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Dual-Mount Beacon LED Safety Flasher - Blue

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2.99


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Night Miles Dual-Mount Safety Flasher - Blue Case

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4657/image_1920?unique=86bf55a

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Traffic’s still heavy on the feeder when the sun drops. This LED safety flasher clips to a running strap or locks onto Texas handlebars, throwing five bright blue LEDs in seven attention-getting modes. The dual-mount system and 120° bike adjustment keep you visible on everything from neighborhood loops to late commutes. Water-resistant and AA powered, it’s the kind of simple, dependable visibility Texans trust when the daylight runs out but the miles don’t.

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Night Miles, Empty Lanes, and a Small Light That Matters

The air cools fast on a late run along a frontage road outside Houston. Headlights stack up on the main lanes. The shoulder is narrow, broken in spots. What keeps a driver from drifting a few feet too far is not how fast you are, but how visible. Clipped to your arm, this compact blue LED safety flasher throws a hard, sharp pulse of light that cuts through glare and roadside clutter. It doesn’t ask you to change your route. It just makes sure they see you coming.

Why This LED Safety Flasher Belongs in Texas Night Miles

Texas doesn’t shut down when the sun drops. Shift work in the Permian, late laps around Town Lake, kids riding home from practice on small-town streets. This dual-mount beacon was built for that in-between light when you’re not ready to call it a night, but you don’t trust drivers to notice your silhouette in the dark.

Five bright LEDs sit behind a textured blue lens, spreading light wide enough to be picked up in side mirrors and windshield glare. Seven modes give you control over how you’re seen, from steady-on for quiet neighborhood rides to aggressive flash patterns on busier San Antonio arterials. One AA battery keeps it running without hunting specialty cells at a gas station off I-35.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers Also Carry Reliable Light

Someone who takes the time to pick the right OTF knife for Texas carry usually does the same with their safety gear. This LED safety flasher fits the same mindset: compact, durable, and ready to work without fuss. It disappears until it’s needed, then delivers a clear, unmistakable signal.

The dual-mount design is the quiet advantage. The neon hook-and-loop strap wraps onto a forearm, hydration pack strap, dog collar, or kid’s backpack. The black bike mount locks to standard handlebars and gives you 120 degrees of adjustment, so the beam points where approaching traffic will actually see it on a winding Hill Country road or a flat Panhandle stretch. One light covers the family bikes and your own training runs.

OTF Knife Texas Culture Meets Everyday Roadside Reality

Folks who care about an OTF knife in Texas aren’t just thinking about cutting tasks. They think about being prepared in the places where help is a long way off — a dead-straight farm-to-market road at night, a canal-side trail on the edge of town, a dark parking lot behind a feed store. In those spots, edge and light go together.

This beacon rides easily next to a truck console knife or clipped to a range bag. Water-resistant housing shrugs off sweat, light rain rolling off a Gulf storm, or spray from a roadside puddle near Dallas after a sudden downpour. The plastic body keeps it light enough that your kids won’t complain when you tell them it stays on their bikes all winter, even when the sun drops early after practice.

Texas Safety, Not Texas Hype: How This Beacon Works

In places where shoulders crumble and ditches are deep, being seen early matters more than being fast. The five-LED array is tuned for visibility, not camping-lantern flood. That means sharp, focused points of light that register quickly in a driver’s peripheral vision. On a dark stretch outside Lubbock, that flash in the corner of a windshield might be the split second that keeps someone from wandering onto the gravel where you’re running.

The seven modes aren’t a gimmick; they’re how you match your signal to the setting. Slow pulse for the quiet subdivision loop around a cul-de-sac. Rapid strobe for a shoulder along Highway 90 where trucks run close to the white line. Mixed patterns for group rides weaving through Austin traffic, when you want your bike to stand out from a line of tail lights ahead.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About LED Safety Flashers

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Many buyers looking at an OTF knife in Texas also want to know the law. Under current Texas law, automatic knives — including OTF knives and traditional switchblades — are legal to own and carry for most adults. The key detail is blade length and location. A blade over 5.5 inches is considered a "location-restricted knife" and can’t be carried into specific places like schools, polling places, courthouses, racetracks, or secure airport areas. Shorter blades are generally allowed in everyday carry, whether that’s in your pocket, clipped inside a truck console, or riding in a work bag. Minors face tighter restrictions, so adults are expected to use good judgment when passing an OTF knife down to younger family members. When in doubt, check local rules for your city or county before carrying into sensitive locations.

How does this beacon actually mount for Texas riding and running?

The dual-mount system is built for real Texas use. The hook-and-loop strap cinches tight over a bare forearm on a humid coastal run, around a jacket sleeve in a Panhandle cold front, or on a dog’s harness for pre-dawn walks in suburbia. The separate bike mount clamps to standard handlebars, then lets you tilt the light through 120 degrees. On a rolling Hill Country road, you can angle the beam slightly upward to catch a driver’s eye before they crest a hill. In flat city grid streets, you can point it level so every car from behind sees a steady, predictable pattern.

Why this LED safety flasher instead of cheaper clip-on lights?

Most clip-on lights handle one job halfway. This one earns its spot by doing several Texas realities well. It runs on a common AA battery you can grab at any small-town gas station when you’ve stayed longer at the lease than planned. It’s water-resistant enough for sweat-heavy August nights in San Antonio or a surprise drizzle rolling over the Brazos. The seven modes and five-LED layout give you real visibility instead of a dim glow. Most important, the dual mounting lets you move it from your bike to your body in seconds, so one piece of gear covers late commutes, weekend rides, and family walks after dinner.

Carried Like a Knife, Seen Like a Signal

First use comes easy. You’re parking along a farm road outside town, last light fading behind a line of live oaks. You pull the beacon from the console, wrap the strap around your arm, and feel the hook-and-loop bite down solid. The LEDs fire to life, blue light pulsing against the white paint of your truck door. A minute later you’re jogging the ditch line, crickets loud, road quiet but not empty.

Far back, a pair of headlights tops a rise. Before the driver knows you’re there, the beam from this small case of LEDs has already cut through the dark, strobing in their peripheral vision, giving them time and space to move over. It’s the same quiet assurance you get from a good OTF knife in Texas: not a showpiece, not a toy, just the right tool in the right place when things get real.

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