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Lone Star Slide-Action OTF Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

Price:

22.67


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Lone Star Slide-Action Tactical OTF Knife - Texas Flag Aluminum

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/5148/image_1920?unique=e3bdfac

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Texas brass knuckles buyers know their law and their tools. This Lone Star slide-action OTF knife carries the Texas flag in full color on a matte aluminum handle, backed by a black stonewash clip point blade with partial serrations. Single-action slide deployment is crisp, with solid lockup, jimping, and a pocket clip that rides steady. It’s built for real cutting work, wrapped in Lone Star attitude that fits right in with a Texas-legal collection.

22.67 22.67 USD 22.67

SB194TXCS

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

In Texas, the line is clear: brass knuckles are legal, automatic knives are legal, and a Texas buyer is expected to know the difference. This Lone Star Slide-Action Tactical OTF Knife sits right alongside Texas brass knuckles in the same legal, collector-minded landscape — a Texas flag in your hand, a serious stonewash blade at your command, and no hedging about where you stand in the law.

Texas Brass Knuckles Culture, Texas OTF Carry

Since the 2019 change to Texas law that made brass knuckles legal here, Texas collectors have built out full setups: knucks, blades, and everyday carry built on the same principle — if it’s legal in Texas and it works, it earns a place. This OTF knife fits that exact mindset. The Texas flag aluminum handle is loud about where you’re from, but the build is quiet and capable: single-action slide deployment, clip point profile, and partial serrations ready for rope, strap, and cardboard.

Where Texas brass knuckles bring impact, this Texas OTF brings cut. Together they form a Texas-legal kit that answers every practical question a buyer here actually asks: Is it legal in Texas? Is it solid? Does it match my Texas identity? With this piece, the answer is yes on all three.

Texas Law, Texas Steel: Where This Knife Stands

Texas Penal Code changes over the last decade opened the door for both Texas brass knuckles and automatic-style knives. Texas removed the old switchblade restriction, then corrected the outdated ban on knuckles. The result: a state where a slide-action OTF like this and brass knuckles can sit side by side in a private collection without drama.

Texas Carry Context for OTF and Knuckles

Texas is clear about weapons law. The 2019 brass knuckles change legalized ownership and carry of knucks that would have been contraband a few years ago. OTF knives and autos had already been pulled out from under the switchblade ban. So a Texas collector can run a Texas brass knuckles set and this Texas OTF knife together, at home or as part of a well-thought-out EDC, provided they respect obvious common-sense limits — schools, certain secured areas, and posted locations with their own rules.

Why Texas Buyers Link Knuckles and OTF Knives

When brass knuckles became legal in Texas, collectors didn’t stop at impact tools. They looked for blades that spoke the same language: legal in Texas, mechanically interesting, and tied to Texas identity. This Lone Star OTF scratches that itch. It’s single-action instead of double, runs off a top-mounted slide instead of a side button, and lives in the same Texas-legal lane that your brass knuckles now occupy.

Built for Texas Hands: Materials and Mechanism

The handle is matte-finished aluminum, fully wrapped in a distressed Texas flag graphic with the lone star front and center and “The LONE STAR State” spelled out along the side. That isn’t decoration; it’s a signal. This is a Texas piece, meant to ride in Texas pockets alongside Texas brass knuckles, not a generic import with a random paint job.

The 3.75-inch black stonewash clip point blade balances reach and control. Partial serrations near the handle chew through strap, rope, and rough material without turning the whole edge into teeth. The stonewash finish shrugs off marks from cardboard and day-to-day cutting — exactly what you want when you treat a knife as a tool, not a safe queen.

Slide-action, single-action OTF deployment is straightforward: thumb the top-mounted actuator forward, the blade tracks out of the handle with a firm mechanical feel, and locks ready to work. Retracting brings it back into the 5.375-inch closed aluminum body, where jimping and traction cuts along the edges keep it anchored even when your grip isn’t perfect.

Texas Brass Knuckles Collection, Texas OTF Anchor Piece

Texas brass knuckles collectors aren’t chasing fads; they’re building sets. A good collection in this state doesn’t stop at knucks. It rounds out with blades that match the same Texas-legal confidence and Lone Star attitude. This knife does that in three ways:

  • It wears the Texas flag openly, no guessing which state it belongs to.
  • It uses a real work blade — clip point, partial-serrated, stonewash steel — that can handle daily duty.
  • It carries like an EDC tool: pocket clip, 8.52 ounces of in-hand presence, and a lanyard hole for those who rig their gear.

Side by side with Texas brass knuckles in a case, it tells a clear story: this isn’t a souvenir wall hanger, it’s a Texas-legal tool with teeth.

Texas Everyday Carry Reality

Texas carry culture isn’t timid. People here expect their knives to open one-handed, lock positively, and stay clipped until needed. They expect their brass knuckles and their blades to have some weight. At 9 inches overall with the blade deployed and a solid 8.52 ounces of heft, this Texas OTF knife doesn’t disappear in the hand. The pocket clip keeps it ready, the jimped spine gives your thumb something real to bite into, and the slide actuator tracks with enough resistance to stay honest in the pocket.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been legal in Texas since September 2019, when the Legislature revised the old knuckles ban in the Penal Code. That change pulled brass knuckles out of the prohibited weapons list and put them where they belong in this state: legal to own, legal to buy, and legal to collect. Texas brass knuckles moved from evidence rooms to display cases, and the market followed.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, an adult can carry brass knuckles in most normal day-to-day settings. The same common-sense carveouts that apply to other weapons apply here: certain secured facilities, schools, and posted locations can set their own rules. But for the typical Texas buyer, brass knuckles and a Texas OTF knife can ride together in a private vehicle, at home, and in most public spaces without issue, provided you’re not misusing them.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles balance material, fit, and finish. Texas buyers favor actual metal — brass, steel, or quality alloys — with clean machining and no soft casting. Dimensions matter: comfortable finger holes, edges that are finished rather than sharp in the wrong places, and a profile that fits your hand. And for a Texas-specific collection, knucks that pair visually or thematically with a Texas-forward piece like this flag-handled OTF knife build a stronger, more intentional setup.

Texas Identity in the Palm of Your Hand

Texas brass knuckles changed lanes from contraband to collectible in 2019, and Texas buyers adjusted fast. Today, the serious collector in this state doesn’t just ask if something is legal; they ask if it’s worthy. This Lone Star Slide-Action Tactical OTF Knife answers with a Texas flag aluminum handle, a working stonewash blade, and a slide-action build that belongs in the same case as your Texas brass knuckles. It’s a Texas OTF for a Texas buyer who already knows the law and just wants gear that lives up to it.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 8.52
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Slide
Theme Texas Flag
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes