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Night Signal Dual-Mount Safety Flasher - Neon Green

Price:

1.99


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Trail Beacon Multi-Mount Safety Light - Green

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This Trail Beacon Multi-Mount Safety Light keeps Texas runners, cyclists, and kids visible when the sun clocks out. Five bright LEDs and seven flash modes throw attention your way, whether it’s on your arm, your bike, or a backpack. The water-resistant body shrugs off sweat and drizzle, while the 120° rotating bike mount lets you dial in the angle. Two AA batteries power it, and the neon strap and clip make it easy to swap between riders and rides.

1.99 1.99 USD 1.99

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Trail Beacon Multi-Mount Safety Light – What It Actually Is

The Trail Beacon Multi-Mount Safety Light is a compact 5-LED safety flasher built for one job: making sure folks see you before they get close. It’s a water-resistant, battery-powered visibility light with two mounting styles in the package—an arm strap and a 120° rotatable bike clamp—so you can run it on your arm, your bike, or clipped to a bag. This isn’t a throw-a-beam flashlight; it’s a purpose-built safety flasher meant to be seen from all the right angles.

How This Safety Flasher Works and Why It’s Different

Five inline LEDs sit behind a green, honeycomb-textured lens. That lens isn’t for looks; it helps throw light wide so drivers and riders catch a flash even if they’re not dead in front of you. The safety flasher runs on two AA batteries and cycles through seven functions, from steady burn to attention-grabbing flash patterns. That means you can match your mode to the situation—steady for group rides, hard flash for solo night runs on Texas farm-to-market roads.

Arm Strap, Clip, and Bike Mount in One Package

Out of the box, you get three ways to run this safety light:

  • Arm strap: A bright, textured fabric strap that threads through a plastic loop to cinch around your arm, leg, or pack strap.
  • Clip-on back: Built-in clip lets you hook it onto a belt, pocket, or MOLLE panel in a second.
  • Bike clamp: A black plastic handlebar mount with a metal screw and a slide-in base for the light, rotating up to 120° for proper aim.

That multi-mount setup turns one safety flasher into shared gear for the family—bike in the evening, kid’s backpack in the morning, jogger’s armband after work.

Water-Resistant for Real-World Texas Weather

Texas weather can jump from dust-dry to sideways rain in one afternoon. This safety flasher’s plastic housing and sealed lens are built to handle sweat, light rain, and road spray. It’s water-resistant, not a dive light, but that’s exactly what you need for night rides in Austin, pre-dawn runs in Houston humidity, or a misty Amarillo school bus stop.

Safety Light vs. Flashlight – Getting the Category Right

Online, a lot of gear like this gets tossed into a generic “LED flashlights” bucket. Technically it fits, but functionally it doesn’t. A flashlight is about seeing—a directional beam you point at the trail, the fence line, or under the truck. This 5 LED safety flasher is about being seen—a wide, attention-grabbing pattern meant to catch eyes in low light.

If you’re shopping for a Texas night ride, post-dusk dog walk, or Halloween safety gear, this distinction matters. Use a flashlight when you need to light your path. Use a safety flasher when you need drivers, cyclists, and neighbors to notice you quickly and clearly.

Texas Nights, Real Carry Scenarios

Across Texas, this light earns its keep in all sorts of low-light routines:

  • Urban cycling in Dallas or Austin: Clip the safety light to your seatpost with the bike attachment and angle it back with the 120° rotation. Run a bright flash mode for rush hour traffic.
  • Jogging in the suburbs: Strap it to your arm or ankle, set a pulsing pattern, and let drivers see you from half a block away as you cross side streets.
  • Hill Country hikes: Hook it to your pack as a rear marker when the trailhead walk-out drifts into twilight.
  • Kids and school bus stops: Clip the flasher to a backpack so your kids are visible on dark winter mornings.
  • Halloween in any Texas town: Neon strap on a costume, flashing mode on, and you can actually spot your own kids moving through the crowd.

Because it runs on standard AA batteries, you can raid the same pack you keep for remotes and emergency flashlights. No special charger, no proprietary cells—just swap batteries and keep moving.

Design Details Collectors and Gear Folks Notice

Even if you’re not a dedicated flashlight collector, you’ll appreciate deliberate design when you see it. This safety flasher packs a few thoughtful touches that set it apart from throwaway promo lights:

  • Five inline LEDs: More even light spread across the lens instead of one harsh hot spot.
  • Honeycomb lens texture: Built-in diffusion to scatter light wide.
  • High-visibility colors: Green housing and neon strap that stand out in low light even when the LEDs are off.
  • Detachable base for the mount: Slide the light in and out without removing the clamp from your handlebars.
  • Lightweight housing: Plastic body that won’t drag on your arm or unbalance a small kid’s bike.

For the Texas buyer who already owns serious flashlights and headlamps, this piece fills a different slot in the kit: a purpose-built, simple, visible safety flasher that you’re not afraid to hand to a kid or strap to a loaner bike.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Safety Flasher

Is this more like a flashlight or a bike light?

Mechanically, it’s closer to a bike safety light than a traditional handheld flashlight. It doesn’t throw a long-range beam; instead, the five LEDs and shaped lens are tuned for wide, bright visibility. The arm strap and clip turn it into a personal safety flasher for runners, walkers, and kids, and the 120° rotatable bike clamp makes it a rear or side marker on handlebars or seatposts. If you need to light up a trail, you’ll still want a true flashlight or headlamp alongside it.

Any Texas law issues with running this on my bike or on my kid?

In Texas, using a visible light like this for safety is not a problem—it's encouraged. State law requires bikes ridden at night to have a white front light and a red rear reflector or red rear light. This green safety flasher makes you more visible from the side or rear but doesn’t replace that required white front bicycle light. For pedestrians, runners, and kids on foot, adding a bright wearable light like this is simply smart safety and doesn’t raise legal concerns.

Is it durable enough for regular Texas use, or is this a throwaway?

The water-resistant plastic housing and simple electronics are designed for repeated, everyday use, not a one-night event. It holds up to sweat, drizzle, and the occasional drop in the driveway. The metal-screw bike clamp gives a more secure mount than friction-only bands, and the strap is meant to handle regular cinching and uncinching. Like any safety light, it’s not indestructible, but treated like real gear—not a toy—it’ll carry you through many seasons of rides, runs, and school years.

Why This Safety Flasher Belongs in a Texas Kit

If you live in Texas, you know how much of life happens outdoors—early runs before the heat, evening rides after work, kids chasing one more lap around the block. This 5 LED water-resistant safety flasher slots neatly into that rhythm. It’s small, bright, and flexible enough to move from arm to bike to backpack without fuss. For the buyer who already owns serious lights, this is the quiet piece that makes the rest of your setup safer. It doesn’t pretend to be a do‑everything flashlight; it does one job well: it helps other people see you coming and going. That’s the kind of honest, purpose-built gear Texans tend to keep around.