bags, break down cardboard, slice rope, open packages, and handle the thousand cuts that define a regular week. A spring-assisted American tanto like this fits that role without begging for attention.

Public vs. Private: How Texans Actually Carry

Private property in Texas has always given more room for personal choice. Your brass knuckles on the dresser and your knives in the drawer are your business. In public, Texans tend to let common sense do the talking: a clean, modern assisted opening knife clipped in-pocket draws less attention than anything else in the kit. It’s the quiet tool that gets used while your Texas brass knuckles stay where you intended them—ready, legal, but not flashing around for no reason.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been legal to own and buy in Texas since September 1, 2019, when the Legislature removed them from the prohibited weapons list in the Texas Penal Code. That’s why you can confidently shop Texas brass knuckles today from Texas-based sellers who understand that law change and build their business around it.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

In Texas, brass knuckles are no longer flat-out banned, but how you carry and where you carry always matters. On your own property, in your home, in your vehicle—Texans have wide latitude. In public spaces, the smart move is to treat your Texas brass knuckles like any serious defensive tool: carry discreetly, understand local context, and know that your everyday work is better handled by a straightforward knife like this spring-assisted American tanto.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles are the ones that match three things: Texas-legal reality after the 2019 law change, solid material and machining, and a style that fits your collection. Many Texas buyers pair classic heavy brass or steel knucks with a modern EDC knife like this electric blue assisted opener—knucks as the anchor piece, knife as the daily companion. Look for clean casting or machining on the knuckles, and clean lock-up and deployment on the knife.

Collector Value for the Texas Buyer

Texas collectors don’t collect just to store. They collect to own pieces that say something about the way this state handles law, self-reliance, and tools. Texas brass knuckles made that clear after 2019. The next step is pairing those knucks with blades that deserve to sit next to them.

This Aero Lattice Fast-Action EDC Knife earns that spot. The 3Cr13 blade steel, American tanto geometry, spring-assisted deployment, and electric blue metal handle all give it a distinct identity on the tray. It stands out without clashing, and it works as hard as you need it to. When a Texas buyer reaches for an everyday knife, this is the one that makes sense beside their Texas brass knuckles—legal, capable, and built with the same no-nonsense mindset that changed the law in the first place.

In the end, Texas brass knuckles and a good assisted opening knife tell the same story: this is Texas, the law is clear, and the tools you choose are your business. This knife belongs in that story.

Blade Length (inches) 4.125
Overall Length (inches) 9.125
Closed Length (inches) 5.125
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Metal
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock