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VoltGuard™ — Crank, Light, And Charge Your Way Through The Next Blackout
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VoltGuard™ — Crank, Light, And Charge Your Way Through The Next Blackout

VoltGuard™ — Crank, Light, And Charge Your Way Through The Next Blackout

Crank, Light, And Charge Your Phone When The Grid Dies

The last power cut caught you with a 12% phone and a kitchen radio that needed an outlet to work. VoltGuard™ runs on three power sources nothing else does — solar panel, hand crank, and USB — so when the lights drop, you've still got phone charge, weather alerts, and a flashlight sitting in your palm.


Stop Sitting In The Dark Hoping The Lights Come Back On

Two hours into an outage and your phone is at 12%. The flashlight on it drains faster than you can text your family. Most emergency radios sit dead in a drawer because nobody remembered to swap the AAs. VoltGuard™ stays ready three different ways — so the one device you actually need works the moment you reach for it.

➤ Charge Your Phone Without A Wall Outlet: The 2000 mAh battery and USB-C port push enough juice to your phone for emergency calls, family messages, or pulling up the evacuation map — even when the grid's been dark for hours.

➤ Three Ways To Power Up — Pick Whatever The Day Gives You: Drop it on a sunny windowsill, hand-crank it in the dark, or top it off via USB before the storm hits. You're never waiting on one charging method to cooperate.

➤ Hear The Alerts Your Phone Can't Pull: AM, FM, and NOAA weather bands keep you tuned to evacuation orders, storm tracks, and rescue broadcasts when cell towers buckle under load.

Three Charging Modes And A Flashlight That Doubles As A Beacon

VoltGuard™ pulls power from the sun, from your own hand crank, or from a USB cable — whichever one you've got that day. That power feeds a 2000 mAh battery sized for real phone charging, then routes a bright 1W LED into a flashlight, reading lamp, or pulsing SOS strobe at the flick of a switch.

Standard radios die when the grid does. Cheap flashlights burn through AAs you don't have. VoltGuard™ stays ready the entire outage — no spare batteries, no wall plug, no faith required.

Why People Who've Lived Through The Last Blackout Already Have One

After the last big outage, Lucia keeps hers within arm's reach of the bed. Marcos charges his every Sunday like a habit. José finally tossed his dead drawer flashlight. None of them want to feel that powerless again — and they don't.

"I was skeptical — figured it'd be another gadget that sits in a drawer. Then I cranked it for 90 seconds and watched my phone climb from 4% to 11%. Sold." — Marcos R.

Own Your Outage Game Plan — One Device, Every Job

✓ Pulls Live Storm Updates When Cell Towers Drop: AM/FM plus NOAA means you hear evacuation orders, tornado warnings, and rescue broadcasts the moment they're sent.

✓ Slips Into Any Bag You Already Own: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches and lighter than a paperback — bug-out bag, glovebox, kitchen drawer, kid's backpack on camp week.

✓ Lights The Path And Signals For Help: 1W LED flashlight plus pulsing SOS strobe means you can find the stairs in the dark and flag a rescue team from a distance.

Three Steps From Pitch Dark To Powered Up

Step 1: Top it off your way — sunny window for solar, 60–90 seconds of hand-cranking in a pinch, or USB before storm season starts.

Step 2: Switch to AM, FM, or NOAA to hear the same alerts emergency services are broadcasting — no cell signal needed.

Step 3: Plug your phone into the USB-C port for charge, flick on the LED for light, or hit the SOS strobe to flag for help.

Why VoltGuard™ Stands Apart Old-School Radios Basic Flashlights
Charges your phone three different ways with no wall outlet
Slips into any bag, ready to grab the moment power drops
Doubles as flashlight and pulsing SOS beacon at one switch

Specs For The Prepared And Analytical

  • Size: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches — glovebox, backpack, or bug-out bag friendly
  • Battery: 2000 mAh rechargeable lithium pack
  • Recharge Options: Solar panel, manual hand crank, USB input
  • Radio Bands: AM, FM, and NOAA weather band

Got Questions? Here's What You Need To Know

How much cranking does it actually take to charge my phone?

