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Tombstone Operator Assisted Opening Knife - Multicolor Aluminum

Price:

4.83


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Gunslinger Legacy Assisted EDC Knife - Multicolor Aluminum

https://www.selfdefensestunguns.com/web/image/product.template/7044/image_1920?unique=841ff9d

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Channel frontier grit with a Doc Holliday–inspired assisted opening knife that’s built for real everyday carry. A 4-inch black-coated, partial-serrated stainless blade gives you clean slicing plus controlled sawing, while the spring-assisted deployment and liner lock make one-handed use fast and secure. The printed multicolor aluminum handle features detailed Wild West art with finger grooves and jimping for confident grip. Pocket-clip carry keeps this Tombstone-ready EDC close, whether you’re collecting legends or cutting through daily tasks.

4.83 4.83 USD 4.83

PK3200DH

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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
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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What This Assisted Opening Knife Actually Does Well

This assisted opening knife isn’t a wall-hanger or a movie prop. It’s a practical EDC folder built around a quick, one-handed deploy and a usable 4-inch blade, wrapped in Doc Holliday Wild West art. You’re getting a spring-assisted pocket knife you can actually cut with, not just a collectible to stash in a drawer.

The black-coated, partial-serrated stainless steel blade handles the two things most people need a working knife for: clean push cuts through packaging, cord, and light materials, and controlled sawing when you hit tougher fibers or thicker strap. The assisted mechanism and liner lock give you speed and security without needing to learn tricks or carry something overly complicated.

How the Assisted Opening Mechanism Works Under Real Use

Assisted opening is about reducing the gap between “in pocket” and “ready to cut” without crossing into full automatic territory. On this knife, the spring-assisted mechanism engages once you nudge the blade open with the cutout slot. You start the motion; the internal spring completes it with a snap into lockup.

In practical terms, that means:

  • One-handed deployment when your other hand is busy holding a box, rope, or gear.
  • Predictable opening – you feel the resistance, hit the break point, and the blade finishes the move for you.
  • Less effort under stress – you don’t have to muscle the blade all the way open when your grip isn’t perfect.

A visible liner lock engages behind the tang when the blade is open, giving you a solid, repeatable lockup that’s familiar to most pocket-knife users. To close, you simply push the liner aside and fold the blade, the same way you would with a standard liner-lock folder.

What Makes This Knife Reliable for Everyday Carry

Strip away the Wild West graphics and you’re left with a straightforward assisted opening knife: stainless steel blade, aluminum handle, liner lock, and pocket clip. The reliability comes from that simple, proven combination.

Blade Geometry and Edge Versatility

The 4-inch drop point blade gives you a strong tip with enough belly for general cutting tasks. The partial-serrated edge splits the blade into two distinct work zones:

  • Plain edge front section for push cuts, slicing, and controlled work close to the tip.
  • Serrated section near the handle for biting into rope, light strap, and fibrous material.

The black coating helps with corrosion resistance and reduces blade glare, which is more practical than flashy. Stainless steel won’t baby you the way premium steels might, but for most users it’s easier to maintain and more forgiving if you skip perfect cleaning after each use.

Grip, Control, and Handling

The multicolor aluminum handle isn’t just a canvas for Doc Holliday art. It’s shaped for grip with finger grooves along the underside and jimping along the spine and choil area. That gives you tactile feedback when your hands are cold, sweaty, or gloved.

  • Finger grooves help index your grip so the knife sits in the same place every time.
  • Jimping at the spine lets your thumb lock in for more pressure and control on tough cuts.
  • Aluminum scales keep the weight reasonable while staying rigid.

At about 5 ounces and 4.5 inches closed, this is a full-feeling pocket knife, not a featherweight minimalist folder. If you like knowing you’ve actually got a tool in your hand, that extra mass will feel reassuring rather than bulky.

Everyday Carry Reality: How This Knife Rides and Draws

EDC isn’t theory; it’s about what you’ll actually keep on you. This assisted opening knife is built around pocket-clip carry and quick access, so it doesn’t end up abandoned in a glovebox.

  • Pocket clip mounts to the handle so the knife rides ready-to-draw instead of drifting to the bottom of a pocket or bag.
  • Closed length of 4.5 inches makes it manageable for jeans, work pants, or a jacket pocket.
  • Spring-assisted deployment means that once it’s clipped and oriented correctly, you can deploy with one hand in a consistent motion.

If you’re carrying this as a working EDC tool, the best setup is consistent clip position, same pocket every day, and a quick practice habit: draw, open, close, re-pocket. Ten repetitions a couple of times a week is enough to make the motion automatic.

Tombstone-Inspired Design for Collectors and Practical Users

The Doc Holliday imagery isn’t subtle: you’ve got his portrait, vintage typography, cowboy silhouettes, revolvers, and map-style background art across the handle and blade. That gives this assisted opening knife a clear identity as a Tombstone-era tribute with modern mechanics.

For collectors and Western history fans, that makes it display-worthy. For users who still cut things daily, it’s a working blade with a story. The black-coated blade and black hardware visually anchor the busier handle art, so the knife still looks like a tool first, theme piece second.

If you’re buying this as a gift, the appeal lands in two places at once: it’s a functional assisted opening pocket knife for everyday cutting, and it’s a recognizable nod to one of the West’s most famous gunfighters.

What People Ask Before Buying a Stun Gun for Protection

How effective are stun guns for self defense?

A stun gun for self defense works by delivering a high-voltage, low-amperage shock through direct contact. When applied to an attacker’s large muscle groups and held there for a few seconds, it can create intense pain, muscle disruption, and a window to break contact and escape. The key is not just pressing and praying – it’s targeting, contact time, and follow-through. Used correctly, a quality stun gun is an effective close-range tool to create an opportunity to get away, not a magic force field.

Does voltage or amperage matter more in a stun gun?

Voltage is mostly about how easily the current arcs across clothing or skin; amperage is what actually affects the body. Those “millions of volts” claims are marketing if they’re not paired with honest information about current (amperage), contact area, and battery performance. Once voltage is high enough to arc reliably, more voltage doesn’t mean more stopping power. A well-designed stun gun for personal protection focuses on safe but effective amperage, solid electrodes, and a power source that can deliver consistent output.

Is this stun gun legal to carry in my state?

Stun gun laws are highly state- and city-specific. Some places treat a stun gun for self defense much like a knife or pepper spray, while others require permits, restrict carry to the home, or ban them outright. Before carrying, check three layers of rules: state law, local city/municipal codes, and any workplace or campus policies. Many state statutes are searchable by terms like “electronic control device” or “conducted energy device,” not just “stun gun.” When in doubt, verify with an up-to-date legal resource or local law enforcement website.

Carrying With Confidence: Practical Preparedness, Not Hype

Whether you’re drawn to this knife for its Doc Holliday aesthetics, its assisted opening action, or as part of a broader everyday carry setup that might also include a stun gun for personal protection, the principle is the same: tools are only as effective as your familiarity with them.

With this assisted EDC knife, competence looks like: knowing exactly how it opens and locks, being able to draw and deploy it smoothly from your usual pocket, and understanding what cuts it does best with its partial-serrated blade. With a stun gun, competence is about realistic expectations, legal awareness, and practiced deployment under stress.

Put those together and you’re not play-acting as a gunslinger; you’re an informed, prepared person who chooses gear based on how it actually works – not on hype, voltage numbers, or movie scenes. That mindset is the real upgrade.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 8.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Coated
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Printed
Handle Material Aluminum
Theme Wild West
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock