Skip to Content
Blackout Beacon 4-in-1 Hand Crank Emergency Radio - Black/Silver

Price:

17.99


Roadside Guardian 2-in-1 Car Safety Hammer - High-Visibility Orange
Roadside Guardian 2-in-1 Car Safety Hammer - High-Visibility Orange
5.99 5.99
Shadow Talon Stealth Karambit Neck Knife - Midnight Black
Shadow Talon Stealth Karambit Neck Knife - Midnight Black
4.99 4.99

Stormline Dynamo 4-in-1 Emergency Radio Flashlight - Black/Silver

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1417/image_1920?unique=dcc21d5

7 sold in last 24 hours

The Stormline Dynamo 4-in-1 emergency radio flashlight is built for Texas blackout season. A few turns of the hand crank wake up AM/FM weather and news, a front LED beam, a sharp emergency siren, and a USB phone boost—no wall outlet needed. The 5.5-inch black and silver body rides light on a lanyard, with micro-USB recharging to keep the 400 mAh battery topped off between storms. It’s the pocket backup that feels like a plan when the power lines go dark.

17.99 17.99 USD 17.99

FL3135

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

You May Also Like These

Stormline Dynamo 4-in-1 Emergency Radio Flashlight for Texas Blackouts

When the grid blinks off across a Texas street, this isn’t just a flashlight. The Stormline Dynamo 4-in-1 emergency radio flashlight is a self-powered backup plan you can hold in one hand. It brings together a bright front LED light, AM/FM emergency radio, loud distress siren, and USB phone boost in a compact, crank-driven body that doesn’t care if the wall outlets are dead.

At 5.5 inches long with a black and silver housing, it rides easy in a drawer, glove box, or go-bag until the weather turns and you actually need it.

How This Emergency Radio Flashlight Keeps You Independent

This isn’t a battery-hungry camp toy. The heart of this emergency radio flashlight is its hand crank dynamo and built-in rechargeable cell. Spin the crank and you’re turning your own motion into stored power—enough to pull in an AM station out of Houston, throw a cone of light across a dark hallway, or squeeze a few more minutes out of a dying phone.

Hand Crank Power You Can Count On

The fold-out crank sits flush until it’s time to work. A few turns wake up the 400 mAh internal battery, feeding the LED flashlight, radio, siren, and USB output. Unlike disposable-battery flashlights that die quietly in a Texas drawer, this one is never truly empty as long as you’re willing to crank.

AM/FM Radio When Cell Bars Disappear

The analog tuning dial and simple controls are a deliberate choice. In a storm, you don’t need menus—you need a signal. Spin the dial, lock onto AM or FM, and listen for weather updates, local news, or that one station that always manages to stay on the air when everything else is off.

Texas-Ready Design: Light, Signal, and Power in One Tool

Texas weather doesn’t care if you’re in a Houston high-rise, a Hill Country farmhouse, or a West Texas rest stop. This emergency radio flashlight is built as a quiet insurance policy that fits any of those lives.

Compact Body, Full-Size Utility

The plastic body keeps weight down without feeling flimsy. The front-facing LED throws practical light—good for breaker boxes, steps, truck cabs, and tent zippers. The speaker grille and radio controls sit on the silver panel where you can work them by feel in the dark. A wrist lanyard keeps it from dropping when your hands are cold, wet, or full.

USB Phone Boost When Outlets Are Out

The labeled IN and OUT ports do exactly what they promise. Use micro-USB to top off the internal battery when the grid’s behaving. When it’s not, flip over to the USB OUT port to give your phone a survival bump—enough to get a text out, pull a map, or check another alert.

Emergency Radio Flashlight vs. Basic Flashlight: Why It Matters in Texas

A basic flashlight shines light. This emergency radio flashlight adds information and communication to that beam. In a Texas ice storm, thunderstorm, or hurricane feeder band, that difference is what makes this piece worth owning.

  • Flashlight only: helps you see the problem.
  • Emergency radio flashlight: helps you see it, understand it, and respond to it.

Instead of juggling a separate radio, flashlight, and power bank, you have one hand crank tool that handles all three jobs well enough to ride out a night of bad weather or an unexpected roadside breakdown between towns.

Texas Power Outages, Storms, and Everyday Carry

Across Texas, this emergency radio flashlight fits naturally into the way folks already prepare. It belongs next to the candles in a Dallas townhouse, in the console of a work truck in Odessa, or in a small go-bag under a San Antonio office desk.

When lines snap from ice or wind, you’ve got:

  • Light for moving safely around stairs, porches, and yards.
  • Radio for real-time updates from Texas stations.
  • Siren for flagging help in a crowded campground or dark roadside.
  • USB boost to keep a lifeline on your phone.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Emergency Radio Flashlights

How is this different from a regular flashlight or lantern?

A regular flashlight is a one-trick tool—bright, but silent. This emergency radio flashlight adds three more tricks that matter in Texas: AM/FM radio for weather and news, a siren for signaling, and a hand-crank generator that feeds its own battery and your phone. It’s closer to a small emergency kit than a simple light.

Can I count on hand crank power during a long Texas outage?

You won’t crank this like a generator, but it’s built for realistic use. Micro-USB keeps the 400 mAh battery ready ahead of time. When the power fails, hand cranking lets you top off enough charge to run the flashlight, catch a weather report, or give your phone a little life. It’s not a full power bank, but it’s enough to bridge the gap when everything else is dark.

Is this emergency flashlight radio worth adding if I already own bigger lights?

Big lanterns and heavy flashlights have their place on a Texas property, but they usually depend on stocked batteries or a charged pack. This piece earns its slot by being the backup to your backup: self-powered, compact, and multi-function. When the big gear is dead, buried in storage, or out in the truck, this is the one tool you can keep close and trust to wake up with a few turns of the crank.

Why This 4-in-1 Belongs in a Texas Toolkit

A serious Texas homeowner, ranch hand, or traveler doesn’t confuse gadgets with gear. This 4-in-1 emergency radio flashlight is gear. It doesn’t try to be clever; it just does four jobs well enough to matter when the wind picks up and the grid goes quiet.

If you like knowing the difference between showy gear and the kind you actually reach for when the sky turns green, this belongs in your rotation. It’s a small, steady promise: light, signal, and a little extra power, ready to work whenever Texas decides to test your preparations.