About 90 seconds of steady cranking gets you enough juice for a short call or several text messages. For a bigger top-up, let it sit on a sunny windowsill or USB-charge it before the storm hits.

Will the radio pick up alerts outside North America?

AM and FM work anywhere and tune the same emergency broadcasts your local stations push during storms or outages. The NOAA band is most useful inside the US — international users rely on AM/FM for civil-protection updates.

Is this another gadget that'll sit dead in a drawer when I need it?

VoltGuard™ holds standby charge for months and tops up without an outlet. Spin the crank for 30 seconds or set it on a sunny windowsill every few weeks and it'll be ready when the lights drop.

Will it really fit in my emergency kit or glovebox?

At 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches it's smaller than most paperbacks. Drops into a backpack side pocket, glovebox, or kitchen drawer without a fight.

What if it doesn't work for me or arrives damaged?

Send it back within 14 days for a full refund. No restocking fee, no quiz on why.

Try It — And Don't Get Caught Flat-Footed Next Time

If VoltGuard™ doesn't crank, charge, and pull alerts the way this page says it does, send it back within 14 days for every cent back. The only way to find out it works is to keep it on the shelf for the next time the grid goes quiet — because being powerless shouldn't be on your to-do list.

$19.50

Original: $64.99

-70%
VoltGuard™ — Crank, Light, And Charge Your Way Through The Next Blackout

$64.99

$19.50

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VoltGuard™ — Crank, Light, And Charge Your Way Through The Next Blackout

Crank, Light, And Charge Your Phone When The Grid Dies

The last power cut caught you with a 12% phone and a kitchen radio that needed an outlet to work. VoltGuard™ runs on three power sources nothing else does — solar panel, hand crank, and USB — so when the lights drop, you've still got phone charge, weather alerts, and a flashlight sitting in your palm.


Stop Sitting In The Dark Hoping The Lights Come Back On

Two hours into an outage and your phone is at 12%. The flashlight on it drains faster than you can text your family. Most emergency radios sit dead in a drawer because nobody remembered to swap the AAs. VoltGuard™ stays ready three different ways — so the one device you actually need works the moment you reach for it.

➤ Charge Your Phone Without A Wall Outlet: The 2000 mAh battery and USB-C port push enough juice to your phone for emergency calls, family messages, or pulling up the evacuation map — even when the grid's been dark for hours.

➤ Three Ways To Power Up — Pick Whatever The Day Gives You: Drop it on a sunny windowsill, hand-crank it in the dark, or top it off via USB before the storm hits. You're never waiting on one charging method to cooperate.

➤ Hear The Alerts Your Phone Can't Pull: AM, FM, and NOAA weather bands keep you tuned to evacuation orders, storm tracks, and rescue broadcasts when cell towers buckle under load.

Three Charging Modes And A Flashlight That Doubles As A Beacon

VoltGuard™ pulls power from the sun, from your own hand crank, or from a USB cable — whichever one you've got that day. That power feeds a 2000 mAh battery sized for real phone charging, then routes a bright 1W LED into a flashlight, reading lamp, or pulsing SOS strobe at the flick of a switch.

Standard radios die when the grid does. Cheap flashlights burn through AAs you don't have. VoltGuard™ stays ready the entire outage — no spare batteries, no wall plug, no faith required.

Why People Who've Lived Through The Last Blackout Already Have One

After the last big outage, Lucia keeps hers within arm's reach of the bed. Marcos charges his every Sunday like a habit. José finally tossed his dead drawer flashlight. None of them want to feel that powerless again — and they don't.

"I was skeptical — figured it'd be another gadget that sits in a drawer. Then I cranked it for 90 seconds and watched my phone climb from 4% to 11%. Sold." — Marcos R.

Own Your Outage Game Plan — One Device, Every Job

✓ Pulls Live Storm Updates When Cell Towers Drop: AM/FM plus NOAA means you hear evacuation orders, tornado warnings, and rescue broadcasts the moment they're sent.

✓ Slips Into Any Bag You Already Own: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches and lighter than a paperback — bug-out bag, glovebox, kitchen drawer, kid's backpack on camp week.

✓ Lights The Path And Signals For Help: 1W LED flashlight plus pulsing SOS strobe means you can find the stairs in the dark and flag a rescue team from a distance.

Three Steps From Pitch Dark To Powered Up

Step 1: Top it off your way — sunny window for solar, 60–90 seconds of hand-cranking in a pinch, or USB before storm season starts.

Step 2: Switch to AM, FM, or NOAA to hear the same alerts emergency services are broadcasting — no cell signal needed.

Step 3: Plug your phone into the USB-C port for charge, flick on the LED for light, or hit the SOS strobe to flag for help.

Why VoltGuard™ Stands Apart Old-School Radios Basic Flashlights
Charges your phone three different ways with no wall outlet
Slips into any bag, ready to grab the moment power drops
Doubles as flashlight and pulsing SOS beacon at one switch

Specs For The Prepared And Analytical

  • Size: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches — glovebox, backpack, or bug-out bag friendly
  • Battery: 2000 mAh rechargeable lithium pack
  • Recharge Options: Solar panel, manual hand crank, USB input
  • Radio Bands: AM, FM, and NOAA weather band

Got Questions? Here's What You Need To Know

How much cranking does it actually take to charge my phone?

About 90 seconds of steady cranking gets you enough juice for a short call or several text messages. For a bigger top-up, let it sit on a sunny windowsill or USB-charge it before the storm hits.

Will the radio pick up alerts outside North America?

AM and FM work anywhere and tune the same emergency broadcasts your local stations push during storms or outages. The NOAA band is most useful inside the US — international users rely on AM/FM for civil-protection updates.

Is this another gadget that'll sit dead in a drawer when I need it?

VoltGuard™ holds standby charge for months and tops up without an outlet. Spin the crank for 30 seconds or set it on a sunny windowsill every few weeks and it'll be ready when the lights drop.

Will it really fit in my emergency kit or glovebox?

At 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches it's smaller than most paperbacks. Drops into a backpack side pocket, glovebox, or kitchen drawer without a fight.

What if it doesn't work for me or arrives damaged?

Send it back within 14 days for a full refund. No restocking fee, no quiz on why.

Try It — And Don't Get Caught Flat-Footed Next Time

If VoltGuard™ doesn't crank, charge, and pull alerts the way this page says it does, send it back within 14 days for every cent back. The only way to find out it works is to keep it on the shelf for the next time the grid goes quiet — because being powerless shouldn't be on your to-do list.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Crank, Light, And Charge Your Phone When The Grid Dies

The last power cut caught you with a 12% phone and a kitchen radio that needed an outlet to work. VoltGuard™ runs on three power sources nothing else does — solar panel, hand crank, and USB — so when the lights drop, you've still got phone charge, weather alerts, and a flashlight sitting in your palm.


Stop Sitting In The Dark Hoping The Lights Come Back On

Two hours into an outage and your phone is at 12%. The flashlight on it drains faster than you can text your family. Most emergency radios sit dead in a drawer because nobody remembered to swap the AAs. VoltGuard™ stays ready three different ways — so the one device you actually need works the moment you reach for it.

➤ Charge Your Phone Without A Wall Outlet: The 2000 mAh battery and USB-C port push enough juice to your phone for emergency calls, family messages, or pulling up the evacuation map — even when the grid's been dark for hours.

➤ Three Ways To Power Up — Pick Whatever The Day Gives You: Drop it on a sunny windowsill, hand-crank it in the dark, or top it off via USB before the storm hits. You're never waiting on one charging method to cooperate.

➤ Hear The Alerts Your Phone Can't Pull: AM, FM, and NOAA weather bands keep you tuned to evacuation orders, storm tracks, and rescue broadcasts when cell towers buckle under load.

Three Charging Modes And A Flashlight That Doubles As A Beacon

VoltGuard™ pulls power from the sun, from your own hand crank, or from a USB cable — whichever one you've got that day. That power feeds a 2000 mAh battery sized for real phone charging, then routes a bright 1W LED into a flashlight, reading lamp, or pulsing SOS strobe at the flick of a switch.

Standard radios die when the grid does. Cheap flashlights burn through AAs you don't have. VoltGuard™ stays ready the entire outage — no spare batteries, no wall plug, no faith required.

Why People Who've Lived Through The Last Blackout Already Have One

After the last big outage, Lucia keeps hers within arm's reach of the bed. Marcos charges his every Sunday like a habit. José finally tossed his dead drawer flashlight. None of them want to feel that powerless again — and they don't.

"I was skeptical — figured it'd be another gadget that sits in a drawer. Then I cranked it for 90 seconds and watched my phone climb from 4% to 11%. Sold." — Marcos R.

Own Your Outage Game Plan — One Device, Every Job

✓ Pulls Live Storm Updates When Cell Towers Drop: AM/FM plus NOAA means you hear evacuation orders, tornado warnings, and rescue broadcasts the moment they're sent.

✓ Slips Into Any Bag You Already Own: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches and lighter than a paperback — bug-out bag, glovebox, kitchen drawer, kid's backpack on camp week.

✓ Lights The Path And Signals For Help: 1W LED flashlight plus pulsing SOS strobe means you can find the stairs in the dark and flag a rescue team from a distance.

Three Steps From Pitch Dark To Powered Up

Step 1: Top it off your way — sunny window for solar, 60–90 seconds of hand-cranking in a pinch, or USB before storm season starts.

Step 2: Switch to AM, FM, or NOAA to hear the same alerts emergency services are broadcasting — no cell signal needed.

Step 3: Plug your phone into the USB-C port for charge, flick on the LED for light, or hit the SOS strobe to flag for help.

Why VoltGuard™ Stands Apart Old-School Radios Basic Flashlights
Charges your phone three different ways with no wall outlet
Slips into any bag, ready to grab the moment power drops
Doubles as flashlight and pulsing SOS beacon at one switch

Specs For The Prepared And Analytical

  • Size: 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches — glovebox, backpack, or bug-out bag friendly
  • Battery: 2000 mAh rechargeable lithium pack
  • Recharge Options: Solar panel, manual hand crank, USB input
  • Radio Bands: AM, FM, and NOAA weather band

Got Questions? Here's What You Need To Know

How much cranking does it actually take to charge my phone?

About 90 seconds of steady cranking gets you enough juice for a short call or several text messages. For a bigger top-up, let it sit on a sunny windowsill or USB-charge it before the storm hits.

Will the radio pick up alerts outside North America?

AM and FM work anywhere and tune the same emergency broadcasts your local stations push during storms or outages. The NOAA band is most useful inside the US — international users rely on AM/FM for civil-protection updates.

Is this another gadget that'll sit dead in a drawer when I need it?

VoltGuard™ holds standby charge for months and tops up without an outlet. Spin the crank for 30 seconds or set it on a sunny windowsill every few weeks and it'll be ready when the lights drop.

Will it really fit in my emergency kit or glovebox?

At 5.12 x 2.36 x 1.57 inches it's smaller than most paperbacks. Drops into a backpack side pocket, glovebox, or kitchen drawer without a fight.

What if it doesn't work for me or arrives damaged?

Send it back within 14 days for a full refund. No restocking fee, no quiz on why.

Try It — And Don't Get Caught Flat-Footed Next Time

If VoltGuard™ doesn't crank, charge, and pull alerts the way this page says it does, send it back within 14 days for every cent back. The only way to find out it works is to keep it on the shelf for the next time the grid goes quiet — because being powerless shouldn't be on your to-do list.